Listing 1 - 7 of 7 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
This entertaining and informative book describes how living things bump up against non-biological reality. "My immodest aim," says the author, "is to change how you view your immediate surroundings." He asks us to wonder about the design of plants and animals around us: why a fish swims more rapidly than a duck can paddle, why healthy trees more commonly uproot than break, how a shark manages with such a flimsy skeleton, or how a mouse can easily survive a fall onto any surface from any height. The book will not only fascinate the general reader but will also serve as an introductory survey of biomechanics. On one hand, organisms cannot alter the earth's gravity, the properties of water, the compressibility of air, or the behavior of diffusing molecules. On the other, such physical factors form both constraints with which the evolutionary process must contend and opportunities upon which it might capitalize. Life's Devices includes examples from every major group of animals and plants, with references to recent work, with illustrative problems, and with suggestions of experiments that need only common household materials.
Biophysics. --- Antheraea. --- Argyronetes. --- Ascaris. --- Bombyx. --- Dendraster. --- Dineutes. --- Halobates. --- Halosaccion. --- Hydra. --- Luna. --- Macronema. --- Metridium. --- Mimosa. --- Nereocystis. --- Pilobolus. --- Potamodytes. --- Quetelet. --- Velcro. --- abductin. --- airfoils. --- albumin. --- axonal transport. --- bending. --- capillary. --- centroid. --- continuity. --- creeks. --- cyclosis. --- detergent. --- echinoderms. --- fabrics. --- fiberglass. --- foraminifera. --- frameworks. --- gait. --- jellyfish. --- kneecap. --- oak tree.
Choose an application
Insects boast incredible diversity, and this book treats an important component of the western insect biota that has not been summarized before-moths and their plant relationships. There are about 8,000 named species of moths in our region, and although most are unnoticed by the public, many attract attention when their larvae create economic damage: eating holes in woolens, infesting stored foods, boring into apples, damaging crops and garden plants, or defoliating forests. In contrast to previous North American moth books, this volume discusses and illustrates about 25% of the species in every family, including the tiny species, making this the most comprehensive volume in its field. With this approach it provides access to microlepidoptera study for biologists as well as amateur collectors. About 2,500 species are described and illustrated, including virtually all moths of economic importance, summarizing their morphology, taxonomy, adult behavior, larval biology, and life cycles.
Moths --- Heterocera --- Lepidoptera nocturna --- Lepidoptera --- Antheraea --- Giant Silkmoths --- Giant Silkworms --- Silkmoths, Giant --- Silkworms, Giant --- Antheraeas --- Giant Silkmoth --- Giant Silkworm --- Moth --- Silkmoth, Giant --- Silkworm, Giant --- amateur collectors. --- biologists. --- comprehensive account. --- crop damage. --- damaging insects. --- defoliating forests. --- illustrated. --- insect biota. --- insect damage. --- insect diversity. --- larval biology. --- lepidopterists. --- microlepidoptera study. --- moth diets. --- moth infestations. --- moth larvae. --- moth life cycles. --- moth morphology. --- moth relationships. --- moth species. --- moth taxonomy. --- moths. --- north america. --- plant and insect life. --- plant diets. --- regional biology. --- western insects. --- western north america.
Choose an application
Noctuidae --- Noctuidés --- Moths --- Lepidoptera --- Antheraea --- Giant Silkmoths --- Giant Silkworms --- Silkmoths, Giant --- Silkworms, Giant --- Antheraeas --- Giant Silkmoth --- Giant Silkworm --- Moth --- Silkmoth, Giant --- Silkworm, Giant --- Heterocera --- Lepidoptera nocturna --- Lepidopterans --- Macrolepidoptera --- Microlepidoptera --- Insects --- Acontidae --- Agrotidae --- Alypiidae --- Amphigonidae --- Amphipyridae --- Anthrophilidae --- Apamidae --- Bendidae --- Boletobidae --- Bolinidae --- Bombycoidae --- Bryophilidae --- Calpidae --- Caradrinidae --- Catephidae --- Catocalidae --- Chloeophoridae --- Cosmidae --- Dyopsidae --- Eriopidae --- Eucocytiidae --- Eurhipidae --- Euschemidae --- Focillidae --- Gonopteridae --- Gortynidae --- Graptolithidae --- Hadenidae --- Haemerosidae --- Heliothidae --- Hemerosidae --- Herminidae --- Homopteridae --- Hulodidae --- Hypenidae --- Hypocalidae --- Hypogrammidae --- Hypopyridae --- Leucanidae --- Noctuid moths --- Nycteolidae --- Ommatophoridae --- Ophideridae --- Ophiusidae --- Orthosidae --- Owlet moths --- Palindidae --- Phalaenidae --- Phalaenoididae --- Phyllodidae --- Placodidae --- Platydidae --- Plusidae --- Plusiidae --- Poaphilidae --- Polydesmidae (Insects) --- Pseudodeltoidae --- Quadrifidae --- Remigidae --- Stilbidae --- Strepsimanidae --- Thermesidae --- Toxocampidae --- Trifidae --- Xylinidae --- Xylophasidae --- Europe --- Council of Europe countries --- Eastern Hemisphere --- Eurasia --- Northern Europe --- Southern Europe --- Western Europe --- Noctuidés
Choose an application
There is global interest in using insects as food and feed. However, before insects can be recommended as a type of nourishment to augment more traditional and widely accepted sources of food and feed, it is essential that in-depth research involving a variety of subjects is carried out. We can learn from societies in which insects are still a component of the local diet which species are preferred and how they are prepared for human consumption. We need information on the chemical composition of edible insects and have to make sure we know what kinds of micro-organisms and pathogens they contain. Legal questions in relation to the sale and breeding of certain species need to be addressed, and medicinal aspects of edible insects and their products should be examined. How best to market selected species and make them palatable to a clientele that more than often rejects the idea of insects in the diet are further important aspects in need of study. This book deals with these questions in 19 articles written by experts from at least 20 different countries that represent a range of disciplines. As such, it is a useful tome for a wide range of food researchers.
entomophagy --- novel food --- neophobia --- disgust --- edible insects --- mealworm --- Tenebrio molitor --- insects --- sensory --- model system --- insect --- food --- avoid --- attitude --- psychology --- willingness to eat --- Alcalase --- insect powders --- Acheta domesticus --- Enterococcus --- antioxidant activity --- biodiversity --- bioresource --- culture --- edible insect --- defatted powder --- mealworm oil --- characteristics --- feed supplementation --- growth performance --- nutrient composition --- emotions --- sociolinguistics --- food choice --- mirror neurons --- steamed and freeze-dried mature silkworm larval powder --- alcoholic fatty liver --- ethanol --- lipogenesis --- fatty acid oxidation --- Sprague-Dawley rats --- protein hydrolysate --- enzymatic hydrolysis --- degree of hydrolysis --- techno-functional properties --- novel proteins --- consumer analysis --- DRSA --- Amino acids --- fatty acids --- minerals --- antioxidant --- antimicrobial --- supplement --- sustainable food --- food safety --- blood coagulation --- platelet aggregation --- haemolysis --- Teleogryllus emma --- food law --- Africa --- food hygiene --- food policy --- processing --- traditional knowledge --- food/feed safety --- nutrition --- yellow mealworm --- processed --- shelf life --- Antheraea assamensis --- Apis cerana indica --- honey --- Nagaland --- preparation --- Samia cynthia ricini --- Vespa mandarinia --- Vespula orbata --- silkworm --- thermal processing --- antioxidant activities --- silkworm powder --- alternative food resource --- wasp larva --- Vespa velutina nigrithorax --- insect edibility --- food shortage --- acceptance --- bio-active compounds --- nutrients
Choose an application
There is global interest in using insects as food and feed. However, before insects can be recommended as a type of nourishment to augment more traditional and widely accepted sources of food and feed, it is essential that in-depth research involving a variety of subjects is carried out. We can learn from societies in which insects are still a component of the local diet which species are preferred and how they are prepared for human consumption. We need information on the chemical composition of edible insects and have to make sure we know what kinds of micro-organisms and pathogens they contain. Legal questions in relation to the sale and breeding of certain species need to be addressed, and medicinal aspects of edible insects and their products should be examined. How best to market selected species and make them palatable to a clientele that more than often rejects the idea of insects in the diet are further important aspects in need of study. This book deals with these questions in 19 articles written by experts from at least 20 different countries that represent a range of disciplines. As such, it is a useful tome for a wide range of food researchers.
Technology: general issues --- entomophagy --- novel food --- neophobia --- disgust --- edible insects --- mealworm --- Tenebrio molitor --- insects --- sensory --- model system --- insect --- food --- avoid --- attitude --- psychology --- willingness to eat --- Alcalase --- insect powders --- Acheta domesticus --- Enterococcus --- antioxidant activity --- biodiversity --- bioresource --- culture --- edible insect --- defatted powder --- mealworm oil --- characteristics --- feed supplementation --- growth performance --- nutrient composition --- emotions --- sociolinguistics --- food choice --- mirror neurons --- steamed and freeze-dried mature silkworm larval powder --- alcoholic fatty liver --- ethanol --- lipogenesis --- fatty acid oxidation --- Sprague-Dawley rats --- protein hydrolysate --- enzymatic hydrolysis --- degree of hydrolysis --- techno-functional properties --- novel proteins --- consumer analysis --- DRSA --- Amino acids --- fatty acids --- minerals --- antioxidant --- antimicrobial --- supplement --- sustainable food --- food safety --- blood coagulation --- platelet aggregation --- haemolysis --- Teleogryllus emma --- food law --- Africa --- food hygiene --- food policy --- processing --- traditional knowledge --- food/feed safety --- nutrition --- yellow mealworm --- processed --- shelf life --- Antheraea assamensis --- Apis cerana indica --- honey --- Nagaland --- preparation --- Samia cynthia ricini --- Vespa mandarinia --- Vespula orbata --- silkworm --- thermal processing --- antioxidant activities --- silkworm powder --- alternative food resource --- wasp larva --- Vespa velutina nigrithorax --- insect edibility --- food shortage --- acceptance --- bio-active compounds --- nutrients --- entomophagy --- novel food --- neophobia --- disgust --- edible insects --- mealworm --- Tenebrio molitor --- insects --- sensory --- model system --- insect --- food --- avoid --- attitude --- psychology --- willingness to eat --- Alcalase --- insect powders --- Acheta domesticus --- Enterococcus --- antioxidant activity --- biodiversity --- bioresource --- culture --- edible insect --- defatted powder --- mealworm oil --- characteristics --- feed supplementation --- growth performance --- nutrient composition --- emotions --- sociolinguistics --- food choice --- mirror neurons --- steamed and freeze-dried mature silkworm larval powder --- alcoholic fatty liver --- ethanol --- lipogenesis --- fatty acid oxidation --- Sprague-Dawley rats --- protein hydrolysate --- enzymatic hydrolysis --- degree of hydrolysis --- techno-functional properties --- novel proteins --- consumer analysis --- DRSA --- Amino acids --- fatty acids --- minerals --- antioxidant --- antimicrobial --- supplement --- sustainable food --- food safety --- blood coagulation --- platelet aggregation --- haemolysis --- Teleogryllus emma --- food law --- Africa --- food hygiene --- food policy --- processing --- traditional knowledge --- food/feed safety --- nutrition --- yellow mealworm --- processed --- shelf life --- Antheraea assamensis --- Apis cerana indica --- honey --- Nagaland --- preparation --- Samia cynthia ricini --- Vespa mandarinia --- Vespula orbata --- silkworm --- thermal processing --- antioxidant activities --- silkworm powder --- alternative food resource --- wasp larva --- Vespa velutina nigrithorax --- insect edibility --- food shortage --- acceptance --- bio-active compounds --- nutrients
Choose an application
There is global interest in using insects as food and feed. However, before insects can be recommended as a type of nourishment to augment more traditional and widely accepted sources of food and feed, it is essential that in-depth research involving a variety of subjects is carried out. We can learn from societies in which insects are still a component of the local diet which species are preferred and how they are prepared for human consumption. We need information on the chemical composition of edible insects and have to make sure we know what kinds of micro-organisms and pathogens they contain. Legal questions in relation to the sale and breeding of certain species need to be addressed, and medicinal aspects of edible insects and their products should be examined. How best to market selected species and make them palatable to a clientele that more than often rejects the idea of insects in the diet are further important aspects in need of study. This book deals with these questions in 19 articles written by experts from at least 20 different countries that represent a range of disciplines. As such, it is a useful tome for a wide range of food researchers.
Technology: general issues --- entomophagy --- novel food --- neophobia --- disgust --- edible insects --- mealworm --- Tenebrio molitor --- insects --- sensory --- model system --- insect --- food --- avoid --- attitude --- psychology --- willingness to eat --- Alcalase --- insect powders --- Acheta domesticus --- Enterococcus --- antioxidant activity --- biodiversity --- bioresource --- culture --- edible insect --- defatted powder --- mealworm oil --- characteristics --- feed supplementation --- growth performance --- nutrient composition --- emotions --- sociolinguistics --- food choice --- mirror neurons --- steamed and freeze-dried mature silkworm larval powder --- alcoholic fatty liver --- ethanol --- lipogenesis --- fatty acid oxidation --- Sprague-Dawley rats --- protein hydrolysate --- enzymatic hydrolysis --- degree of hydrolysis --- techno-functional properties --- novel proteins --- consumer analysis --- DRSA --- Amino acids --- fatty acids --- minerals --- antioxidant --- antimicrobial --- supplement --- sustainable food --- food safety --- blood coagulation --- platelet aggregation --- haemolysis --- Teleogryllus emma --- food law --- Africa --- food hygiene --- food policy --- processing --- traditional knowledge --- food/feed safety --- nutrition --- yellow mealworm --- processed --- shelf life --- Antheraea assamensis --- Apis cerana indica --- honey --- Nagaland --- preparation --- Samia cynthia ricini --- Vespa mandarinia --- Vespula orbata --- silkworm --- thermal processing --- antioxidant activities --- silkworm powder --- alternative food resource --- wasp larva --- Vespa velutina nigrithorax --- insect edibility --- food shortage --- acceptance --- bio-active compounds --- nutrients
Choose an application
"When a rich man in seventeenth-century South Asia enjoyed a peaceful night's sleep, he imagined himself enveloped in a velvet sleep. In the poetic imagination of the time, the fine dew of early evening was like a thin cotton cloth from Bengal, and woolen shawls of downy pashmina sent by the Mughal emperors to their trusted noblemen approximated the soft hand of the ruler on the vassal's shoulder. Textiles in seventeenth-century South Asia represented more than cloth to their makers and users. They simulated sensory experience, from natural, environmental conditions to intimate, personal touch. The Art of Cloth in Mughal India is the first art historical account of South Asian textiles from the early modern era. Author Sylvia Houghteling resurrects a truth that seventeenth-century world citizens knew, but which has been forgotten in the modern era: South Asian cloth ranked among the highest forms of art in the global hierarchy of luxury goods, and had a major impact on culture and communication. While studies abound in economic history about the global trade in Indian textiles that flourished from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, they rarely engage with the material itself and are less concerned with the artistic-and much less the literary and social-significance of the taste for cloth. This book is richly illustrated with images of textiles, garments, and paintings that are held in little-known collections and have rarely, if ever, been published. Rather than rely solely on records of European trading companies, Houghteling draws upon poetry in local languages and integrates archival research from unpublished royal Indian inventories to tell a new history of this material culture, one with a far more balanced view of its manufacture and use, as well as its purchase and trade"--
Textile fabrics, Mogul Empire. --- Art, Asian. --- Aesthetic Theory. --- Akbar. --- Aligarh Muslim University. --- Antheraea assamensis. --- Archival research. --- Art history. --- Aurangzeb. --- Backstitch. --- Bandar Abbas. --- Bengal Sultanate. --- Bequest. --- Brahmin. --- Braj Bhasha. --- Broadcloth. --- Brocade. --- Calico Museum of Textiles. --- Carpet. --- Central Asia. --- Chintz. --- Coat of arms. --- Colonial empire. --- Cotton gin. --- Crêpe (textile). --- Deccan sultanates. --- Dress code. --- Dyeing. --- Embroidery stitch. --- Eri silk. --- Finery (company). --- Floral design. --- Fritillaria imperialis. --- Gouache. --- Gujarat Sultanate. --- Gujarat. --- Hampton Court Palace. --- Handkerchief. --- Hindi literature. --- Hindu mythology. --- Hindu temple. --- Hindu. --- Imperial State. --- Indian art. --- Islamic art. --- Jahangir. --- Jean-Baptiste Tavernier. --- Knot. --- Lacquerware. --- Ladakh. --- Livery. --- Mahatma Gandhi. --- Mandapa. --- Maratha (Uttar Pradesh). --- Mechanization. --- Metropolitan Museum of Art. --- Ming dynasty. --- Mughal Empire. --- Mughal architecture. --- Mughal clothing. --- Mughal emperors. --- Mughal gardens. --- Mughal painting. --- Muslin. --- Pashmina. --- Persian carpet. --- Persian gardens. --- Quilt. --- Quilting. --- Rahul Jain. --- Rajput painting. --- Rajput. --- Royal Household. --- Safavid art. --- Safavid dynasty. --- Sanjay Subrahmanyam. --- Sanskrit literature. --- Sanskrit. --- Satin. --- Sawai (title). --- Sericulture. --- Shah Jahan. --- Shah Shuja (Mughal prince). --- Silk Road. --- Silk waste. --- Silk. --- Spinning (textiles). --- Sumptuary law. --- Textile industry. --- Textile manufacturing. --- Textile printing. --- Textile. --- Tie-dye. --- Trading company. --- Turban. --- Velvet. --- Victoria and Albert Museum. --- Visual arts. --- Vizier. --- Woolen. --- Woven fabric. --- Yale University Art Gallery. --- Textile fabrics, Mughal Empire.
Listing 1 - 7 of 7 |
Sort by
|