A classic gets a new coauthor and a new approach: Developmental Biology, Eleventh Edition, keeps the excellent writing, accuracy, and enthusiasm of the Gilbert Developmental Biology book, streamlines it, adds innovative electronic supplements, and creates a new textbook for those teaching Developmental Biology to a new generation. Several new modes of teaching are employed in the new Gilbert and Barresi textbook. The videos explaining development--as well as those from Mary Tyler's Vade Mecum--are referenced throughout the book, and several other valuable new elements have been added. Additional updates include: * An increased emphasis on stem cells, which are covered extensively and early in the book. * Sex determination and gametogenesis, instead of being near the end of the volume, are up front, prior to fertilization. * Greatly expanded coverage of neural development, comprising a unit unto itself. * Coverage of new experiments on morphogenesis and differentiation, as well as new techniques such as CRISPR. For Students Companion Website Significantly enhanced for the eleventh edition, and referenced throughout the textbook, the Developmental Biology Companion Website provides students with a range of engaging resources, in the following categories: * NEW Dev Tutorials: Professionally produced video tutorials, presented by the textbook's authors, reinforces key concepts. * NEW Watch Development: Putting concepts into action, these informative videos show real-life developmental biology processes. * Web Topics: These extensive topics provide more information for advanced students, historical, philosophical, and ethical perspectives on issues in developmental biology, and links to additional online resources. * NEW Scientists Speak: In these question-and-answer interviews, developmental biology topics are explored by leading experts in the field. * Plus the full bibliography of literature cited in the textbook (most linked to their PubMed citations). DevBio Laboratory: Vade Mecum3 Included with each new copy of the textbook, Vade Mecum3 is an interactive website that helps students understand the organisms discussed in the course, and prepare them for the lab. The site includes videos of developmental processes and laboratory techniques, and has chapters on the following organisms: slime mold (Dictyostelium discoideum), planarian, sea urchin, fruit fly (Drosophila), chick, and amphibian. For Instructors Instructor's Resource Library (available to qualified adopters) The Developmental Biology, Eleventh Edition, Instructor's Resource Library includes the following resources: * NEW Developing Questions: Answers, references, and recommendations for further reading are provided so that you and your students can explore the Developing Questions that are posed throughout each chapter. * Textbook Figures & Tables: All of the textbook's figures, photos, and tables are provided both in JPEG (high- and low-resolution) and PowerPoint formats. All images have been optimized for excellent legibility when projected in the classroom. * Video Collection: Includes video segments depicting a wide range of developmental processes, plus segments from DevBio Laboratory: Vade Mecum3, and Differential Experessions2. * Vade Mecum3 PowerPoints: Chick serial sections and whole mounts, provided in both labeled and unlabeled versions, for use in creating quizzes, exams, or in-class exercises. * NEW Case Studies in Dev Bio: This new collection of case study problems accompanies the Dev Tutorials and provides instructors with ready-to-use in-class active learning exercises. The case studies foster deep learning in developmental biology by providing students an opportunity to apply course content to the critical analysis of data, to generate hypotheses, and to solve novel problems in the field. Each case study includes a PowerPoint presentation and a student handout with accompanying questions. * Developmental Biology: A Guide for Experimental Study, Third Edition, by Mary S. Tyler: The complete lab manual, in PDF format.
Format:Hardcover
Language:English
ISBN:1605354708
ISBN13:9781605354705
Release Date:May 2016
Publisher:Sinauer Associates Is an Imprint of Oxford Un
good quality, brand new book with VCD fast delivery, also cost me much less than buying from some other book stores.
If Knowledge is Your Idea of Fun...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
... you might be interested in this massive college textbook in developmental biology, chiefly addressing cell processes. It does presuppose a reasonable knowledge of general biology and chemistry, but given that starting point, it's quite lucid in its explanations, the visual aids are very clear and supportive of the text, and the whole volume progresses well from what you know toward what you need to know next. Most of the negative reviews here focus on what the book doesn't contain; I'm sure the reviewers had their points, in that they were probably using the book for immediate practical purposes. I've been pouring through it purely for fun. It's taken me about two years to absorb enough of it to be ready for the test. The good news is that, ha ha, I don't take tests any more! This is the 1997 Fifth Edition. I'm well aware that the current state of the field of molecular biology is already beyond the contents of this textbook, but as far as I can tell from my armchair, everything you might want to learn about current research will require the kind of fundamentals presented in this text. Read it, and then you'll be ready for phosphorescent color-coding of your own mouse neurons!
Comprehensive, interesting and well illustrated
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
With a clear prose and a CD with links to all source material, this book is a great source for any biologist interested in the development of organisms, and how it was all figured out.
Outstanding in-depth intro to developmental biology
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
I think Scott Gilbert has done an absolutely stupendous job in writing this clearly written, beautifully illustrated and up-to-date exposition of developmental biology. The concluding chapter on evolutionary developmental biology is brief but very well done. The websites associated with the book and the CD provide much additional information. Definitely the premier textbook in this area. Don't tackle it without having taken at least a course in cell biology, and some exposure to biochemistry and genetics would be helpful as well. The last time I read a dev bio textbook was when I was in college 30 years ago; how things have changed!
Good overview of developmental biology
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Well written and illustrated reference on animal development. This book covers basic principles of developmental biology, and then considers transcriptional regulation, control of development by RNA processing and translational regulation. Cell specification and cellular interactions are then considered. The last chapter considers developmental mechanisms in evolution.
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