The Making of a Fly: The Genetics of Animal Design
Understanding how a multicelluar animal develops from a single cell (the fertilized egg) poses one of the greatest challenges in biology today. Development from egg to adult involves the sequential expression of virtually the whole of an organisms genetic instructions both in the mother as she lays down developmental cues in the egg, and in the embryo itself. Most of our present information on the role of genes in development comes from the invertebrate fruit fly, Drosophila. The two authors of this text (amongst the foremost authorities in the world) follow the developmental process from fertilization through the primitive structural development of the body plan of the fly after cleavage into the differentiation of the variety of tissues, organ and body parts that together define the fly. The developmental processes are fully explained throughout the text in the modern language of molecular biology and genetics.
Author: Peter A. Lawrence
Publisher: Blackwell Science
Extra Details: Pictorial Card Covers 6 x 9 inches tall.240 Pages.Illustrated.NEW.
product is in categories:
- Natural History -> Diptera
- Natural History -> Other Insects/Invertebrates
- Natural History -> Ecology & Conservation
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