Book Review: Neuron Properties in Insects
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Date
Authors
Horridge, George Adrian
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Abstract
We are waiting for a second volume
of this work because this beautifully
produced volume lays all the ground-
work but covers almost none of the
exciting areas of recent discovery in
insect neurobiology. There is an in-
comparable account of the cellular
structure of the nervous system, espe-
cially of glia and ultrastructure, by
Nancy Lane, followed by careful and
most useful accounts of axonal con-
duction and central synaptic transmis-
sion in insects by Yves Pichon and
Jean-Jacques Callec. The chapter by
Treherne on the environment and func-
tion of nerve cells shows exemplary
moderation in both conclusions and
volume. These, and the section on neu-
romuscular transmission by Peter
Usherwood, are very solid, bread-and-
butter productions by up-and-coming
experts. That is refreshing: they are
not reiterations of battle cries by old
campaigners, but useful summaries by
middle-of-the-road researchers who are
with it. That is the kind of summary
that is handy to have on the shelf.
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Source
Science
Type
Book Title
Insect Neurobiology
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DOI
Restricted until
2037-12-31
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