This book provides a general background on biodiversity and the study of chemical ecology before moving into specific chemical examples of insect defenses and microbial communication. It finishes with first-hand accounts of the trials and tribulations of a canopy biology pioneer and a rainforest research novice, while assessing the state of modern tropical research, its importance to humanity, and the ecological, political, and ethical issues that need to be tackled in order to move the field forward.
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"This recent work in Springer's 'Signaling and Communication in Plants' series originated with an expedition of laboratory scientists to Peru's Tambopata National Reserve. ... The result is a mixture of general review articles together with some firsthand descriptions of the pleasures and perils of tropical research. ... should be required reading for graduate students in tropical biology. ... Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and researchers/faculty." (B. E. Fleury, Choice, Vol. 49 (6), February, 2012)