TY - BOOK AU - Grenfell,B.T. AU - Dobson,Andrew P. TI - Ecology of infectious diseases in natural populations T2 - Publications of the Newton Institute SN - 9780511629396 (ebook) AV - QR100 .E32 1995 U1 - 574.2/3 20 PY - 1995/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Microbial ecology KW - Congresses KW - Communicable diseases KW - Epidemiology N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015); Impact of Infectious Diseases on Wild Animal Populations: a Review / F.M.D. Gulland -- Microparasites: Observed Patterns / A.P. Dobson and P.J. Hudson -- Mathematical Models for Microparasites of Wildlife / J.A.P. Heesterbeek and M.G. Roberts -- Microparasite Group Report / Edited by C. Dye -- Macroparasites: Observed Patterns / P.J. Hudson and A.P. Dobson -- Mathematical Models for Macroparasites of Wildlife / M.G. Roberts, G. Smith and B.T. Grenfell -- Macroparasite Group Report / Edited by G. Smith -- Critical Evaluation of Wildlife Disease Models / N.D. Barlow -- Nonlinearities in the Dynamics of Indirectly-Transmitted Infections (or, does having a Vector make a Difference?) / C. Dye and B.G. Williams -- Model Frameworks for Plant-Pathogen Interactions / J. Swinton and R.M. Anderson -- The Dynamics of Insect-Pathogen Interactions / C.J. Briggs, R.S. Hails, N.D. Barlow and H.C.J. Godfray -- Environmental Influences on Host Immunity / S. Lloyd N2 - This is a major synthesis of the theory and empirical knowledge about the ecology and epidemiology of infectious diseases in natural, unmanaged, animal and plant populations. Throughout the book a dialogue is developed between the patterns observed in empirical studies of disease in natural populations and the mathematical models used to dissect and examine the observed epidemiological patterns. The book arose from a symposium at the Newton Institute at Cambridge University. It is divided into a number of reviews by experts in various fields and four group reports: two of these synthesize important issues relating to the dynamics of microparasites and macroparasites, while the others discuss spatial patterns in disease dynamics and the evolutionary biology of parasites, pathogens and their hosts UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511629396 ER -