Dave Goulson Libros Populares
Dave Goulson Biografía y Hechos
La infección por derrame, también conocida como derrame de patógenos y evento de derrame, ocurre cuando una población de reservorios con una alta prevalencia de patógenos entra en contacto con una nueva población de huéspedes. El patógeno se transmite desde la población del reservorio y puede o no transmitirse dentro de la población huésped.[1] Zoonosis indirectas El derrame es un evento común. De hecho, más de dos tercios de los virus humanos son zoonóticos, es decir, de origen no humano.[2] La mayoría de los eventos de derrame dan como resultado casos autolimitados sin transmisión adicional de humano a humano, como ocurre, por ejemplo, con la rabia, el ántrax, la histoplasmosis o la hidatidosis. Los humanos pueden transmitir otros patógenos zoonóticos para producir casos secundarios e incluso establecer cadenas limitadas de transmisión. Algunos ejemplos son los filovirus Ebola y Marburg, los coronavirus MERS y SARS o algunos virus de la gripe aviar. Finalmente, algunos pocos casos de propagación pueden dar como resultado la adaptación final del microbio a los humanos, que se convirtieron en un nuevo reservorio estable, como ocurrió con el virus del VIH que generó la pandemia del SIDA. De hecho, la mayoría de los patógenos que actualmente son exclusivos de los humanos probablemente fueron transmitidos por otros animales en algún momento del pasado.[3] Si el historial de adaptación mutua es lo suficientemente largo, se pueden establecer asociaciones permanentes entre el huésped y el microbio, lo que provoca una evolución conjunta e incluso la integración permanente del genoma del microbio en el genoma humano, como es el caso de los virus endógenos. Cuanto más cerca estén las dos especies en términos filogenéticos, más fácil será para los microbios superar la barrera biológica para producir efectos secundarios exitosos. Por esta razón, otros mamíferos son la principal fuente de agentes zoonóticos para los humanos.[cita requerida] La propagación zoonótica ha aumentado en los últimos 50 años, principalmente debido al impacto ambiental de la agricultura, que promueve la deforestación, el cambio del hábitat de la vida silvestre y los impactos del aumento del uso de la tierra.[4] Derrames intraespecie Los abejorros criados comercialmente, utilizados para polinizar invernaderos, pueden ser reservorios de varios parásitos para los polinizadores, incluidos los protozoos Crithidia bombi y Apicystis bombi,[5] los hongos microsporidios Nosema bombi y Nosema ceranae,[6] así como otros virus, como el virus del ala deformada y los ácaros traqueales Locustacarus buchneri. Las abejas comerciales que escapan del ambiente de invernadero pueden infectar a las poblaciones de abejas silvestres. La infección puede ser a través de interacciones directas entre las abejas manejadas y silvestres o mediante el uso compartido de flores y la contaminación.[7][8] Un estudio encontró que la mitad de todas las abejas silvestres encontradas cerca de los invernaderos estaban infectadas con C. bombi. Las tasas y la incidencia de infección disminuyen dramáticamente cuanto más lejos de los invernaderos se encuentran las abejas silvestres.[9][10] Los casos de contagio entre abejorros están bien documentados en todo el mundo, particularmente en Japón, América del Norte y el Reino Unido.[11][12] Véase también Brote epidémico Epidemia SARS-CoV-2 Referencias Enlaces externos . Descubre los libros populares de Dave Goulson. Encuentra los 100 libros más populares de Dave Goulson
.Best Seller Dave Goulson Libros de 2024
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The Climate Book
Greta ThunbergA Times, Financial Times, Observer and Nature Book of the Year‘Spectacular ... this work is planetary in scale’ Independent‘It offers real, rich hope’ Observer, Books of the YearWe...
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The Book of Deadly Animals
Gordon GriceConsider, if you can, the case of Jacob Fowler, who heard what he thought was the sound of his own skull cracking between the jaws of a grizzly bear only to discover that it was. ...
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The Bee Garden
Maureen LittleBees play a vital and irreplaceable role in pollinating our flowers, fruits and vegetables. The more bees in your garden the healthier, more productive and more pleasant a place it...
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Say Goodbye to the Cuckoo
Michael McCarthyIf we could see it as a whole, if they all arrived in a single flock, say, we would be truly amazed: sixteen million birds. Swallows, martins, swifts, warblers, wagtails, wheatears...
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Field Notes from the Edge
Paul Evans‘A profoundly satisfying read’ Financial TimesIn Field Notes from the Edge, the acclaimed writer of the Guardian's 'Country Diary', Paul Evans, takes us on a journey through the in...
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In Trouble Again
Redmond O'HanlonRedmond O'Hanlon found few experienced adventurers willing to accompany him on his fourmonth trip up the Orinoco river and across the Amazon Basin. He wondered why... Was it perhap...
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Ground Work
Tim DeeThe essential and defining new collection of the best British nature writing‘Tim Dee has brought together a wonderous array of talent for this lifeaffirming, often magical antholog...
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Plant Trees, Sow Seeds, Save The Bees
Nicola BradbearDiscover the wonder of bees (and other stripey insects) and how to help them survive. In this little book of bees, wasps, hoverflies and more, discover the easy ways to make your g...
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Johnny Kingdom's West Country Tales
Johnny KingdomThere are few people better acquainted with the West Country than Johnny Kingdom. His knowledge of local wildlife is second to none, but he's also a fount of knowledge when it come...
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The Little Gentleman
Philippa PearceWhen Bet is first asked to go into the meadow and read a passage aloud from a book apparently to noone she wonders why. But then she realises that her audience is a little mole, ...
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Catwatching
Desmond MorrisThe personality of the cat is a fascinating mixture of affection, domesticity and active independence. You may think you know your cat as he purrs in your lap, but come across your...
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Shades Of Green
Paul WaddingtonFew of us have what it takes to go 'all the way' on the green scale. Yet as fears about the food chain, climate change, plummeting biodiversity and the sustainability of our curren...
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Catlore
Desmond MorrisDesmond Morris considers the cat in myth and history, and answers questions he received from cat owners after the publication of the internationally bestselling Catwatching.
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Birds as Individuals
Len HowardEnter the secret lives of Britain's ordinary garden birds and the brilliant, unconventional woman who opened her doors to them.In the late 1930s, Len Howard packed up her life in L...
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Four Quarters Of Light
Brian KeenanBrian Keenan's fascination with Alaska began as a small boy while reading Jack London's wondrous Call of the Wild. With a head full of questions about its inspiring landscape and a...
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Veterinary Notes For Cat Owners
Jean Turner & Trevor TurnerA comprehensive and accessible manual of feline medicine and surgery, it explains the symptoms and treatment of every disease or injury that a cat owner is likely to encounter. Wri...
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A Wiltshire Diary
Francis KilvertFrancis Kilvert's diary shows a compassionate and thoughtful delight in the people and beautiful surroundings of the English countryside. With good cheer he records his loves (amon...
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The River at the Centre of the World
Simon WinchesterSimon Winchester undertakes a journey from the mouth of the Yangste River to its source. This is the story of the river, it's cities and their people, built around the author's own...
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A Practical Manual of Beekeeping
David CrampA fascinating hobby; a remunerative business; or a globetrotting career? Which type of beekeeper do you want to be? It is entirely up to you: beekeeping can provide it all.Beekeepi...
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The Old Man and the Sand Eel
Will Millard'A wonderfully fluent account of how the strange magic of water and the beings that inhabit it can enchant and intoxicate' Chris YatesGrowing up on the Cambridgeshire Fens, Will Mi...
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The Cuckoo's Parting Cry
Anthea HalliwellFor Fidgie, living in prewar Wales, the long school holiday stretched blissfully ahead. With her new friend Chaz as companion for idyllic summer days by the sea, she was able frequ...
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The Beekeeper's Field Guide
David CrampThis guide is a diagnostic tool and an aide memoire for the hobbyist and for the professional beekeeper, who may know what to do but will at times need the information close to han...
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Silent Spring
Rachel CarsonNow recognized as one of the most influential books of the twentieth century, Silent Spring exposed the destruction of wildlife through the widespread use of pesticides 'Rachel C...
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Birds of Selborne
Gilbert WhiteThe letters of the eminent naturalist Gilbert White are full of precise, unaffected and delightful observations of the wildlife of his beloved village of Selborne, describing the h...
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In the Heart of the Amazon Forest
Henry Walter BatesOne of the most impressive of all Victorian scientists but also a marvellous writer, Bates' (18251892) account of his years in the upper reaches of the Amazon is almost too good to...
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Sea Change
Richard GirlingWe have a special relationship with the sea. It is the single most powerful driver of our economy, our lifestyle and our politics. It affects what we eat, how we use the land, how ...
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Summary of Dave Goulson's Silent Earth
Slingshot BooksExcerpt From Summary of Dave Goulson's Silent Earth #1 Insects are an important part of our ecosystem, and yet, most of us have grown up being taught to fear and loath them. ...
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Connemara
Tim RobinsonThe first volume in Tim Robinson's phenomenal Connemara Trilogy which Robert Macfarlane has called 'One of the most remarkable nonfiction projects undertaken in English'. In its l...
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Jungle
Patrick Roberts'A bold, ambitious and truly wonderful history of the world' Peter Wohlleben, author of The Hidden Life of Trees'A fascinating story and a crucial revision of the momentous importa...
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Domestic Manners of the Americans
Fanny TrollopeWhen Fanny Trollope set sail for America in 1827 with hopes of joining a Utopian community of emancipated slaves, she took with her three of her children and a young French artist,...
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Empire of Ants
Olaf Fritsche & Susanne Foitzik'Beautifully written and filled with mindboggling wonders' Dave Goulson, author of A Sting in the Tale'Thrilling, compellingly readable and paradigmshattering' Charles Foster, au...
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Wild Fell
Lee Schofield'I found myself turning the pages with an inward leap of joy' Isabella TreeWINNER of the Richard Jefferies Award for Nature WritingShortlisted for the James Cropper Wainwright Pri...
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Guide to Greece
PausaniasWritten in the second century AD by a Greek traveller for a predominantly Roman audience, Pausanias' Guide to Greece is an extraordinarily literate and wellinformed guidebook. A st...
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A Life in Nature
Marc HamerA captivating, lifeaffirming memoir of a life in nature that celebrates finding wonder in our world. 'A wonderful book... It has taught me a lot. I feel great love for it' MAX PORT...
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How to Catch a Mole
Marc HamerLonglisted for the Wainwright Book Prize 2019A calming, lifeaffirming book about the British countryside, the cycle of nature, solitude and contentment, by a brilliant new nature w...
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A Honeybee Heart Has Five Openings
Helen Jukes'This book has found a special place in my heart. It’s as strange, beautiful and unexpected, as precise and exquisite in its movings, as bees in a hive. I loved it' ...
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Why Pandas Do Handstands...
Augustus BrownSouth American rats settle arguments by boxing. Tuna fish sunbathe and herring communicate with each other by breaking wind. Llamas hum to each other, elephants impersonate traffic...
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Our Place
Mark Cocker'Essential reading for anybody who cares about the future’ Henry Marsh, New Statesman Books of the YearA radical examination of Britain's relationship with the land by one of our ...
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Turning the Boat for Home
Richard Mabey'One of our greatest nature writers' GuardianFor over fifty years, Richard Mabey has been a pioneering voice in modern nature writing. This book collects pieces across his rich car...