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Responsive image
Vendor
Codice edizioni srl
ISBN
9788875784409

Birds do it, bees do it, even educated fleas do it

by Lisa Signorile

Animals and sex

Passing on one’s genes has always been the greatest (often unconscious) aspiration of every living being. Besides, it could not be otherwise: in the last half billion years, those that have not dedicated their energies to reproduction have simply become extinct. We are the descendants of those who wanted to hand down their genes. Evolution has perfected this tendency and has made it an inexorable urge as well as an (almost) perfect machine, developing imaginative stratagems in the behaviour and anatomy of animals. With the grace, scientific rigour and humour we became used to with L’orologiaio miope (The short-sighted watchmaker), Lisa Signorile gives us a round-up of the strangest reproductive mechanisms developed by fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds… and naturally mammals.

After her studies in biology, Lisa Signorile moved to Eng- land, where she took a PhD in population genetics, Since 2007 she has had a very popular blog, L’orologiaio miope, on which the book of the same title published by Codice Edizioni is based. Since 2012, she has written for “National Geographic Italia”, and in 2013 she published Il viaggio e la necessità for Scienza Express.

pp. 176

Available product forms

Paperback / softback

Paperback / softback

Published by Codice edizioni srl

Main content page count: 176 Pages

ISBN: 9788875784409

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