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Auburn University entomologist Gary Mullen, often the media’s
go-to man for information on disease-transmitting insects, is
garnering high praises from academia for Medical and Veterinary
Entomology, his debut in the book-publishing world.
The comprehensive 597-page tome
clearly and completely covers 22 groups of insect and arachnid
(e.g., spiders, mites and ticks) vectors that can adversely
affect the health of humans |
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and/or animals by transmitting
illnesses. Each chapter gives an overview of the taxonomy, biology
and ecology of a particular group, followed by a section on
its medical-veterinary importance, another on control and prevention
and another that lists references and suggestions for further
reading. Reviews in professional
journals have hailed the book as “without a doubt the
finest available in English on the subject today,” as
“an excellent book, probably the best text to comprehensively
cover both medical and veterinary entomology” and as “a
‘must have’ acquisition for every biology library.”
Mullen says the volume, written
as a textbook for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students,
was borne out of necessity.
“The textbook that nearly all college medical and veterinary
entomology classes had been using for decades was first published
in 1915,” Mullen explains. “It had been through
seven revisions, but the last one of those had been in 1979—and
that was before many people had heard of diseases such as West
Nile virus and Lyme disease.”
Mullen took on the task of writing a new book in 1993. He recruited
Georgia State University entomologist Lance Durden to serve
as co-editor of the book and invited as contributing authors
23 other noted U.S. entomologists. In addition to organizing
and editing the volume, Mullen and Durden wrote or helped write
10 of the 24 chapters. Medical
and Veterinary Entomology, first published in September 2002
by Academic Press, has quickly made its way into college classrooms
around the country, a fact that Mullen discovered somewhat by
accident. “I went to
order books last summer for my fall (2003) semester class and
was told it was out of stock, and that I’d have to wait
for the second printing,” Mullen says.
The books arrived shortly after classes began and, for the record,
received favorable reviews from Mullen’s students.
While the book is billed as a
textbook, its reader-friendliness makes it valuable to a broader
audience, including physicians, veterinarians, public-health
officials and the lay public.
Medical and Veterinary Entomology retails for $99.95 and can
be ordered from a variety of sources online.
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