General and Comparative Endocrinology 1st Edition
General and Comparative Endocrinology 1st Edition by A.M. Schreiber is an authoritative, accessible exploration of hormonal systems across species—designed to captivate researchers, graduate students, clinicians, and anyone working in physiology, ecology, or veterinary science.
Begin with a clear view of endocrine principles as they operate from invertebrates to mammals. Schreiber synthesizes core mechanisms—hormone synthesis, receptor signaling, feedback regulation—and frames them within an evolutionary and comparative context, making complex concepts approachable without sacrificing scientific rigor. The result is a textbook that bridges laboratory research and real-world application across global classrooms and research institutes.
Readers will find lucid explanations, comparative case studies, and thoughtful analysis of endocrine adaptations that illuminate how environment, development, and phylogeny shape hormonal function. This 1st Edition emphasizes integrative thinking: connecting molecular pathways to organismal behavior, population-level effects, and implications for human and animal health. Practical for coursework and indispensable for reference, it supports curriculum needs from molecular endocrinology to ecological endocrinology.
Why this edition stands out: it balances depth and clarity, offering a roadmap for interpreting endocrine data across taxa and for applying comparative approaches in conservation, medicine, and laboratory science. Professionals will appreciate the synthesis of current concepts; students will benefit from structured explanations that build expertise efficiently.
For anyone seeking a comprehensive, well-organized guide to endocrine biology worldwide, General and Comparative Endocrinology 1st Edition by A.M. Schreiber is a definitive choice. Enhance your bookshelf and your understanding—order your copy today to bring comparative endocrine insight to your research, teaching, or clinical practice.
Note: eBooks do not include supplementary materials such as CDs, access codes, etc.


