“This textbook continues to highlight the lack of even basic veterinary information for many species and will hopefully inspire continued research and clinically relevant publications regarding these animals.” (Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 15 June 2012)
Awarded the 2012 Textbook Excellence Award by the Textbook and Academic Author Association. http://www.taaonline.net/notes/index.html#3notes
Laboratory Animal Practitioner says of the first edition: "The real joy of this publication lies in the realization of a nascent specialty in veterinary medicine and our ever expanding understanding of the bio-world that is precious and critical to the earth's survival.
"Of course not every known invertebrate phyla and class are clinically represented in the text, but those not reviewed are listed in the introduction and the emphasis is placed on those species harvested for food, captivity, or for research.
"This is the first edition of the most comprehensive resource on invertebrate animal medicine. The author and collaborators are to be congratulated for bringing this start of the art effort to fruition in an organized, delightful to read format. This text should be considered as a valuable addition to the lab animal reference library."
Exotic DVM says: "This is the first veterinary textbook devoted exclusively to an in-depth review of aquatic and terrestrial invertebrate medicine.
"The chapters are well organized and easy to read. There are good reviews of basic anatomy and husbandry and the text centralizes reference in one location for interested readers to pursue more in-depth research. The chapter authors have organized information in a format that will be familiar to veterinarians and emphasize disease conditions where these are known. There is a good review of diagnostic techniques and sample handling at the end. This is an excellent starting place for clinicians that want to expand their invertebrate medicine practice.
"If you are interested in working with these species the text offers a great starting point. It will hopefully inspire others to contribute to this growing area of veterinary medicine.
The VIN Store (www.vin.com) tells readers: "This book will be of great interest to veterinarians with an involvement in fish medicine, as the book also deals with jellyfish, sea urchins, anemones, corals, mollusks, starfish, crayfish, lobsters, shrimp, crabs, hermit crabs, and many more.
"The popularity of spider and scorpions will make this book a necessity for veterinarians treating those species.
"Clinicians in laboratory animal medicine will find this book an irreplaceable source of information.
"Chapters are well illustrated, although I would have liked to have seen many more of the photos in color. Perhaps the originals were in black and white, but if Blackwell intends to do a second edition, it should think about replacing the b/w photos with color ones.
"The lists of common names, drugs/therapeutic agents, common parasites of invertebrate species, legislation restrictions, and the other books and papers on invertebrates listed in the hundreds of references make this a valuable reference in itself.
"The overall compilation of invertebrate medicine makes this probably the premier text on the subject. Each chapter seems to thoroughly cover its topic, including natural history, anatomy, physiology, environmental issues, preventative medicine, anesthesia, surgery, treatment protocols, and formularies.
"Greg Lewbart did an excellent job of pulling this text together. I would recommend having a copy in the clinic library."
Invertebrates make up over 95 percent of the Earth's animal species. For many years, invertebrates have been kept as pets, displayed in aquariums and zoos, used for research and consumed. Despite the wide range of uses and the environmental and economic importance of these species, the veterinary profession has paid relatively little attention to this huge part of the animal kingdom.
Invertebrate Medicine is the single most comprehensive resource available today on invertebrate animal medicine. It is not meant to be a definitive natural history of invertebrates, but rather it provides basic biology as well as state-of-the-science information pertaining to medicine and clinical conditions. Coverage includes sponges, jellyfish, anemones, corals, snails, squids, octopuses, clams, oysters, horseshoe crabs, spiders, scorpions, crabs, crayfish, lobsters, shrimp, hermit crabs, centipedes, millipedes, insects, starfish, sea urchins, and dozens more. Although the taxonomic scope is broad, emphasis is on invertebrates harvested for food or maintained in captivity.