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Intro; Preface; Contents; Abbreviations and Glossary; Chapter 1: Introduction
'You Are What You Eat'; Appendix; Technical Note; References; Chapter 2: Diets and Digestive Tracts
'Your Food Determines Your Intestine'; 2.1 Digestive Tract; 2.2 Digestion; 2.2.1 Protein Digestion; 2.2.2 Lipid Digestion; 2.2.3 Carbohydrate Digestion; 2.3 Ontogenesis and the Intestine; 2.3.1 Fishes; 2.3.2 Invertebrates; 2.3.2.1 Echinoderms; 2.3.2.2 Crustaceans; 2.4 Herbivory, a Disadvantageous Acquization Strategy?; 2.4.1 Fishes; 2.4.2 Invertebrates; 2.5 Starvation and Gut Morphology.

2.6 Trophic Positions: An Omnivores' Dilemma?2.7 Concluding Remarks; References; Chapter 3: The Intestinal Microbiota
'Your Eating Feeds a Plethora of Guests' and 'This Plethora of Guests Determines Who You Are and How Well You Do'; 3.1 Invertebrates; 3.1.1 Hydrozoa; 3.1.2 Mollusks; 3.1.3 Echinoderms; 3.1.4 Crustaceans; 3.2 Fishes; 3.2.1 Microbiome Ontogenesis; 3.2.2 Does a Core Microbiome Exist?; 3.2.2.1 Microbiome and Starvation; 3.2.2.2 Host's Impact on Microbiota; 3.2.2.3 Environmental Impact on Microbiota; 3.2.2.4 Diet; 3.2.3 Zebrafish as Witness of Microbiome Development.

3.2.4 Control Functions by Gut Microbiota3.2.4.1 Circadian Clock; 3.2.4.2 Behavior; 3.2.4.3 Development and Health; 3.3 Concluding Remarks; References; Chapter 4: Dietary Restriction, Starvation, Compensatory Growth
'Short-Term Fasting Does Not Kill You: It Can Make You Stronger'; 4.1 Indicators of Starvation; 4.2 Starvation Tolerance and Starvation Impact; 4.2.1 Cnidarians; 4.2.2 Rotifers; 4.2.3 Mollusks; 4.2.4 Echinoderms; 4.2.5 Crustaceans; 4.2.5.1 Ostracods; 4.2.5.2 Cladocerans; 4.2.5.3 Copepods; 4.2.5.4 Amphipods and Isopods; 4.2.5.5 Euphausiids; 4.2.5.6 Decapods; 4.2.6 Fishes.

4.2.6.1 Livebearers4.2.6.2 Cavefish; 4.2.6.3 Killifishes; 4.2.7 Summary of Starvation Effects; 4.2.8 Starvation: Point-of-no-Return; 4.3 Compensatory Growth; 4.3.1 Invertebrates; 4.3.1.1 Mollusks; 4.3.1.2 Crustaceans; 4.3.1.3 Insects; 4.3.2 Fishes; 4.3.2.1 Overcompensatory Growth; 4.3.2.2 Costs of Compensatory Growth; 4.4 Compensatory Growth in Populations; 4.5 Regulation of Compensatory Growth; 4.5.1 Appetite-Regulating Hormones; 4.5.2 Neuropeptides; 4.5.3 Transcription of Growth Regulators; 4.5.3.1 Information from Transgenic Animals; 4.6 Concluding remarks; References.

Chapter 5: Chrononutrition
'The Clock Makes Good Food'5.1 How Does a Biological Clock Work?; 5.1.1 Fishes; 5.1.2 Invertebrates; 5.2 Food and Circadian Gene Transcription; 5.2.1 Major Nutrients; 5.2.2 Xenobiotic or Antinutritional Compounds; 5.3 Concluding Remarks; References; Chapter 6: Transgenerational Effects
'Your Offspring Will Become What You Eat'; 6.1 Parental Effects; 6.1.1 Maternal Effects; 6.1.1.1 Invertebrates; 6.1.1.2 Fishes; Egg and Embryo Quality; Transgenerational Metabolic Programming; Offspring Immunity and Fecundity; 6.1.2 Paternal Effects; 6.1.2.1 Male Pregnancy.

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