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Showing 1 - 8 of 8 matches in All Departments
Volume 44 is an eclectic volume with timely reviews on invertebrate
zooplankton growth rates and movements on marine fish and decapod
crustaceans.
Volume 39 is a standard volume with reviews on three different topics: the effect of the Exxon Valdez oil spill on the Alaskan ecosystem, the reproduction and development of peracarida (abundant marine crustaceans), and remote sensing of the global light-fishing fleet.
Advances in Marine Biology has always offered marine biologists
in-depth and up-to-date reviews on a variety of topics. As well as
many volumes that provide a selection of important topics, the
series also includes thematic volumes that examine a particular
field in detail. Two recent thematic volumes, one on ocean
biogeography and another on the biology of calanoid copepods,
provide comprehensive reviews of these topics and include
previously unpublished data.
This timely volume provides a comprehensive account of the natural history of the organisms associated with the deep-sea floor and examines their relationship with this inhospitable environment--perhaps the most remote and least accessible location on the planet. The authors begin by describing the physical and chemical nature of the deep-sea floor and the methods used to collect and study its fauna. Then they discuss the ecology of the deep sea by exploring spatial patterns, diversity, biomass, vertical zonation, and large-scale distribution of organisms. Subsequent chapters review current knowledge of feeding, respiration, reproduction, and growth processes in these communities. The unique fauna of hypothermal vents and seeps are considered separately. Finally, there is a pertinent discussion of human exploitation of deep-sea resources and potential use of this environment for waste disposal.
This new volume of Advances in Marine Biology contains reviews on a
wide range of important subjects such as: long-term oceanographic
and ecological research in the western English Channel; marine
biofouling on fish farms and its remediation; interactions between
behaviour and physical forcing in the control of horizontal
transport of decapod crustacean larvae; comparison of marine
copepod outfluxes: nature, rate, fate and role in the carbon and
nitrogen cycles.
Volume 42 is a thematic volume with reviews on the biology of four
major molluscs. Advances in Marine Biology was first published in
1963. Now edited by A.J. Southward (Marine Biological Association,
UK), P.A. Tyler (Southampton Oceanography Association, UK), C.M.
Young (Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution, USA) and L.A.
Fuiman (University of Texas, USA), the serial publishes in-depth
and up-to-date reviews on a wide range of topics which will appeal
to postgraduates and researchers in marine biology, fisheries
science, ecology, zoology, oceanography. Eclectic volumes in the
series are supplemented by thematic volumes on such topics as "The
Biology of Calanoid Copepods."
Volume 40 is a standard volume with reviews on three wide-ranging topics: parasites found on the Atlantic cod; the biology of mangrove trees and mangrove swamp ecosystems; and structural, histochemical, and functional aspects of the epidermis (skin/outside layer) of fishes.
This volume of Advances in Marine Biology contains four eclectic
reviews on topics ranging from marine mollusc mucus to deep-sea
hydrothermal vent fauna.
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