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Technological improvements have greatly increased the ability of
marine scientists to collect and analyze data over large spatial
scales, and the resultant insights attainable from interpreting
those data vastly increase understanding of poplation dynamics,
evolution and biogeography. "Marine Metapopulations " provides a
synthesis of existing information and understanding, and frames the
most important future directions and issues.
* First book to systematically apply metapopulation theory directly
to marine systems
*Contributions from leading international ecologists and fisheries
biologists
*Perspectives on a broad array of marine organisms and ecosystems,
from coastal estuaries to shallow reefs to deep-sea hydrothermal
vents
*Critical science for improved management of marine resources
*Paves the way for future research on large-scale spatial ecology
of marine systems
Coral Reef Fishes is the successor of "The Ecology of Fishes on
Coral Reefs." This new edition includes provocative reviews
covering the major areas of reef fish ecology. Concerns about the
future health of coral reefs, and recognition that reefs and their
fishes are economically important components of the coastal oceans
of many tropical nations, have led to enormous growth in research
directed at reef fishes. Coral Reef Fishes is much more than a
simple revision of the earlier volume; it is a companion that
supports and extends the earlier work. The included syntheses
provide readers with the current highlights in this exciting
science.
Key Features
* An up-to-date review of key research areas in reef fish ecology,
with a bibliography including hundreds of citations, most from the
last decade
* Authoritative, up-to-date, provocative chapters written to
suggest future research priorities
* An important companion and successor to "The Ecology of Fishes on
Coral Reefs"
* Includes discussions of regulation of fish populations, dispersal
or site fidelity of larval reef fishes, sensory and motor
capabilities of reef fish larvae, and complexities of management of
reef species and communities
An eye-opening introduction to the complexity, wonder, and vital
roles of coral reefs "Part memoir, part popular science, part call
to action on climate change, the book makes a compelling case for
why coral reefs deserve more attention. Sale's argument is as
simple as it is powerful: as coral reefs go, so goes the rest of
the planet." -Bryan P. Galligan, Commonweal When mass coral
bleaching and die-offs were first identified in the 1980s, and
eventually linked to warming events, the scientific community was
sure that such a dramatic and unambiguous signal would serve as a
warning sign about the devastating effects of global warming.
Instead, most people ignored that warning. Subsequent decades have
witnessed yet more degradation. Reefs around the world have lost
more than 50 percent of their living coral since the 1970s. In this
book, distinguished marine ecologist Peter F. Sale imparts his
passion for the unexpected beauty, complexity, and necessity of
coral reefs. By placing reefs in the wider context of global
climate change, Sale demonstrates how their decline is more than
simply a one-off environmental tragedy, but rather an existential
warning to humanity. He offers a reframing of the enormous
challenge humanity faces as a noble venture to steer the planet
into safe waters that might even retain some coral reefs.
This book provides a comprehensive and up-to-date review of the
ecology of coral reef fishes presented by top researchers from
North America and Australia. Immense strides have been made over
the past twenty years in our understanding of ecological systems in
general and of reef fish ecology in particular. Many of the
methodologies that reef fish ecologists use in their studies will
be useful to a wider audience of ecologists for the design of their
ecological studies. Significant among the impacts of the research
on reef fish ecology are the development of nonequilibrium models
of community organization, more emphasis on the role of recruitment
variability in structuring local assemblages, the development and
testing of evolutionary models of social organization and
reproductive biology, and new insights into predator-prey and
plant-herbivore interactions.
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