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  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D. C. :Island Press,
    Schlagwort(e): Electronic books.
    Materialart: Online-Ressource
    Seiten: 1 online resource (497 pages)
    Ausgabe: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 9781597267717
    DDC: 333.95/616
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Preface: A New Science for a New Century -- Acknowledgments -- Ch. 1: Why Marine Conservation Biology? -- Ch. 2: Back to the Future in Marine Conservation -- Part One: Marine Populations: The Basics -- Ch. 3: The Life of the Sea: Implications of Marine Population Biology to Conservation Policy -- Ch. 4: The Allee Effect in the Sea -- Ch. 5: Extinction Risk in Marine Species -- Ch. 6: Behavioral Approaches to Marine Conservation -- Part Two: Threats to Marine Biological Diversity -- Ch. 7: The Potential for Nutrient Overenrichment to Diminish Marine Biodiversity -- Ch. 8: The Magnitude and Consequences of Bioinvasions in Marine Ecosystems: Implications for Conservation Biology -- Ch. 9: Diseases and the Conservation of Marine Biodiversity -- Ch. 10: Multiple Stressors in Marine Systems -- Part Three: The Greatest Threat: Fisheries -- Ch. 11: Global Fisheries and Marine Conservation: Is Coexistence Possible? -- Ch. 12: The Global Destruction of Bottom Habitats by Mobile Fishing Gear -- Ch. 13: Effects of Fishing on Long-Lived Marine Organisms -- Ch. 14: Evolutionary Impacts of Fishing on Target Populations -- Ch. 15: Are Sustainable Fisheries Achievable? -- Part Four: Place-Based Management of Marine Ecosystems -- Ch. 16: Marine Protected Areas and Biodiversity Conservation -- Ch. 17: Marine Reserve Function and Design for Fisheries Management -- Ch. 18: Place-Based Ecosystem Management in the Open Ocean -- Ch. 19: Metapopulation Structure and Marine Reserves -- Part Five: Human Dimensions -- Ch. 20: Developing Rules to Manage Fisheries: A Cross-Cultural Perspective -- Ch. 21: The Role of Legal Regimes in Marine Conservation -- Ch. 22: Uncertainty in Marine Management. , Ch. 23: Recovering Populations and Restoring Ecosystems: Restoration of Coral Reefs and Related Marine Communities -- Ch. 24: Toward a Sea Ethic -- Ch. 25: Ending the Range Wars on the Last Frontier: Zoning the Sea -- About the Editors -- Contributors -- Index -- Species Index.
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    Digitale Medien
    Digitale Medien
    Palo Alto, Calif. : Annual Reviews
    Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 30 (1999), S. 515-538 
    ISSN: 0066-4162
    Quelle: Annual Reviews Electronic Back Volume Collection 1932-2001ff
    Thema: Biologie
    Materialart: Digitale Medien
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    Publikationsdatum: 2019-09-23
    Beschreibung: As coastal fisheries around the world have collapsed, industrial fishing has spread seaward and deeper in pursuit of the last economically attractive concentrations of fishable biomass. For a seafood-hungry world depending on the oceans' ecosystem services, it is crucial to know whether deep-sea fisheries can be sustainable. The deep sea is by far the largest but least productive part of the oceans, although in very limited places fish biomass can be very high. Most deep-sea fishes have life histories giving them far less population resilience/productivity than shallow-water fishes, and could be fished sustainably only at very low catch rates if population resilience were the sole consideration. But like old-growth trees and great whales, their biomass makes them tempting targets while their low productivity creates strong economic incentive to liquidate their populations rather than exploiting them sustainably (Clark's Law). Many deep-sea fisheries use bottom trawls, which often have high impacts on nontarget fishes (e.g., sharks) and invertebrates (e.g., corals), and can often proceed only because they receive massive government subsidies. The combination of very low target population productivity, nonselective fishing gear, economics that favor population liquidation and a very weak regulatory regime makes deep-sea fisheries unsustainable with very few exceptions. Rather, deep-sea fisheries more closely resemble mining operations that serially eliminate fishable populations and move on. Instead of mining fish from the least-suitable places on Earth, an ecologically and economically preferable strategy would be rebuilding and sustainably fishing resilient populations in the most suitable places, namely shallower and more productive marine ecosystems that are closer to markets. Highlights ► Industrial fishing has spread seaward and deeper in pursuit of wild fish biomass. ► Low productivity deep-sea fishes tempt fishermen to overexploit their populations. ► Azores hook-and-line black scabbardfish is a rare, apparently sustainable exception. ► Subsidies for trawling in poorly managed high seas areas incentivize overfishing. ► Recovering and fishing productive shelf fish populations is much more sustainable.
    Materialart: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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