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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    San Diego :Elsevier Science & Technology,
    Keywords: Coral reef fishes -- Ecology. ; Coral reef ecology. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: 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.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (566 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780080530017
    DDC: 597.177/89
    Language: English
    Note: Front Cover -- Coral Reef Fishes: Dynamic and Diversity in a Complex Ecosystem -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Contributors -- Preface -- SECTION I: Reef Fishes: A Diversity of Adaptations and Specializations -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. The History and Biogeography of Fishes on Coral Reefs -- Chapter 2. Ecomorphology of Feeding in Coral Reef Fishes -- Chapter 3. Age-Based Studies -- Chapter 4. Rarity in Coral Reef Fish Communities -- Chapter 5. The Ecological Context of Reproductive Behavior -- SECTION II: Replenishment of Reef Fish Populations and Communities -- Introduction -- Chapter 6. The Sensory World of Coral Reef Fishes -- Chapter 7. Larval Dispersal and Retention and Consequences for Population Connectivity -- Chapter 8. The Biology, Behavior and Ecology of the Pelagic, Larval Stage of Coral Reef Fishes -- Chapter 9. Biogeography and Larval Dispersal Inferred from Population Genetic Analysis -- Chapter 10. Numerical and Energetic Processes in the Ecology of Coral Reef Fishes -- SECTION III: Dynamics of Reef Fish Populations and Communities -- Introduction -- Chapter 11. Otolith Applications in Reef Fish Ecology -- Chapter 12. Energetics and Fish Diversity on Coral Reefs -- Chapter 13. Simulating Large-Scale Population Dynamics Using Small-Scale Data -- Chapter 14. Density Dependence in Reef Fish Populations -- Chapter 15. Variable Replenishment and the Dynamics of Reef Fish Populations -- SECTION IV: Management of Coral Reef Fishes -- Introduction -- Chapter 16. The Science We Need to Develop for More Effective Management -- Chapter 17. Reef Fish Ecology and Grouper Conservation and Management -- Chapter 18. Ecological Issues and the Trades in Live Reef Fishes -- Chapter 19. Yet Another Review of Marine Reserves as Reef Fishery Management Tools -- Bibliography -- Taxonomic Index -- Subject Index -- Color Plate Section.
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    San Diego :Elsevier Science & Technology,
    Keywords: Marine ecology. ; Animal populations. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: The single-source reference to understanding and implementing marine metapopulation information.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (573 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780080454719
    DDC: 577.7
    Language: English
    Note: Front cover -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- FOREWORD -- PREFACE -- ABOUT THE EDITORS -- CONTRIBUTORS -- PART I: Introduction -- 1: The Merging of Metapopulation Theory and Marine Ecology: Establishing the Historical Context -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. DIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIES BETWEEN MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL SYSTEMS -- A. DESCRIBING ACTUAL SPATIAL POPULATION PROCESSES AND STRUCTURES -- B. A FRAMEWORK FOR ASKING RESEARCH QUESTIONS -- C. A PARADIGM FOR POPULATION AND CONSERVATION BIOLOGY -- D. APPLICATIONS TO MARINE POPULATIONS -- III. HISTORY AND EFFECTS OF PREDOMINANT RESEARCH QUESTIONS IN MARINE ECOLOGY -- IV. CONSERVATION AND FISHERIES MANAGEMENT INFLUENCES ON MARINE ECOLOGY -- A. SCALE OF STUDY -- B. SPATIAL RESOLUTION -- C. MARINE PROTECTED AREAS -- V. SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- PART II: Fishes -- 2: The Metapopulation Ecology of Coral Reef Fishes -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. SPATIAL STRUCTURE -- A. GEOGRAPHIC EXTENT -- B. SPATIAL SUBDIVISION -- C. INTERPATCH SPACE -- III. BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY OF CORAL REEF FISHES -- A. POSTSETTLEMENT LIFE STAGES -- B. DISPERSAL AND CONNECTIVITY -- C. METAPOPULATION DYNAMICS -- IV. FACTORS DISSOLVING METAPOPULATION STRUCTURE -- A. SPAWNING AGGREGATIONS -- B. NURSERY HABITATS -- V. SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- 3: Temperate Rocky Reef Fishes -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. GEOLOGICAL PROCESSES AND THE TYPES AND DISTRIBUTION OF TEMPERATE REEF HABITAT -- A. SUBDUCTION, VOLCANISM, AND FAULTING -- B. GLACIATION -- C. FLUVIAL AND DYNAMIC SUBMARINE EROSIVE PROCESSES -- III. TEMPERATE REEF FISH COMMUNITIES -- A. BIOGEOGRAPHIC PROVINCES AND TEMPERATE REEF FISH COMMUNITIES -- B. DEPTH AS A MASTER VARIABLE IN TEMPERATE REEF FISH COMMUNITIES -- C. TYPICAL FISH FAUNA OF TEMPERATE ROCKY REEF COMMUNITIES -- IV. THE ROLE OF OCEANOGRAPHY IN METAPOPULATION STRUCTURING -- A. MAJOR OCEANOGRAPHIC DOMAINS. , B. DISPERSAL AND RETENTION MECHANISMS -- V. CLIMATE, CLIMATE CYCLES, AND HISTORICAL METAPOPULATION STRUCTURING -- VI. THE ROLE OF LIFE HISTORY IN METAPOPULATION STRUCTURING -- A. EARLY LIFE HISTORY -- B. JUVENILES -- C. ADULTS -- D. LONGEVITY -- VII. EMPIRICAL APPROACHES TO MEASURING DISPERSAL AND METAPOPULATION STRUCTURE -- VIII. POPULATION GENETIC STUDIES IN NORTH PACIFIC ROCKY REEF FISHES -- IX. HUMAN IMPACTS -- X. FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR METAPOPULATION STUDIES OF TEMPERATE REEF FISHES -- REFERENCES -- 4: Estuarine and Diadromous Fish Metapopulations -- I. INTRODUCTION TO METAPOPULATION CONCEPTS IN ESTUARINE AND DIADROMOUS FISH -- II. MECHANISMS THAT FORM DISTINCT POPULATIONS -- III. TOOLS TO QUANTIFY MIGRATION IN DIADROMOUS FISH -- A. GENETICS -- B. ARTIFICIAL TAGS -- C. NATURAL TAGS WITH EMPHASIS ON OTOLITH-GEOCHEMICAL TAGS -- IV. DIADROMOUS FISH EXEMPLIFY METAPOPULATION THEORY -- A. SALMONIDS -- B. ALOSINES -- C. COMPARING SALMONIDS AND ALOSINE HERRINGS -- D. SCIAENIDS -- E. ATHERINIDS -- V. VALUE OF THE METAPOPULATION CONCEPT IN UNDERSTANDING AND MANAGING DIADROMOUS FISHERIES -- A. CONSERVATION OF LOCAL POPULATIONS -- B. HISTORICAL MANAGEMENT OF LOCAL POPULATIONS IN A FISHERIES CONTEXT -- C. MIXED-STOCK ANALYSIS -- D. EFFECT OF DEMOGRAPHY ON METAPOPULATION MANAGEMENT -- E. MARINE PROTECTED AREAS AS A SPATIAL MANAGEMENT TOOL -- F. C AN FISHERIES BE MANAGED AS METAPOPULATIONS? -- VI. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- PART III: Invertebrates -- 5: Metapopulation Dynamics of Hard Corals -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. STRUCTURE OF THIS CHAPTER -- III. SUMMARY OF MODEL STRUCTURE AND PARAMETERIZATION -- IV. EXISTING MODELS OF DYNAMICS ON CORAL REEFS -- V. DEVELOPMENT OF A PROTOTYPE MODEL OF SPATIALLY STRUCTURED CORAL REEF COMMUNITIES -- A. SCALES -- B. REPRODUCTION -- C. CONNECTIVITY -- D. RECRUITMENT -- E. GROWTH -- F. M ORTALITY. , G. COMPETITION (AND MODELING THE DYNAMICS OF COMPETITORS) -- H. HERBIVORY -- VI. TESTING THE MODEL: PHASE SHIFTS IN COMMUNITY STRUCTURE -- VII. SENSITIVITY OF MODEL TO INITIAL CONDITIONS -- VIII. EXPLORATION OF MODEL BEHAVIOR -- A. INTERACTIONS BETWEEN INITIAL CORAL COVER, ALGAL OVERGROWTH RATE, CORAL GROWTH RATE, AND HERBIVORY -- B. RECRUITMENT SCENARIO AND OVERFISHING OF HERBIVORES -- C. IMPACT OF HURRICANE FREQUENCY ON LOCAL DYNAMICS -- D. EFFECT OF REDUCED HURRICANE FREQUENCY ON A RESERVE NETWORK -- IX. SUMMARY -- X. ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- 6: Population and Spatial Structure of Two Common Temperate Reef Herbivores: Abalone and Sea Urchins -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. LIFE HISTORY -- A. ABALONE -- B. SEA URCHINS -- III. LARVAL DISPERSAL AND SETTLEMENT -- A. ABALONE -- B. SEA URCHINS -- C. SUMMARY OF LARVAL DISPERSAL -- IV. POPULATION GENETICS -- A. ABALONE -- B. SEA URCHINS -- C. SUMMARY OF GENETICS -- V. SPATIAL VARIABILITY IN ADULT DISTRIBUTIONS AND DEMOGRAPHICS -- A. ABALONE: ADULT HABITAT AND SPATIAL STRUCTURE -- B. SEA URCHINS: ADULT HABITAT AND SPATIAL STRUCTURE -- VI. FISHING AND MANAGEMENT -- A. ABALONE -- B. SEA URCHINS -- C. OPTIMAL HARVESTING OF INVERTEBRATE METAPOPULATIONS -- VII. SUMMARY -- VIII. ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- 7: Rocky Intertidal Invertebrates: The Potential for Metapopulations within and among Shores -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. PATCH MODELS -- III. WITHIN-SHORE METAPOPULATIONS -- IV. METAPOPULATIONS AT DIFFERENT SCALES -- V. MEASURED SCALES OF VARIABILITY -- VI. SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- 8: Metapopulation Dynamics of Coastal Decapods -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. DECAPOD LIFE HISTORIES -- III. IDENTIFYING DECAPOD METAPOPULATIONS -- IV. CASE STUDIES -- A. AMERICAN LOBSTER (HOMARUS AMERICANUS) -- B. BLUE CRAB (CALLINECTES SAPIDUS) -- C. DUNGENESS CRAB (CANCER MAGISTER) -- D. PINK SHRIMP (PANDALUS BOREALIS). , V. DISCUSSION -- VI. SUMMARY -- VII. ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- 9: A Metapopulation Approach to Interpreting Diversity at Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vents -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. VENT SYSTEMS AS METAPOPULATIONS -- A. DYNAMICS AND DISTRIBUTION OF VENT HABITAT -- B. DISPERSAL AND COLONIZATION -- III. SPECIES INTERACTIONS -- IV. BIOGEOGRAPHY AND DIVERSITY -- V. METAPOPULATION MODELS FOR VENT FAUNAL DIVERSITY -- A. A NULL MODEL -- B. FACILITATION -- VI. SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- PART IV: Plants and Algae -- 10: A Metapopulation Perspective on the Patch Dynamics of Giant Kelp in Southern California -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. DYNAMICS OF GIANT KELP POPULATIONS -- III. FACTORS AFFECTING COLONIZATION -- A. LIFE HISTORY CONSTRAINTS -- B. MODES OF COLONIZATION -- C. SPORE PRODUCTION, RELEASE, AND COMPETENCY -- D. POSTSETTLEMENT PROCESSES -- IV. SPORE DISPERSAL -- A. FACTORS AFFECTING COLONIZATION DISTANCE -- B. EMPIRICAL ESTIMATES OF SPORE DISPERSAL -- C. MODELED ESTIMATES OF SPORE DISPERSAL -- V. CONNECTIVITY AMONG LOCAL POPULATIONS -- VI. SUMMARY -- VII. ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- 11: Seagrasses and the Metapopulation Concept: Developing a Regional Approach to the Study of Extinction, Colonization, and Dispersal -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. SEAGRASS REPRODUCTION -- III. PATCHES: COLONIZATION AND EXTINCTION -- IV. EXAMPLES OF POTENTIAL SEAGRASS METAPOPULATIONS -- A. HALOPHILA DECIPIENS ON THE WEST FLORIDA SHELF: A LOCAL POPULATION THAT EXHIBITS PATCH EXTINCTION AND REGIONAL RECRUITMENT -- B. PHYLLOSPADIX SCOULERI ON EXPOSED PACIFIC SHORES: REGIONAL PATTERNS OF SUITABLE SITES EXIST AMONG A MATRIX OF UNSUITABLE SITES -- PATCH EXTINCTION DOCUMENTED -- C. HALOPHILA JOHNSONII IN SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA: A WELL-DEFINED REGIONAL POPULATION WITH LIMITED DISPERSAL BETWEEN PATCHES -- EXTINCTION OF PATCHES DOCUMENTED. , V. THE METAPOPULATION MODEL AND SEAGRASS POPULATIONS: A USEFUL CONCEPT? -- A. COLLECTION OF GOOD INFORMATION ON SPATIAL ORGANIZATION OF SEAGRASSES -- B. COLLECTION OF GENETIC INFORMATION TO HELP ANALYZE SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF A POPULATION -- C. SEED DORMANCY: A SPECIAL PROBLEM FOR PLANT POPULATIONS -- VI. SUMMARY -- VII. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- PART V: Perspectives -- 12: Conservation Dynamics of Marine Metapopulations with Dispersing Larvae -- I. INTRODUCTION -- II. SINGLE POPULATION PERSISTENCE -- III. METAPOPULATION PERSISTENCE -- A. CONSEQUENCES FOR THE DISTRIBUTION OF MEROPLANKTONIC SPECIES -- B. CONSEQUENCES FOR THE SUCCESS OF MARINE RESERVES -- IV. ROLE OF VARIABILITY -- V. DISCUSSION -- VI. SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- 13: Genetic Approaches to Understanding Marine Metapopulation Dynamics -- I. INTRODUCTION -- A. SUBDIVISION IN MARINE POPULATIONS -- B. THE ISLAND MODEL AND ITS LIMITATIONS -- II. DELINEATING POPULATIONS -- III. INFERRING PATTERNS OF CONNECTIVITY -- IV. INFERRING NONEQUILIBRIUM POPULATION DYNAMICS -- A. POPULATION EXTINCTION AND RECOLONIZATION -- B. SOURCE-SINK RELATIONSHIPS -- C. MIXING IN THE PLANKTON AND THE GENETICS OF LARVAL COHORTS -- V. SUMMARY -- VI. ACKNOWLEDGMENT -- REFERENCES -- 14: Metapopulation Dynamics and Community Ecology of Marine Systems -- I. INTRODUCTION -- A. SCALE OF DISPERSAL -- B. DISPERSAL AND POPULATION DYNAMICS -- C. RELEVANCE TO MARINE METACOMMUNITIES -- II. METACOMMUNITIES AND SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIPS -- A. BACKGROUND -- B. RELEVANCE TO MARINE METACOMMUNITIES -- C. REGIONAL-SCALE DIFFERENTIATION -- D. SUMMARY -- III. METACOMMUNITIES AND LOCAL-REGIONAL SPECIES RICHNESS RELATIONSHIPS -- A. BACKGROUND -- B. RELEVANCE TO MARINE METACOMMUNITIES -- C. EFFECTS OF TRANSPORT PROCESSES AND RELATIVE ISLAND POSITION -- D. SUMMARY -- IV. METACOMMUNITIES AND RELATIVE SPECIES ABUNDANCE PATTERNS. , A. BACKGROUND.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Macmillian Magazines Ltd.
    Nature 421 (2003), S. 933-936 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] A central aim of ecology is to explain the heterogeneous distribution of biodiversity on earth. As expectations of diversity loss grow, this understanding is also critical for effective management and conservation. Although explanations for biodiversity patterns are still a matter for intense ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
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    Unknown
    Wiley-Blackwell
    In:  Fish and Fisheries, 5 (2). pp. 131-140.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-25
    Description: Marine and fisheries scientists are increasingly using metapopulation concepts to better understand and model their focal systems. Consequently, they are considering what defines a metapopulation. One perspective on this question emphasizes the importance of extinction probability in local populations. This view probably stems from the focus on extinction in Levins' original metapopulation model, but places unnecessary emphasis on extinction–recolonization dynamics. Metapopulation models with more complex structure than Levins' patch-occupancy model and its variants allow a broader range of population phenomena to be examined, such as changes in population size, age structure and genetic structure. Analyses along these lines are critical in fisheries science, where presence–absence resolution is far too coarse to understand stock dynamics in a meaningful way. These more detailed investigations can, but need not, aim to assess extinction risk or deal with extinction-prone local populations. Therefore, we emphasize the coupling of spatial scales as the defining feature of metapopulations. It is the degree of demographic connectivity that characterizes metapopulations, with the dynamics of local populations strongly dependent upon local demographic processes, but also influenced by a nontrivial element of external replenishment. Therefore, estimating rates of interpopulation exchange must be a research priority. We contrast metapopulations with other spatially structured populations that differ in the degree of local closure of their component populations. We conclude with consideration of the implications of metapopulation structure for spatially explicit management, particularly the design of marine protected area networks.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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