Aquatic Functional Biodiversity
Academic Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-12-417015-5 (ISBN)
Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in using network approaches to disentangle the relationship between biodiversity, community structure and functioning. Novel methods for model construction are being developed constantly, and modern methods allow for the inclusion of almost any type of explanatory variable that can be correlated either with biodiversity or ecosystem functioning. As a result these models have been widely used in ecology, conservation and eco-evolutionary biology. Nevertheless, there remains a considerable gap on how well these approaches are feasible to understand the mechanisms on how biodiversity constrains the provisioning of ecosystem services.
Andre Belgrano is currently at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Resources, Institute of Marine Research, Lysekil, and at the Swedish Institute for the Marine Environment (SIME), Gothenburg, in Sweden. He has held faculty positions in the United States at the University of Maryland, University of New Mexico, University of Washington, and was a visiting scientist at the National Center for Genome Resources (NCGR), Santa Fe, New Mexico.Dr Belgrano is broadly interested in ecological and evolutionary studies that use ecosystem status and trend data, for characterising relationships between diversity patterns and ecosystem functioning, which includes the effect of commercial fisheries, climate change and environmental variability. His research approach is to use the broad concepts of macroecology, food webs theory and evolution to understand the underlying common rules governing ecosystem dynamics and functioning. Most of Dr Belgrano’s current work focuses on functional biodiversity, ecosystem-based management for marine fisheries, ocean health, governance, sustainability and resilience in aquatic systems. Guy Woodward is Professor of Ecology in the Department of Life Sciences at Imperial College London and Series Editor for Advances in Ecological Research. He has authored over 100 peer-reviewed publications, including recent papers in Nature, Science and Nature Climate Change, with a strong emphasis on understanding and predicting how aquatic ecosystems and food webs respond to a wide range of biotic and abiotic stressors, including climate change, chemical pollution, habitat degradation and invasive species. Much of this work covers multiple scales in space and time and also a range of organisational levels - from genes to ecosystems. His research group and ongoing collaborations span the natural and social sciences, reflecting the need for multidisciplinary approaches for addressing the environmental challenges of the 21st Century. Ute Jacob is a Research Scientist at the Institute of Hydrobiology and Fisheries Science, University of Hamburg, Germany. She has contributed to previously published books as well as high-impact peer-reviewed journal articles. Dr. Jacob has been co-editor of two volumes of Advances in Ecological Research as well as a special issue of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, and is very active in this area of research.
Perspective: Functional Biodiversity during the AnthropoceneAndrea Belgrano, Ute Jacob, Charles Fowler, and Guy Woodward
Section 1 Theoretical Background1. From Metabolic Constraints on Individuals to the Dynamics of EcosystemsSamraat Pawar, Anthony I. Dell and Van M. Savage2. Ecological Effects of Intraspecific Consumer Biodiversity for Aquatic Communities and EcosystemsEric P. Palkovacs, David C. Fryxell, Nash E. Turley and David M. Post3. How Does Evolutionary History Alter the Relationship between Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function?David A. Vasseur and Susanna M. Messinger4. Effects of Metacommunity Networks on Local Community Structures: From Theoretical Predictions to Empirical EvaluationsAna Ines Borthagaray, Veronica Pinelli, Mauro Berazategui, Lucia Rodriguez-Tricot and Matias Arim
Section II: Across Aquatic Ecosystems 5. Limited Functional Redundancy and Lack of Resilience in Coral Reefs to Human StressorsCamilo Mora6. Biodiversity, Ecosystem Functioning, and Services in Fresh Waters: Ecological and Evolutionary Implications of Climate ChangeGuy Woodward and Daniel M. Perkins7. Global Aquatic Ecosystem Services Provided and Impacted by Fisheries: A Macroecological PerspectiveJonathan A.D. Fisher, Kenneth T. Frank and Andrea Belgrano8. Valuing Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in a Complex Marine EcosystemUte Jacob, Tomas Jonsson, Sofia Berg, Thomas Brey, Anna Eklof, Katja Mintenbeck, Christian Mollmann, Lyne Morissette, Andrea Rau and Owen Petchey
Section III: In the Wild: Biodiversity and Ecosystem Service Conservation 9. The Role of Marine Protected Areas in Providing Ecosystem ServicesPierre Leenhardt, Natalie Low, Nicolas Pascal, Fiorenza Micheli and Joachim Claudet10. Freshwater Conservation and Biomonitoring of Structure and Function: Genes to Ecosystems Clare Gray, Iliana Bista, Simon Creer, Benoit O.L. Demars, Francesco Falciani, Don T. Monteith, Xiaoliang Sun and Guy WoodwardEpilogue: The Robustness of Aquatic Biodiversity Functioning under Environmental Change: The Ythan Estuary, ScotlandDave Raffaelli
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 19.10.2015 |
---|---|
Verlagsort | San Diego |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 152 x 229 mm |
Gewicht | 520 g |
Themenwelt | Naturwissenschaften ► Biologie ► Ökologie / Naturschutz |
ISBN-10 | 0-12-417015-3 / 0124170153 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-12-417015-5 / 9780124170155 |
Zustand | Neuware |
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
aus dem Bereich