[Topics in Biodiversity and Conservation] Marine, Freshwater, and Wetlands Biodiversity Conservation Volume 4 || The upper reached ichthyofauna of the Tietê River, São Paulo, Brazil: aspects of their diversity and conservation
✍ Scribed by Hawksworth, David L.; Bull, Alan T.
- Book ID
- 115523779
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 191 KB
- Edition
- 2006
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 1402057334
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Marine, coastal and wetland habitats are threatened, not only through exploitation, but also by the prospect of climate change – as ocean currents change course, sea levels rise, and rainfall patterns change. Even the once-common cod is now under threat from the combined effects of over-fishing and a dramatic change-induced decrease in the plankton that cod larvae feed on. Meanwhile, coral reefs remain especially vulnerable to rapid sea-level changes exacerbated by the effects of tourism and disease.
This book gathers together a wide range of papers reporting on key research into the biodiversity conservation of these critical and increasingly threatened habitats. Collectively these papers provide a snap-shot of the types of problems they are experiencing, and offer a wealth of topical examples which render this volume especially valuable to teachers of courses in marine, freshwater and wetlands ecology, biological conservation and ecological restoration.
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Marine, coastal and wetland habitats are threatened, not only through exploitation, but also by the prospect of climate change – as ocean currents change course, sea levels rise, and rainfall patterns change. Even the once-common cod is now under threat from the combined effects of over-fishing and
Marine, coastal and wetland habitats are threatened, not only through exploitation, but also by the prospect of climate change – as ocean currents change course, sea levels rise, and rainfall patterns change. Even the once-common cod is now under threat from the combined effects of over-fishing and