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Fishery Science:
The Unique Contributions of Early Life Stages
edited by Lee A. Fuiman and Robert G. Werner
published by Blackwell Science
distributed in North America by Iowa State Press |
- Excerpts from reviews:
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- "Overall this book is a valuable contribution. It provides a basis for
individual university courses and a reference and background for postgraduate
studies as well as for active fisheries scientists." Steve Coombs,
Journal of Fish Biology, 2003.
"the book will be a most useful sourcebook
for students of fishery science, and also for teachers wishing to include more
information about the early life stages in their fish biology courses."
Malcolm Jobling, Aquaculture International, 2003.
"Most comprehensive texts on fishery science will say something about the
egg and larval stages, but leave out a lot of the scientific and
methodological detail. This book fills the gaps and will allow students to
obtain a deeper grasp, both of egg and larval biology and of fishery
science...Teachers of fishery science will find this book a very useful
supplement to their course literature." Paul J. B. Hart, Fish and
Fisheries, 2003.
Summary
There has been explosive growth in research on the early life history of
fishes during recent years and it is widely recognized that a full understanding of this aspect of fish life
history is vital to the study of fish biology, fisheries, and aquaculture.
This book demonstrates why fish eggs and larvae are important, how the
characteristics of early life stages require a somewhat different research
approach, and
how information on early life stages can be applied and interpreted to yield
unique insights into fish populations.
Fishery Science was designed as a complement to existing textbooks or
as a stand-alone text for advanced students and researchers. The editors of
Fishery Science have drawn
together a team of internationally
respected
researchers and educators from North America, Asia, and Europe to contribute
chapters. Each chapter covers the concepts of a topic traditionally taught in fishery
science courses but from the point of view of the importance of early life stages
and includes a list of supplemental readings. A carefully
selected set of case studies demonstrates several specific applications of early life history
information to a number of diverse fishery problems.
- Contents
- Special Considerations of Fish Eggs and Larvae - Lee A. Fuiman
- Age and Growth - Cynthia M. Jones
- Mortality - Edward D. Houde
- Recruitment - James H. Cowan, Jr. & Richard F. Shaw
- Population Analysis - Pierre Pepin
- Cohort Identification - Karin E. Limburg
- Habitat Requirements - Robert G. Werner
- Assemblages, Communities, and Species Interactions - Thomas J. Miller
- Fishery Management - Edward S. Rutherford
- Human Impacts- G. Joan Holt
Case Studies:
- Resurgence and Decline of the Japanese Sardine Population - Yoshiro
Watanabe
- Cascading Effects of Human Impacts on Fish Populations in the Laurentian
Great Lakes - James A. Rice
- Understanding Conservation Issues of the Danube River - Hubert
Keckeis & Fritz Schiemer
Methodological Resources - Robert G. Werner & Lee A. Fuiman
- Appendix
- Literature Cited
- Subject Index
- Taxonomic Index
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