Zoological Catalogue of Australia

Zoological Catalogue of Australia
Author:
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 546
Release: 1983
Genre: Animals
ISBN: 9780643069022

The published works are derived from the Zoological catalogue of Australia database. Taxa in the Australian fauna are divided among volumes to form sets of about 1800-2000 species available names, such that each volume comprises the whole or part of one or more major groups.

Bulletin

Bulletin
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 2001
Genre: Anthropology
ISBN:

Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota

Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota
Author: Darryl L. Felder
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 1405
Release: 2009
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1603442693

This landmark scientific reference for scientists, researchers, and students of marine biology tackles the monumental task of taking a complete biodiversity inventory of the Gulf of Mexico with full biotic and biogeographic information. Presenting a comprehensive summary of knowledge of Gulf biota through 2004, the book includes seventy-seven chapters, which list more than fifteen thousand species in thirty-eight phyla or divisions and were written by 138 authors from seventy-one institutions in fourteen countries.This first volume of Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota, a multivolumed set edited by John W. Tunnell Jr., Darryl L. Felder, and Sylvia A. Earle, provides information on each species' habitat, biology, and geographic range, along with full references and a narrative introduction to the group, which opens each chapter.

Detecting Ecological Impacts

Detecting Ecological Impacts
Author: Russell J. Schmitt
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 428
Release: 1996-01-17
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780126272550

Detecting Ecological Impacts: Concepts and Applications in Coastal Habitats focuses on crucial aspects of detecting local and regional impacts that result from human activities. Detection and characterization of ecological impacts require scientific approaches that can reliably separate the effects of a specific anthropogenic activity from those of other processes. This fundamental goal is both technically and operationally challenging. Detecting Ecological Impacts is devoted to the conceptual and technical underpinnings that allow for reliable estimates of ecological effects caused by human activities. An international team of scientists focuses on the development and application of scientific tools appropriate for estimating the magnitude and spatial extent of ecological impacts. The contributors also evaluate our current ability to forecast impacts. Some of the scientific, legal, and administrative constraints that impede these critical tasks also are highlighted. Coastal marine habitats are emphasized, but the lessons and insights have general application to all ecological systems.

The Families and Genera of Marine Gammaridean Amphipoda

The Families and Genera of Marine Gammaridean Amphipoda
Author: Jerry Laurens Barnard
Publisher:
Total Pages: 550
Release: 1969
Genre: Science
ISBN:

Keys and diagnoses, with illustrations, to the families and genera of marine gammaridean Amphipoda are presented here in the form of a handbook. Since 1906 the number of families has been increased by 25 percent, the number of genera by 200 percent and the number of species by nearly 200 percent.

Molecular Panbiogeography of the Tropics

Molecular Panbiogeography of the Tropics
Author: Michael Heads
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 577
Release: 2012-01-04
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0520951808

Molecular studies reveal highly ordered geographic patterns in plant and animal distributions. The tropics illustrate these patterns of community immobilism leading to allopatric differentiation, as well as other patterns of mobilism, range expansion, and overlap of taxa. Integrating Earth history and biogeography, Molecular Panbiogeography of the Tropics is an alternative view of distributional history in which groups are older than suggested by fossils and fossil-calibrated molecular clocks. The author discusses possible causes for the endemism of high-level taxa in tropical America and Madagascar, and overlapping clades in South America, Africa, and Asia. The book concludes with a critique of adaptation by selection, founded on biogeography and recent work in genetics.