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Paperback $49.95 ISBN: 9781559636629 Published May 2005

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Marine Conservation Biology

The Science of Maintaining the Sea's Biodiversity

 Marine Conservation Biology
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Edited by Elliott A. Norse and Larry B. Crowder; Foreword by Michael E. Soule ; Marine Conservation Biology Institute

496 pages | 8 x 10

Humans are terrestrial animals, and our capacity to see and understand the importance and vulnerability of life in the sea has trailed our growing ability to harm it. While conservation biologists are working to address environmental problems humans have created on land, loss of marine biodiversity, including extinctions and habitat degradation, has received much less attention. At the same time, marine sciences such as oceanography and fisheries biology have largely ignored issues of conservation.

Marine Conservation Biology brings together for the first time in a single volume, leading experts from around the world to apply the lessons and thinking of conservation biology to marine issues. Contributors including James M. Acheson, Louis W. Botsford, James T. Carlton, Kristina Gjerde, Selina S. Heppell, Ransom A. Myers, Julia K. Parrish, Stephen R. Palumbi, and Daniel Pauly offer penetrating insights on the nature of marine biodiversity, what threatens it, and what humans can and must do to recover the biological integrity of the world's estuaries, coastal seas, and oceans.

Sections examine: distinctive aspects of marine populations and ecosystems; threats to marine biological diversity, singly and in combination; place-based management of marine ecosystems; the often-neglected human dimensions of marine conservation.

Marine Conservation Biology breaks new ground by creating the conceptual framework for the new field of marine conservation biology -- the science of protecting, recovering, and sustainably using the living sea. It synthesizes the latest knowledge and ideas from leading thinkers in disciplines ranging from larval biology to sociology, making it a must-read for research and teaching faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate and advanced undergraduate students (who share an interest in bringing conservation biology to marine issues). Likewise, its lucid scientific examinations illuminate key issues facing environmental managers, policymakers, advocates, and funders concerned with the health of our oceans.

Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Why Marine Conservation Biology?
2. Back to the Future in Marine Conservation
 
Part I. Marine Populations: The Basics
3. The Life of the Sea: Implications of Marine Population Biology to Conservation Policy
4. The Allee Effect in the Sea
5. Extinction Risk in Marine Species
6. Behavioral Approaches to Marine Conservation
 
Part II. Threats to Marine Biological Diversity
7. The Potential for Nutrient Overenrichment to Diminish Marine Biodiversity
8. The Magnitude and Consequences of Bioinvasions in Marine Ecosystems: Implications for Conservation Biology
9. Diseases and the Conservation of Marine Biodiversity
10. Multiple Stressors in Marine Systems
 
Part III. The Greatest Threat: Fisheries
11. Global Fisheries and Marine Conservation: Is Coexistence Possible?
12. The Global Destruction of Bottom Habitats by Mobile Fishing Gear
13. Effects of Fishing on Long-Lived Marine Organisms
14. Evolutionary Impacts of Fishing on Target Populations
15. Are Sustainable Fisheries Achievable?
 
Part IV. Place-Based Management of Marine Ecosystems
16. Marine Protected Areas and Biodiversity Conservation
17. Marine Reserve Function and Design for Fisheries Management
18. Place-Based Ecosystem Management in the Open Ocean
19. Metapopulation Structure and Marine Reserves
 
Part V. Human Dimensions
20. Developing Rules to Manage Fisheries: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
21. The Role of Legal Regimes in Marine Conservation
22. Uncertainty in Marine Management
23. Recovering Populations and Restoring Ecosystems: Restoration of Coral Reefs and Related Marine Communities
24. Toward a Sea Ethic
25. Ending the Range Wars on the Last Frontier: Zoning the Sea
 
About the Editors
Contributors
Index
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