TY - BOOK AU - McClanahan,T.R. AU - Branch,George TI - Food webs and the dynamics of marine reefs SN - 0195319958 AV - QH541.15.F66 F66 2008 U1 - 577.789 22 PY - 2008/// CY - Oxford, New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Food chains (Ecology) KW - Coral reef ecology N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; 1; Marine Food Webs: Conceptual Development of a Central Research Paradigm; Bruce Menge --; 2; Kelp Forest Food Webs in the Aleutian Archipelago; James A. Estes --; 3; Trophic Interactions in Subtidal Rocky Reefs on the West Coast of South Africa; George M. Branch --; 4; Subtidal Kelp-Associated Communities off the Temperate Chilean Coast; Jose M. Farina, Alvaro T. Palma and F. Patricio Ojeda --; 5; Diversity and Dynamics of Californian Subtidal Kelp Forests; Michael Graham, Ben Halpern and Mark Carr --; 6; Biodiversity and Food-Web Structure of a Galapagos Shallow Rocky-Reef Ecosystem; Rodrigo H. Bustamante, Thomas A. Okey and Stuart Banks --; 7; Food-Web Structure and Dynamics of East African Coral Reefs; Tim R. McClanahan --; 8; Food-Web Structure and Dynamics of Eastern Tropical Pacific Coral Reefs: Panama and Galapagos Islands; Peter W. Glynn --; 9; Conclusions: An Ecosystem Perspective of Shallow Marine Reefs; Tim R. McClanahan and George M. Branch N2 - "Biologists have made significant advances in our understanding of the Earth's shallow subtidal marine ecosystems, but the findings on these disparate regions have never before been documented and gathered in a single volume. Now, in Food Webs and the Dynamics of Marine Reefs, Tim R. McClanahan and George M. Branch fill this lacuna with a comparative and comprehensive collection of nine essays written by experts on specific aquatic regions. Each essay focuses on the food webs of a respective ecosystem and the factors affecting these communities, from the intense and direct pressure of human influence on fisheries to the multi-vector contributors to climate change." "The book covers nine shallow water marine ecosystems from selected areas throughout the world: four coral reef systems, three hard bottom systems, and two kelp systems. In summarizing their organization, human influence on them, and recent developments in these ecosystems, the authors contribute to our understanding of their ecological organization and management." "Food Webs and the Dynamics of Marine Reefs will be a useful for all aquatic benthnic marine investigators, providing an expert, comparative view of these aquatic regions."--BOOK JACKET ER -