Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 9 OF 23

Main Title Global seagrass research methods /
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Short, Frederick T.
Coles, Robert G.
Publisher Elsevier,
Year Published 2001
OCLC Number 48487290
ISBN 0444508910; 9780444508911
Subjects Seagrasses--Research ; Methode ; Seegrasgew achse ; Okologie ; Zeegrassen ; Algues--Recherche
Internet Access
Description Access URL
Publisher description http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0613/2002265318-d.html
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EHBM  QK495.A14S4 2001 CEMM/ACESD Library/Narragansett,RI 11/03/2023
EKCM  QK495.A14S4 2001 CEMM/GEMMD Library/Gulf Breeze,FL 08/29/2016
Collation vii, 473 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), color maps ; 25 cm
Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Notes
Global seagrass distribution / Frederick T. Short, Robert G. Coles, Christine Pergent-Martini -- Seagrass taxonomy and identification key / John Kuo, C. den Hartog -- Reproduction and phenology in seagrasses / Diana I. Walker, Birgit Olesen, Ronald C. Phillips -- Standards for seagrass collection, identification and sample design / David M. Burdick, Gary A. Kendrick -- Methods for mapping seagrass distribution / Len J. McKenzie, Mark A. Finkbeiner, Hugh Kirkman -- Methods for assessing seagrass seed ecology and population genetics / Graeme J. Inglis, Michelle Waycott -- Methods for the measurement of seagrass abundance and depth distribution / Carlos M. Duarte, Hugh Kirkman -- Methods for the measurement of seagrass growth and production / Frederick T. Short, Carlos M. Duarte -- Measurements of photosynthetic rates in seagrasses / Sven Beer [and others] -- Assessing biomass, assemblage structure and productivity of algal epiphytes on seagrasses / Gary A. Kendrick, Paul S. Lavery -- Methods to measure macroalgal biomass and abundance in seagrass meadows / Bujang Japar Sidik, Salom ao O. Bandeira, Nataliya A. Milchakova -- Techniques for quantitative sampling of infauna and small epifauna in seagrass / Andrea Raz-Guzman, Raymond E. Grizzle -- Fish, crabs, shrimps and other large mobile epibenthos : measurement methods for their biomass and abundance in seagrass / Graham J. Edgar, Hiroshi Mukai, Robert J. Orth -- Measuring invertebrate grazing on seagrasses and epiphytes / Valerio Zupo, Walter G. Nelson, M. Cristina Gambi -- Methods for assessing the grazing effects of large herbivores on seagrasses / Chatcharee Supanwanid, John O. Albertsen, Hiroshi Mukai -- Seagrass decomposition / Diana I. Walker, G erard Pergent, Stefano Fazi -- Measurements of physical parameters in seagrass habitats / Evamaria W. Koch, Jennifer J. Verduin -- Sediment geology methods for seagrass habitat / Paul L.A. Erftemeijer, Evamaria W. Koch -- Measurement of light penetration in relation to seagrass / Timothy J.B. Carruthers [and others] -- Water quality measurement methods for seagrass habitat / Stephen Granger, Hitoshi Iizumi -- Improving seagrass habitat quality / Warren J. Lee Long, Ronald M. Thom -- Seagrass transplantation and other seagrass restoration methods / Hilconida P. Calumpong, Mark S. Fonseca -- Protecting seagrass : approaches and methods / Robert Coles, Miguel Fortes. This thorough and informative volume presents a set of detailed, globally applicable techniques for seagrass research. The book provides methods for all aspects of seagrass science from basic plant collection to statistical approaches and investigations of plant-animal interaction. The emphasis is on methods that are applicable in both developing and developed countries. The importance of seagrasses in coastal and near shore environments, and ultimately their contribution to the productivity of the world's oceans, has become increasingly recognised over the last 40 years. Seagrasses provide food for sea turtles, nearly 100 fish species, waterfowl and for the marine mammals the manatee and dugong. Seagrasses also support complex food webs by virtue of their physical structure and primary production and are well known for their role as breeding grounds and nurseries for important crustacean, finfish and shell fish populations. Seagrasses are the basis of an important detrital food chain. The plants filter nutrients and contaminants from the water, stabilise sediments and act as dampeners to wave action. Seagrasses rank with coral reefs and mangroves as some of the world's most productive coastal habitat and strong linkages among these habitats make the loss of seagrasses a contributing factor in the degradation of the world's oceans. Contributors from around the world provide up-to-date methods for comparable collection of ecological information from both temperate and tropical seagrass ecosystems.