Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 8 OF 64

Main Title Ecological and Genetic Implications of Aquaculture Activities [electronic resource] /
Type EBOOK
Author Bert, Theresa M.
Publisher Springer Netherlands,
Year Published 2007
Call Number QL1-991
ISBN 9781402061486
Subjects Life sciences ; Biodiversity ; Zoology ; Animal genetics ; Invertebrates
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6148-6
Collation XII, 545 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Overviews Of Ecological Interactions -- Environmentally Responsible Aquaculture-A Work in Progress -- An Ecosystems Approach to Risk Assessment of Alien Species and Genotypes in Aquaculture -- Indicators for the Sustainability of Aquaculture -- Sustainable Approaches for Aquaculture Development: Looking Ahead Through Lessons in the Past -- Population Genetic Considerations -- Genetic Risks of Marine Hatchery Enhancement: The Good, the Bad, and the Unknown -- Preventing Genetic Pollution and the Establishment of Feral Populations: A Molecular Solution -- Behavioral and Genetic Interactions Between Escaped Farm Salmon and Wild Atlantic Salmon -- Genetic Management of Hatchery-Based Stock Enhancement -- Case Studies -- Environmental Impacts in Australian Aquaculture -- Effects of Hatchery Rearing on Asian Seabass, Lates calcarifer, in Sabah, Malaysia -- Disturbance of Korean Lake Ecosystems by Aquaculture and Their Rehabilitation -- Mariculture-Related Environmental Concerns in the People's Republic of China -- Indigenous Species for African Aquaculture Development -- The Introduction of Nonnative Fishes into Freshwater Systems of Peru -- of Exotic Species and Transplantation of Native Species across River Basins in Venezuela -- Impacts of Non-Native Fish Species in Minas Gerais, Brazil: Present Situation and Prospects -- Salmonid Introductions in Patagonia: A Mixed Blessing -- Introduced Anadromous Salmonids in Patagonia: Risks, Uses, and a Conservation Paradox -- Addressing Problems Associated with Aquaculture and Aquaculture Effluents in the USA: A Historical Essay -- Productivity of Alaska's Salmon Hatchery Ocean Ranching Program and Management of Biological Risks to Wild Pacific Salmon -- Empirical Results of Salmon Supplementation in the Northeast Pacific: A Preliminary Assessment -- Positive Approaches To Environmentally Sustainable Aquaculture -- Macrobenthos as Biological Indicators to Assess the Influence of Aquaculture on Japanese Coastal Environments -- A Simple Experiment in Polyculture: Red Sea Bream (Pagrus major) and Ulvales (Ulva pertusa) -- Microalgae, Macroalgae, and Bivalves as Biofilters in Land-Based Mariculture in Israel -- Beyond the Monospecific Approach to Animal Aquaculture-The Light of Integrated Multi-Trophic Aquaculture -- Using Natural Ecosystem Services to Diminish Salmon-Farming Footprints in Southern Chile -- Conclusion -- Environmentally Responsible Aquaculture: Realities and Possibilities. Aquaculture is a rapidly growing industry and aquaculture practices can directly interact with and depend upon the surrounding environment. Therefore, the effects of all types of aquaculture on living natural resources and ecosystems are of significant and increasing national and international interest. In Ecological and Genetic Implications of Aquaculture Activities, numerous nationally and internationally prominent aquaculture researchers contribute 27 chapters that comprise overviews of aquaculture effects on the environment, discussions of genetic considerations, thorough documentation of aquaculture effects and their solutions specific to countries, and approaches toward environmentally sustainable aquaculture. Together, these chapters comprise a comprehensive synthesis of many ecological and genetic problems implicated in the practice of aquaculture and of many proven, attempted, or postulated solutions to those problems. Many chapters can serve as benchmark documentations of specific aquaculture effects on biodiversity at different levels. The authorship is broadly international; the authors represent 18 different countries or international agencies and all continents except Antarctica. The aquaculture effects and their solutions range from local to global and simple to highly technical. Effects common to many levels and types of aquaculture emerge, as well as both common and unique solutions. Aquaculturists, aquaculture researchers, aquaculture industry developers, conservation biologists, environmental scientists, resource managers, and policy makers should find this book interesting and informative.