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Recent Advances in Freshwater Crustacean Biodiversity and Conservation [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by (University of Kansas, USA), Edited by (Central Fisheries Research Institution, Japan)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 508 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1174 g, 34 Tables, black and white; 98 Illustrations, color; 66 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Advances in Crustacean Research
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367443503
  • ISBN-13: 9780367443504
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 508 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1174 g, 34 Tables, black and white; 98 Illustrations, color; 66 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Advances in Crustacean Research
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367443503
  • ISBN-13: 9780367443504
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Recent Advances in Freshwater Crustacean Biodiversity and Conservation focuses on minor crustacean groups and regionally endemic groups, all from freshwaters. Chapters in this book cover crustaceans such as Maxillopods, Mysids, Cumaceans, Isopods, Amphipods, Branchiopods, Copepods, and Decapods. Each looks at global or regional fauna and discusses conservation issues for that group. The majority of the chapters are based on papers presented at symposia organized by the editors at two international scientific meetings held in Barcelona and Washington DC. The contributors are world-renowned experts on their groups, as well as on freshwater crustacean conservation and biodiversity at global levels.

It has previously been difficult for conservation managers, NGOs, and university professors and students who may not have access to comprehensive journal subscriptions to find relevant information on diversity and conservation of freshwater crustaceans. This book meets that need, addressing crustacean groups not previously treated and providing additional information beyond any presented in existing books. As the editors write in their introduction: we cannot conserve and we cannot protect what we do not know exists.

This is a reliable, cutting-edge reference for anybody involved in crustacean research: students, researchers, agencies, and NGOs, as well as science educators, conservationists, and government conservation policymakers. The book will also be useful for those working in aquaculture and fisheries, given that many of the taxa discussed are economically important.

Editor Bio ix
Contributors xi
Chapter 1 Conservation Biology of Freshwater Crustaceans: Introduction
1(2)
D. Christopher Rogers
Tadashi Kawai
Chapter 2 Phylogenetic Analyses Suggest A Single Origin of Freshwater Barnacles
3(16)
Henrik Glenner
Jens T. Høeg
David J. Rees
Christoph D. Schubart
Chapter 3 Malacostraca (Arthropoda: Crustacea) of Fresh and Brackish Waters of Sakhalin Island: the Interaction of Faunas of Different Origins
19(48)
Vjacheslav S. Labay
Chapter 4 Notes On Australian Marsh-Hoppers (Protorchestiidae: Amphipoda: Crustacea)
67(18)
Lauren E. Hughes
Chapter 5 New and Known Species of Bellorchestia Serejo and Lowry, 2008 From Australia (Talitridae: Amphipoda: Crustacea)
85(54)
Lauren E. Hughes
Sue Lindsay
Chapter 6 Freshwater Malacostraca of the Mediterranean Islands - Diversity, Origin, and Conservation Perspectives
139(82)
Kamil Hupalo
Fabio Stoch
Ioannis Karaouzas
Anna Wysocka
Tomasz Rewicz
Tomasz Mamos
Michal Grabowski
Chapter 7 Conservation Status of the Large Branchiopods (Branchiopoda: Anostraca, Notostraca, Laevicaudata, Spinicaudata, Cyclestherida)
221(18)
D. Christopher Rogers
Chapter 8 Faunal Patterns in the Cladocera (Crustacea: Branchiopoda) On the Indian Subcontinent with Special Emphasis On Their Body Size Distribution
239(16)
Sameer M. Padhye
Henri J. Dumont
Chapter 9 Freshwater and Brackish Water Planktonic Copepods (Crustacea: Copepoda) of Sakhalin Island (Far East Asia): Diversity, Ecology, and Zoogeography
255(52)
Denis S. Zavarzin
Chapter 10 Conservation of Continental Mysida and Stygiomysida
307(40)
Mikhail E. Daneliya
Karl J. Wittmann
Chapter 11 Reassessing the Current Conservation Status of the Freshwater Aeglid, Aegla Jaragua Moraes, Tavares and Bueno, 2016 (Decapoda: Anomura: Aeglidae) as Critically Endangered A Ten-Year Case Study
347(34)
Sergio L. S. Bueno
Milena R. Wolf
Roberto M. Shimizu
Chapter 12 New Insights On Biodiversity and Conservation of Amphidromous Shrimps of the Indo-Pacific Islands (Decapoda: Atyidae: Caridina)
381(24)
V. de Mazancourt
W. Klotz
G. Marquet
B. Mos
D.C. Rogers
P. Keith
Chapter 13 Updated Extinction Risk Assessment of the Colombian Freshwater Crabs (Brachyura: Pseudothelphusidae, Trichodactylidae) Reveals An Increased Number of Threatened Species
405(20)
Ada Acevedo-Alonso
Neil Cumberlidge
Chapter 14 Threats to Endemic Colombian Freshwater Crabs (Decapoda: Pseudothelphusidae, Trichodactylidae) Associated with Climate Change and Human-Mediated Activities
425(20)
David M. Hudson
Gillian Phillips
Carlos A. Lasso
Martha R. Campos
Chapter 15 A New Morphotype of the Crayfish Cambarus Hubrichti (Decapoda: Cambaridae) From A Karst Spring Cave System, with Comments On Its Ecology
445(24)
Teresa M. Carroll
D. Christopher Rogers
David B. Stern
Keith A. Crandall
Chapter 16 Historic Cultural Value of the Japanese Endangered Freshwater Crayfish, Cambaroides Japonicus (De Haan, 1841) (Decapoda: Cambaroididae)
469(18)
Tadashi Kawai
Jason Coughran
Chapter 17 Conservation of the Japanese Endangered Japanese Crayfish, Cambaroides Japonicus (De Haan, 1841) (Decapoda; Cambaroididae)
487(18)
Tadashi Kawai
Brooke Grubb
Frederic Grandjean
Chapter 18 General Discussion
505(4)
Tadashi Kawai
D. Christopher Rogers
Index 509
Tadashi Kawai is Chief researcher at the Hokkaido Research Organization, Central Fisheries Research Institution (Japan). His main research program is "Environmental monitoring for the conservation of native ecosystems". He received his PhD from the Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. Tadashi cover biology and systematic of freshwater decapod crustacean (particularly freshwater crayfish) and conservation of wetlands on a global scale.

D. Christopher Rogers is a research zoologist at the University of Kansas with the Kansas Biological Survey and is affiliated with the Biodiversity Institute, with various research projects all over the world. He received his PhD from the University of New England in Armidale, NSW, Australia. Christopher specializes in freshwater and terrestrial crustaceans (particularly Branchiopoda and Malacostraca) and the invertebrate fauna of seasonally astatic wetlands on a global scale.