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Author Fogarty, Michael J., author

Title Fishery ecosystem dynamics / Michael J. Fogarty, Jeremy S. Collie
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Cover -- Fishery Ecosystem Dynamics -- Copyright -- Preface -- About this Book -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Overview -- 1.1.1 Historical perspectives -- 1.1.2 Scientific developments -- 1.2 Process and pattern in fishery ecosystems -- 1.3 Confronting complexity -- 1.4 Summary -- Additional reading -- Part I: Ecological Models: An Overview -- Chapter 2: Density-Independent Population Growth -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Simple population models -- 2.2.1 Continuous-time model -- 2.2.2 Discrete-time model -- 2.3 Age- and stage-structured models -- 2.3.1 Age-structured model -- 2.3.1.1 Sensitivities and elasticities of matrix models -- 2.3.1.2 Stage-structured models -- 2.4 Summary -- Additional reading -- Chapter 3: Density-Dependent Population Growth -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Compensation in simple population models -- 3.2.1 Continuous-time models -- 3.2.1.1 The generalized logistic model -- 3.2.2 Multiple equilibria -- 3.2.2.1 Depensation -- 3.2.2.2 Alternative stable states -- 3.2.3 Discrete-time models -- 3.2.3.1 Complex dynamics -- 3.3 Time-delay models -- 3.3.1 Continuous-time models -- 3.3.2 Discrete-time models -- 3.4 Matrix models -- 3.4.1 Age-structured models -- 3.4.2 Stage-structured models -- 3.5 Summary -- Additional reading -- Chapter 4: Interspecific Interactions I: Predation and Parasitism -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Predation -- 4.2.1 Density-independent models in continuous time -- 4.2.2 Density-dependent models in continuous time -- 4.2.3 Refugia -- 4.2.3.1 The foraging arena -- 4.2.4 The functional feeding response -- 4.2.4.1 Implications for stability -- 4.2.4.2 Environmental effects -- 4.2.5 Predator dependence -- 4.2.6 Discrete-time models -- 4.2.6.1 Density-independent models -- 4.2.6.2 Prey density dependence -- 4.3 Parasitism and disease -- 4.3.1 Models for microparasites -- 4.3.2 Models for macroparasites -- 4.3.3 Epidemiological models -- 4.4 Summary -- Additional reading -- Chapter 5: Interspecific Interactions II: Competition and Mutualism -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Competition -- 5.2.1 Competition and the niche -- 5.2.1.1 Niche metrics -- 5.2.2 Experimental evidence for competition -- 5.2.2.1 Species removal experiments -- 5.2.2.2 Species addition "experiments" -- 5.2.2.3 Estimating interaction strength -- 5.2.3 Models of competition in continuous time -- 5.2.3.1 Non-linear isoclines -- 5.2.4 Models of competition in discrete time -- 5.2.5 Model-based estimation of competition coefficients -- 5.2.6 Altering competitive outcomes -- 5.2.7 The competitive production principle -- 5.3 Mutualism -- 5.3.1 Continuous-time models -- 5.3.2 Discrete-time models -- 5.4 Summary -- Additional reading -- Chapter 6: Community Dynamics -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Some attributes of communities -- 6.2.1 Species diversity -- 6.2.2 Keystone species and trophic cascades -- 6.2.3 Guilds and functional groups -- 6.2.4 Community compensation
Summary This book provides an integrated framework for the quantitative analysis of exploited aquatic ecosystems, tracing the critical linkages between fundamental ecological processes and their implications for sustainable resource management. Examples are drawn from freshwater and marine ecosystems throughout the world. Fishery ecosystems have historically been subject to a broad array of human interventions, ranging from large-scale removal of biomass to deliberate attempts at ecosystem engineering involving species introductions, habitat alteration, and selective reorganization of ecosystem structure. Traditional approaches to fisheries analysis and management focus on extraction of resources viewed in isolation from the broader ecosystem setting. Further, these approaches typically are predicated on assumptions of "well-behaved" dynamical properties characterized by stable equilibrium properties. This book explores a broader range of possibilities concerning human impacts on aquatic ecosystems. It places software tools in the hands of students and professionals in an electronic supplement. Modeling and statistical programs in R and other platforms are provided to assist in the transition from concept to practical application
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [287]-309) and index
Notes Online resource; title from HTML homepage (Oxford, viewed October 15, 2020)
Subject Fishery resources.
Fishery management.
Fishery management
Fishery resources
Form Electronic book
Author Collie, Jeremy S. (Jeremy Steven), author.
ISBN 9780191081606
0191081604
9780191822209
0191822205