Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Preface: why?
- 1 The world as it was and the world as it is
- 1.1 Early ecological history
- 1.2 The more recent past
- 1.3 Characteristics of freshwater organisms
- 1.4 Freshwater biodiversity
- 1.5 A spanner in the works?
- 1.6 Politics and pollution
- 1.7 On the nature of textbooks
- 1.8 Further reading
- 2 Early evolution and diversity of freshwater organisms
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 The freshwater biota
- 2.3 Bacteria
- 2.4 The variety of bacteria
- 2.5 Viruses
- 2.6 Two sorts of cells
- 2.7 The diversity of microbial eukaryotes
- 2.8 Algae
- 2.9 Kingdoms of eukaryotes
- 2.10 Further reading
- 3 Diversity continued
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Osmoregulation
- 3.3 Reproduction, resting stages and aestivation
- 3.4 Getting enough oxygen
- 3.5 Insects
- 3.6 Big animals, air‐breathers and swamps
- 3.7 Dispersal among freshwaters
- 3.8 Patterns in freshwater diversity
- 3.9 Fish faunas
- 3.10 The fish of Lake Victoria
- 3.11 Overall diversity in freshwaters
- 3.12 Environmental DNA
- 3.13 Further reading
- 4 Water
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 The molecular properties of water and their physical consequences
- 4.3 Melting and evaporation
- 4.4 How much water is there and where is it?
- 4.5 Patterns in hydrology
- 4.6 Bodies of water and their temperatures
- 4.7 An overview of mixing patterns
- 4.8 Viscosity of water and fluid dynamics
- 4.9 Diffusion
- 4.10 Further reading
- 5 Water as a habitat
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Polar and covalent compounds
- 5.3 The atmosphere
- 5.4 Carbon dioxide
- 5.5 Major ions
- 5.6 The big picture
- 5.7 Further reading
- 6 Key nutrients, trace elements and organic matter
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Concepts of limiting substances
- 6.3 Experiments on nutrient limitation
- 6.4 Nutrient supply and need
- 6.5 Phosphorus
- 6.6 Nitrogen
- 6.7 Pristine concentrations
- 6.8 Trace elements and silicon
- 6.9 Organic substances
- 6.10 Substance budgets and movements
- 6.11 Sediment–water relationships
- 6.12 Further reading
- 7 Light thrown upon the waters
- 7.1 Light
- 7.2 Effects of the atmosphere
- 7.3 From above to under the water
- 7.4 Remote sensing
- 7.5 Further reading
- 8 Headwater streams and rivers
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.2 General models of stream ecosystems
- 8.3 The basics of stream flow
- 8.4 Flow and discharge
- 8.5 Laminar and turbulent flow
- 8.6 Particles carried
- 8.7 The response of stream organisms to shear stress
- 8.8 Community composition in streams
- 8.9 Algal and plant communities
- 8.10 Macroinvertebrates
- 8.11 Streams in different climates: the polar and alpine zones
- 8.12 Invertebrates of kryal streams
- 8.13 Food webs in cold streams
- 8.14 Stream systems in the cold‐temperate zone
- 8.15 Allochthonous sources of energy
- 8.16 Stream orders
- 8.17 The river continuum concept
- 8.18 Indirectly, wolves are stream animals too
- 8.19 Scarcity of nutrients
- 8.20 Warm‐temperate streams
- 8.21 Desert streams
- 8.22 Tropical streams
- 8.23 Further reading
- 9 Uses, misuses and restoration of headwater streams and rivers
- 9.1 Traditional use of headwater river systems
- 9.2 Deforestation
- 9.3 Acidification
- 9.4 Eutrophication
- 9.5 Commercial afforestation
- 9.6 Settlement
- 9.7 Engineering impacts
- 9.8 Alterations of the fish community and introduced species
- 9.9 Sewage and toxic pollution and their treatment
- 9.10 Diffuse pollution
- 9.11 River monitoring
- 9.12 The Water Framework Directive
- 9.13 Implementation of the Directive
- 9.14 Restoration and rehabilitation ecology
- 9.15 Further reading
- 10 Rich systems: floodplain rivers
- 10.1 Introduction
- 10.2 From an erosive river to a depositional one
- 10.3 Submerged plants
- 10.4 Growth of submerged plants
- 10.5 Methods of measuring the primary productivity of submerged plants
- 10.6 Enclosure methods
- 10.7 Other methods
- 10.8 Submerged plants and the river ecosystem
- 10.9 Farther downstream: swamps and floodplains
- 10.10 Productivity of swamps and floodplain marshes
- 10.11 Swamp soils and the fate of the high primary production
- 10.12 Oxygen supply and soil chemistry in swamps
- 10.13 Emergent plants and flooded soils
- 10.14 Swamp and marsh animals
- 10.15 Whitefish and blackfish
- 10.16 Latitudinal differences in floodplains
- 10.17 Polar floodplains
- 10.18 Cold‐temperate floodplains
- 10.19 Warm‐temperate floodplains
- 10.20 Tropical floodplains
- 10.21 The Sudd
- 10.22 Further reading
- 11 Floodplains and human affairs
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 Floodplain services
- 11.3 Floodplain fisheries
- 11.4 Floodplain swamps and human diseases
- 11.5 Case studies: the Pongola River
- 11.6 River and floodplain management and rehabilitation
- 11.7 Mitigation: plant bed management in rivers
- 11.8 Enhancement
- 11.9 Rehabilitation
- 11.10 Inter‐basin transfers and water needs
- 11.11 Further reading
- 12 Lakes and other standing waters
- 12.1 Introduction
- 12.2 The origins of lake basins
- 12.3 Lake structure
- 12.4 The importance of the catchment area
- 12.5 Lakes as autotrophic or heterotrophic systems
- 12.6 The continuum of lakes
- 12.7 Lake history
- 12.8 Organic remains
- 12.9 General problems of interpretation of evidence from sediment cores
- 12.10 Two ancient lakes
- 12.11 Younger lakes
- 12.12 Filling in
- 12.13 Summing‐up
- 12.14 Further reading
- 13 The communities of shallow standing waters: mires, shallow lakes and the littoral zone
- 13.1 Introduction
- 13.2 What determines the nature of mires and littoral zones?
- 13.3 Temperature
- 13.4 Nutrients
- 13.5 Littoral communities in lakes
- 13.6 The structure of littoral communities
- 13.7 Periphyton
- 13.8 Heterotrophs among the plants
- 13.9 Neuston
- 13.10 Linkages, risks and insurances among the littoral communities
- 13.11 Latitude and littorals
- 13.12 The role of the nekton
- 13.13 Further reading
- 14 Plankton communities of the pelagic zone
- 14.1 Kitchens and toilets
- 14.2 Phytoplankton and sinking
- 14.3 Photosynthesis and growth of phytoplankton
- 14.4 Net production and growth
- 14.5 Nutrient uptake and growth rates of phytoplankton
- 14.6 Distribution of freshwater phytoplankton
- 14.7 Washout
- 14.8 Cyanobacterial blooms
- 14.9 Heterotrophs in the plankton: viruses and bacteria
- 14.10 The microbial pathway
- 14.11 Zooplankton
- 14.12 Grazing
- 14.13 Feeding and grazing rates of zooplankton
- 14.14 Competition and predation among grazers
- 14.15 Predation on zooplankters by invertebrates
- 14.16 Fishes in the open‐water community
- 14.17 Predation on the zooplankton and fish production
- 14.18 Avoidance of vertebrate predation by the zooplankton
- 14.19 Piscivores and piscivory
- 14.20 Functioning of the open‐water community
- 14.21 Polar lakes
- 14.22 Cold‐temperate lakes
- 14.23 Warm‐temperate lakes
- 14.24 Very warm lakes in the tropics
- 14.25 Further reading
- 15 The profundal zone and carbon storage
- 15.1 The end of the line
- 15.2 The importance of oxygen
- 15.3 Profundal communities
- 15.4 Biology of selected benthic invertebrates
- 15.5 What the sediment‐living detritivores really eat
- 15.6 Influence of the open‐water community on the profundal benthos
- 15.7 Sediment storage and the global carbon cycle
- 15.8 Further reading
- 16 Fisheries in standing waters
- 16.1 Some general principles
- 16.2 Some basic fish biology
- 16.3 Eggs
- 16.4 Feeding
- 16.5 Breeding
- 16.6 Choice of fish for a fishery
- 16.7 Measurement of fish production
- 16.8 Growth measurement
- 16.9 Fish production and commercial fisheries in lakes
- 16.10 Changes in fisheries: a case study
- 16.11 The East African Great Lakes
- 16.12 Fish culture
- 16.13 Stillwater angling
- 16.14 Amenity culture and the aquarium trade
- 16.15 Further reading
- 17 The uses, abuses and restoration of standing waters
- 17.1 Introduction
- 17.2 Services provided by standing waters
- 17.3 Domestic water supply, eutrophication and reservoirs
- 17.4 Eutrophication – nutrient pollution
- 17.5 Dams and reservoirs
- 17.6 Fisheries in new lakes
- 17.7 Effects downstream of the new lake
- 17.8 New tropical lakes and human populations
- 17.9 Man‐made tropical lakes, the balance of pros and cons
- 17.10 Amenity and conservation
- 17.11 The alternative states model
- 17.12 Ponds
- 17.13 Restoration approaches for standing waters: symptom treatment
- 17.14 Treatment of proximate causes: nutrient control
- 17.15 Present supplies of phosphorus, their relative contributions and how they are related to the algal crop
- 17.16 Methods available for reducing total phosphorus loads
- 17.17 In‐lake methods
- 17.18 Complications for phosphorus control – sediment sources
- 17.19 Nitrogen reduction
- 17.20 Habitat creation
- 17.21 Further reading
- 18 Climate change and the future of freshwaters
- 18.1 Introduction
- 18.2 Climate change
- 18.3 Existing effects of freshwaters
- 18.4 Future effects
- 18.5 Future effects on freshwaters
- 18.6 Switches and feedbacks
- 18.7 Wicked problems
- 18.8 Mitigation of global warming
- 18.9 The remedy of ultimate causes
- 18.10 Rewilding the world
- 18.11 Reforming governments
- 18.12 Further reading
- References
- Index
- End User License Agreement
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