Top Predators in Marine Ecosystems: Their Role in Monitoring and Management

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, May 11, 2006 - Science - 378 pages
The sustainable exploitation of the marine environment depends upon our capacity to develop systems of management with predictable outcomes. Unfortunately, marine ecosystems are highly dynamic and this property could conflict with the objective of sustainable exploitation. This book investigates the theory that the population and behavioural dynamics of predators at the upper end of marine food chains can be used to assist with management. Since these species integrate the dynamics of marine ecosystems across a wide range of spatial and temporal scales, they offer new sources of information that can be formally used in setting management objectives. This book examines the current advances in the understanding of the ecology of marine predators and will investigate how information from these species could be used in management.
 

Contents

Section 1
11
Section 2
28
Section 3
30
Section 4
46
Section 5
56
Section 6
63
Section 7
67
Section 8
82
Section 19
191
Section 20
200
Section 21
206
Section 22
211
Section 23
223
Section 24
229
Section 25
236
Section 26
249

Section 9
98
Section 10
104
Section 11
118
Section 12
121
Section 13
131
Section 14
138
Section 15
143
Section 16
157
Section 17
166
Section 18
177
Section 27
262
Section 28
275
Section 29
282
Section 30
294
Section 31
310
Section 32
324
Section 33
347
Section 34
355
Section 35
361

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About the author (2006)

Ian Boyd is Director of the Sea Mammal Research Unit at the University of St Andrews. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and a recipient of the Bruce Medal of the Zoological Society of London for his scientific studies in Antarctica.

Sarah Wanless of the NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, works on long term studies of bird populations.

C. J. Camphuysen's current research interests include foraging ecology, mortality and distribution patterns of seabirds in the Atlantic Ocean and in the North Sea, the impacts of fishing on marine birds and the spatial distribution and temporal trends in abundance of cetaceans in the North Sea.

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