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  • Formaat: 324 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429790058

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Global climate change affects productivity and species composition of freshwater and marine aquatic ecosystems by raising temperatures, ocean acidification, excessive solar UV and visible radiation. Effects on bacterioplankton and viruses, phytoplankton and macroalgae have farreaching consequences for primary consumers such as zooplankton, invertebrates and vertebrates, as well as on human consumption of fish, crustaceans and mollusks. It has affected the habitation of the Arctic and Antarctic oceans the most so far. Increasing pollution from terrestrial runoff, industrial, municipal and household wastes as well as marine transportation and plastic debris also affect aquatic ecosystems.

Preface iii
1 Introduction
1(11)
Donat-P. Hader
Kunshan Gao
2 Solar UV Radiation and Penetration into Water
12(20)
Uwe Feister
Donat-P. Hader
3 Ocean Climate Changes
32(13)
Donat-P. Hader
Kunshan Gao
4 Effects of Global Climate Change on Cyanobacteria
45(17)
Jainendra Pathak
Haseen Ahmed
Rajneesh
Shailendra P. Singh
Donat-P. Hader
Rajeshwar P. Sinha
5 Phytoplankton Responses to Ocean Climate Change Drivers: Interaction of Ocean Warming, Ocean Acidification and UV Exposure
62(27)
Donat-P. Hader
Kunshan Gao
6 Are Warmer Waters, Brighter Waters?: An Examination of the Irradiance Environment of Lakes and Oceans in a Changing Climate
89(27)
Patrick Neale
Robyn Smyth
7 Effects of Global Change on Aquatic Lower Trophic Levels of Coastal South West Atlantic Ocean Environments
116(30)
Macarena S. Valinas
Virginia E. Villafane
E. Walter Helbling
8 Effects of Climate Change on Corals
146(16)
Donat-P. Hader
9 Responses of Calcifying Algae to Ocean Acidification
162(12)
Kai Xu
Kunshan Gao
10 Effects of a Changing Climate on Freshwater and Marine Zooplankton
174(28)
Craig E. Williamson
Erin P. Overholt
11 UV-B Radiation and the Green Tide-forming Macroalga Ulva
202(25)
Jihae Park
Murray T. Brown
Hojun Lee
Christophe Vieira
Lalit K. Pandey
Eunmi Choi
Stephen Depuydt
Donat-P. Hader
Taejun Han
12 Mid-Latitude Macroalgae
227(26)
Donat-P. Hader
13 Polar Macroalgae
253(15)
Donat-P. Hader
14 Effects of Climate Change on Aquatic Bryophytes
268(20)
Javier Martinez-Abaigar
Encarnacion Nunez-Olivera
15 Ecophysiological Responses of Mollusks to Oceanic Acidification
288(15)
Ting Wang
Youji Wang
16 Climate Change Effects on the Physiology and Ecology of Fish
303(14)
Wang Xiaojie
Index 317
Donat-P. Häder was the director of the Botanical Institute at the Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany, and held the chair in Ecophysiology. He was also the director of the Botanical Garden of this university. He obtained his Ph.D. from Philipps University in Marburg, Germany, in 1973 where he continued as a Research Assistant until 1988. During this time he had several appointments as a travelling researcher in the US and Japan. His research interests include the effects of solar UV and global climate change on aquatic ecosystems. In addition, he worked on space biology and graviperception mechanisms in microorganisms using satellites, sounding rockets, the American Shuttle and the ISS. He is a member of the Effects Panel of the United Nations Environmental Programme since 1987 and was a member of the advisory board on Ecological Research of the German Minister for Research and Technology. He is a member of numerous Editorial Boards of internationally renowned journals and Vice President of the Deutsche Akademie für Photobiologie und Phototechnologie. He has published more than 720 scientific papers and worked on close to 30 books.

Kunshan Gao is currently the Chair Professor of State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University, China. He obtained his Ph.D. from Kyoto University, Japan, in 1989 and continued research at The General Technical Research Institute of Kansai Electrical Co., and a postdoctoral fellowship at University of Hawaii, USA. He became an Associate Professor at Shantou University in 1995 and was recognized as the outstanding young scientist in 1996 by NSFC, then as professor for one hundred talented programs in the Institute of Hydrobiology by the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1997. Professor Gaos scientific interests focus on the environmental impacts of increasing atmospheric CO2 (ocean acidification) and solar UV radiation. He has more than 260 publications in peer-reviewed journals, including Nature Climate Change, Nature Communications and Global Change Biology. He has been active as a member of SCOR WG on Changing Ocean Biological Systems.