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E-raamat: Chagos Archipelago: A Biological Biography

(University of Warwick, UK)
  • Formaat: 154 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Apr-2024
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040016947
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 154 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Apr-2024
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040016947

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With beautiful photography of the Chagos Archipelago coral reefs and islands, as well as graphs indicating their findings, this book offers professionals, researchers, academics and students in Conservation and Biodiversity an insight into one of the worlds most diverse ecosystems.



This book is the story of the natural history of Chagos Archipelago, and of the efforts of many to get it recognized as an important and protected wildlife reserve. Exploring its immense natural riches and biodiversity, both on islands and in the marine environment, this book addresses competing claims to its resources, its politics, and the desire of some commercial and political parties to exploit the area. It is about the fight to conserve a wonderland of biodiversity and obtain its protection from exploitation, especially of its reefs and other marine life.

This book shows the importance of the Chagos Archipelago and why so much research was done there. Rather than being a typical research book, this work presents research in a narrative form and describes the now substantial Government, UN, and legal interest in the archipelago since the UK was told to ‘decolonise’ it. It is also the story of our planet in miniature: the archipelago encapsulates much of the world’s conservation tribulations in a way we can much more easily understand. This narrative will explore the difficulties faced by the Chagos Archipelago, including displaced people, old and derelict industries (coconut in this case), the military, politics, rich and untouched ecosystems that some want to exploit, ruined habitats on land, climate change, and territorial claims. It will examine how all of these factors have affected the natural history, biodiversity, and conservation of the archipelago.

With beautiful photography of the Chagos Archipelago coral reefs and islands, as well as graphs indicating their findings, this book offers professionals, researchers, academics, and students in conservation and biodiversity an insight into one of the world’s most diverse ecosystems. It is also accessible for non-academic readers with an interest in climate change, biodiversity, and the importance of conservation.

Arvustused

Professor Emeritus Charles Sheppard OBEs latest (and final) book on the coral reefs and biogeography of the Chagos Islands is a highly engaging and accessible narrative, but ultimately a plea to act on climate change and human impacts on coral within a decadeor there wont be much left. Charles vividly paints the Chagos archipelago as a unique and broadly instructive microcosm of the worlds conservation and governance conundrums, and an ecological reference point. There are few branches of science whose practitioners hope that the outcomes of their lifetimes research might be wrong or become irrelevant, but Charles reminds us, that is the case both for scientists researching climate change and its effects on natural systems, not only coral reefs. As for Chagos and its reefs? We must retain hope, he said, or we are lost. After all, we know we will be dead one day but would still see a doctor tomorrow if needed. Why?. Sadly, the first print of this book arrived at his door just days after his sudden death in 2024 not long after retirement. It is a fitting final publication.

Matthew Bunce FMBA, in The Marine Biologist, Issue 32, Oct 2024

1. A tour of the Archipelago. Where and what is BIOT? The Capital Area.
Environmental planning in Diego Garcia. The rest of the archipelago
2.
Geography, origins, human use. What is so important about coral reefs anyway?
3. Natural history of the islands and human settlement. Environmental history
in plantation days. Introduced plants. Seabirds. Rats and other introduced
animals. Turtles. Coconut crabs. Final plantation days. Economics and the
island environment
4. Restoration, rats and the persistence of the coconut.
Possible restoration. Todays tiny islands. Potential value of the islands
5.
Coral reefs of Chagos. The earliest scientists. The 1970s reef expeditions.
Reef corals in the sunlit coral gardens. Corals at the extremes: the
shallowest corals. Corals at the extremes: the deepest corals. Lasting
impressions
6. Dark Ages and Enlightenment. The dark ages. Age of
Enlightenment. Ship expeditions: a way to do science. Later expeditions. 2006
onwards
7. The first ocean heatwave. The reefs are in black and white.
Eroding reefs. Rubble. Recovery and erosion
8. Connections, and the major
reef components. Stepping-stones across the ocean. Smaller reef creatures.
Juvenile corals. The reef fish. Poaching. Commercial Overfishing. Anchoring
on the corals ships big and small. Sewage in Diego Garcia lagoon
9.
Creation of the BIOT Marine Reserve. Deep water not yet explored. More
cavalry from over the horizon
10. Climate change research. Measuring water
temperatures. Measuring coral cover. Measuring sea level rise. Island
erosion. Other climate change.
11. The worlds conservation conundrum in one
archipelago. Conservation and deniers in a changing landscape. Costs and
values of conservation in Chagos. Hostility about working in Chagos. The
Military era and Modern environmental and commercial problems.
12. What of
the future? A poor prognosis?. Why justify it?. Politics and the future . In
the End. References
Charles Sheppard OBE was an Emeritus Professor whose work focused on coral reefs, and impacts of marine exploitation and climate change. He researched in most Indian Ocean and Caribbean countries, wrote about 250 research articles and over a dozen books, and received several awards for conservation.

Anne Sheppard has been Charles' partner and scientific colleague throughout, a biologist, taxonomist and photographer. They first visited the Chagos Archipelago in the 1970s and then, with others, built up a series of research expeditions as the richness, condition and value of Chagos became apparent. This culminated in its declaration as the world's largest no-take ocean reserve.

Photo Jon Schlayer, with permission.