Hugendubel.info - Die B2B Online-Buchhandlung 

Merkliste
Die Merkliste ist leer.
Bitte warten - die Druckansicht der Seite wird vorbereitet.
Der Druckdialog öffnet sich, sobald die Seite vollständig geladen wurde.
Sollte die Druckvorschau unvollständig sein, bitte schliessen und "Erneut drucken" wählen.

Corals and Reefs

From the Beginning to an Uncertain Future
BuchGebunden
166 Seiten
Englisch
Springererschienen am25.02.20232023
The health status and future of tropical coral reefs, as tourist destinations, are regularly subjected to media coverage.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
BuchGebunden
EUR149,79
BuchKartoniert, Paperback
EUR149,79
E-BookPDF1 - PDF WatermarkE-Book
EUR139,09

Produkt

KlappentextThe health status and future of tropical coral reefs, as tourist destinations, are regularly subjected to media coverage.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-3-031-16886-4
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr2023
Erscheinungsdatum25.02.2023
Auflage2023
Seiten166 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
IllustrationenIX, 166 p. 120 illus., 117 illus. in color.
Artikel-Nr.51015749

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
INTRODUCTION: THE REEF PHENOMENON.- INTO THE INTIMACY OF CORALS, BUILDERS OF THE SEA.- 1 TAXONOMIC AFFILIATION.- 1.1 Systematic classification of cnidarians.- 1.2  Scleractinians.- 2 MORPHOLOGY AND ANATOMY.- 2.1 Polyp anatomy.- 2.2   Reproduction.- 2.2.1 Sexual reproduction.- 2.2.2 Asexual reproduction.- 2.3 Anatomy of calcareous skeletons.- 2.4 Coral colonies.- 2.4.1 Corallite arrangement.- 2.4.2 Colony morphology.- 3 SYMBIOSIS.- 4 BIOMINERALIZATION.- 4.1 Calicoderm and biomineralization.- 4.2 Skeletons and biomineralization.- 4.3 Interface between calicoderm and skeleton.- 4.4 Principles of calcification.- 5 NUTRITION.- 5.1 Prey capture.- 5.2 Food.- 5.3 Autotrophy.- THE MODERN TIMES.- 1 BIOZONATION.- 2 REEF MORPHOTYPES.- 2.1      Fringing reefs.- 2.2 Barrier reefs.- 2.3 Atolls.- 2.4 Bank reefs.- 2.5 High carbonate islands.- 3          GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION.- 3.1 Ecological control.- 3.2 Tectonic control.- 3.3 Eustatic control.- 3.4 Topographic control.- 4 REEF GROWTH.- 4.1 Vertical growth strategies.- 4.1.1 Controlling factors.- 4.1.2 Give-up growth.- 4.1.3 Keep-up growth.- 4.1.4 Catch-up mode.- 4.2 Lateral growth.- 5 MORPHO-SEDIMENTARY PROCESSES.- 5.1 Bioconstruction.- 5.2  Erosion.- 5.3 Bioaccumulation.- 5.4 Cementation.- 6 INTERNAL STRUCTURE.- 6.1 Nature and distribution of facies.- 6.1.1 Framework facies.- 6.1.2 Detrital facies.- 6.1.3 Facies distribution and hydrodynamics.- 6.2 The different structural models.- 7  A BRIEF HISTORY OF REEF DEVELOPMENT.- 7.1 The climatic context.- 7.2 History of reef development since the last deglaciation.- 7.3 Reef history throughout the Pleistocene.-8 RECORD OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES.- 8.1 Record at the coral colony scale.- 8.1.1 Temperature.- 8.1.2  Salinometry.- 8.1.3 Rainfall.- 8.1.4 pH measurement.- 8.1.5 Photometry.- 8.1.6 Current measurement.- 8.2 Record at the scale of a reef edifice.- 8.2.1 Reef flats and micro-atolls.- 8.2.2  Arrangement of coral communities.- 8.2.3 Arrangement of reef edifices.- THE LONG MARCH OF CORALS.- 1 THE TIME OF THE ORIGINS.- 1.1 Early Earth and the first traces of life.- 1.2 Evolution of the atmosphere.- 1.3 Geochemical model of the early ocean.- 1.4 Emergence of biomineralization.- 1.5 The early calcifying organisms and cnidarians.- 1.6 The earliest corals.- 1.7 The appearance of scleractinian corals.- 2 THE TIME OF DIVERSIFICATION.- 2.1 Coral-algae symbiosis.- 2.1.1  Acquiring photosymbiosis.- 2.1.2 Evidence of photosymbiosis.- 2.1.3 Symbiosis and coloniality.- 2.2 A brief history of coral and reef building.- 2.2.1 Paleozoic times.- 2.2.2  Mesozoic times.- 2.2.3 Cenozoic times.- THE HIGHS AND LOWS OF THE REEF PHENOMENON.- 1          CAUSES.- 1.1 Causal relationships.- 1.2  Gas emissions and volcanic products.- 1.3 Methane emissions.- 1.4 Thermogenic gases.- 1.5 The fall of celestial bodies.- 1.6 Behaviour of organisms facing environmental disturbances.- 1.7 Disturbances induced by CO2 and ocean acidification.- 1.8 Thermal shocks.- 1.9 Disturbances induced by ocean deoxygenation.- 2  THE MAIN BIOLOGICAL CRISES.- 2.1 The Cambrian crises.- 2.2 The major crisis of the Ordovician end.- 2.3 The minor crises of the Silurian.- 2.4 The successive crises of the Devonian.- 2.5 The Permian crises.- 2.6 The Triassic crises.- 2.7 The lower Jurassic crisis.- 2.8 The Jurassic-Cretaceous transition (J-K).- 2.9 The Cretaceous-Paleogene crisis.- 2.10 The Paleocene-Eocene crisis.- 2.11 The Eocene-Oligocene transition.- 2.12 The Oligocene end to the Plio-Quaternary.- 3 THE RESPONSE OF CORALS AND REEFS TO CRISES: FROM EXTINCTION TO RECOVERY.- 3.1 At the Ordovician end.- 3.2 During the Silurian.- 3.3 During the Devonian.- 3.4  At the Permian.- 3.5 At the Permian-Triassic boundary.- 3.6 From the middle to the end of the Triassic.- 3.7 During the Jurassic.- 3.8 From the upper Jurassic to the lower Cretaceous.- 3.9 At the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) transition.- 3.10 From the Paleocene to the Eocene.- 3.11 From the Oligocene to the Miocene.- 3.12 During the Plio-Quaternary.- 4   CONCLUSIONS.- CORAL REEFS IN THE FACE OF THEIR FATE.- 1 DISRUPTIVE AGENTS IN ACTION.- 1.1 Carbon dioxide and rising surface water temperatures.- 1.2 Carbon dioxide and its effects on the carbonate cycle.- 1.3 Carbon dioxide and ocean acidification.- 1.4 The other disruptive agents.- 2 THE RESPONSE OF CORALS AND CORAL REEFS.- 2.1 Temperature rise of surface waters.- 2.2 To acidification.- 2.3 To other disruptive agents.- 3 THE EVOLUTION OF CORAL ISLETS.- 3.1 The modes of low-lying island formation.- 3.2 Future evolution of low-lying islands: maintenance, reduction, or destruction?.- CONCLUSIONS.- BIBLIOGRAPHY.- INDICE.mehr

Autor

Bertrand Martin-Garin is an associate professor at Aix-Marseille université. His skills are mainly guided by cnidarians - corals and jellyfish; coral reefs - in all their states! Paleontologist and marine biologist, the study of its organisms takes him on a spatio-temporal journey through the oceans and the seas of the Jurassic, the Miocene and the recent with themes related to climate and biodiversity, ecotoxicology, or mathematical concepts.
Lucien F. Montaggioni is a professor emeritus at Aix-Marseille université. His skills refer to sedimentology and palaeoecology of coral reefs and shallow-water carbonate platforms, from the Oligo-Miocene to Recent, in relation to palaeoclimate and palaeoenvironmental reconstructions. His research has focused on systems from islands in the Western Indian Ocean, Red Sea, Australia, Myanmar, New Caledonia and French Polynesia.
Weitere Artikel von
Martin-Garin, Bertrand