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Biological invaders in inland waters : profiles, distribution and threats / edited by Francesca Gherardi.

Contributor(s): Gherardi, Francesca.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Invading nature : Springer series in invasion ecology: vol. 2Publisher: Dordrecht ; London : Springer, ©2007Description: xxix, 733 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.ISBN: 9781402060281; 1402060289.Subject(s): BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS | INTRODUCED TAXA | PESTS | FRESHWATER FISH | TROUT | BIRDS | MAMMALS | PARASITES | FRESHWATER ECOLOGY | CONTROLSHoldings: GRETA POINT: 574:504.3 BIO
Contents:
INTRODUCTION -- 1. Biological invasions in inland waters: an overview / Francesca Gherardi -- DISTRIBUTION OF INVADERS -- 2. Invasive crustaceans in European inland waters / David M. Holdich and Manfred Pöckl -- 3. Non-indigenous freshwater crabs in France: a new occurrence of a potamid near Nice / Pierre Y. Noël and Danièle Guinot -- 4. Status and ecosystem interactions of the invasive Louisianan red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii in East Africa / John Foster and David Harper -- 5. Non-indigenous freshwater molluscs and their distribution in Italy / Simone Cianfanelli, Elisabetta Lori, and Marco Bodon -- 6. Non-indigenous animal species naturalized in Iberian inland waters / Emili García-Berthou, Dani Boix, and Miguel Clavero -- 7. An overview of the natural history of non-indigenous amphibians and reptiles / Riccardo Scalera -- 8. The red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) in Asia: a review / Neil F. Ramsay, Pek Kaye Abigayle Ng, Ruth M. O’Riordan, and Loke Ming Chou -- 9. Semiaquatic mammals introduced into Italy: case studies in biological invasion / Sandro Bertolino and Piero Genovesi -- 10. Invasions by plants in the inland waters and wetlands of Africa / Geoffrey W. Howard and Florence W. Chege -- 11. Non-indigenous aquatic and semiaquatic plant species in France / Gabrielle Thiébaut -- PROFILES OF INVADERS -- 12. Ecological traits of aquatic NIS invading Austrian fresh waters / Leopold Füreder and Manfred Pöckl -- 13. Growth and reproduction of the goldfish Carassius auratus: a case study from Italy / Massimo Lorenzoni, Massimiliano Corboli, Lucia Ghetti, Giovanni Pedicillo and Antonella Carosi -- 14. Epigenetic context in the life history traits of the round goby, Neogobius melanostomus / Mária Balážová-L’avrinčiková and Vladimír Kováč -- 15. Growth and life history traits of introduced pumpkinseed (Lepomis gibbosus) in Europe, and the relevance to its potential invasiveness / Gordon H. Copp and Michael G. Fox -- 16. The biological flexibility of the pumpkinseed: a successful colonizer throughout Europe / Jozef Tomeček, Vladimír Kováč, and Stanislav Katina -- PATTERNS AND PATHWAYS OF INVASIONS -- 17. Marine vs. freshwater invaders: is shipping the key vector for species introductions to Europe? / Stephan Gollasch -- 18. Modeling biological invasions of inland waters / Hugh J. Maclsaac, Leif-Matthias Herborg, and Jim R. Muirhead -- 19. Biomonotony: definition and assessment for macroinvertebrates in European running waters / Jean-Nicolas Beisel and Simon Devin -- 20. Genetics and invasion biology in fresh waters: a pilot study of Procambarus clarkii in Europe / Silvia Barbaresi, Francesca Gherardi, Alessio Mengoni, and Catherine Souty-Grosset -- 21. Do estuaries act as saline bridges to allow invasion of new freshwater systems by non-indigenous fish species? / J. Anne Brown, Dawn M. Scott, and Rod W. Wilson -- 22. Which factors determine non-indigenous fish dispersal? A study of the red piranha in tropical Brazilian lakes / Anderson O. Latini and Miguel Petrere, Jr. -- 23. The relationship between biodiversity and invasibility in central Swedish lakes invaded by Elodea species / Daniel Larson and Eva Willén -- IMPACTS OF INVADERS -- 24. Measuring the impact of freshwater NIS: what are we missing? / Francesca Gherardi -- 25. Invasion of the Baltic Sea basin by the Ponto-Caspian amphipod Pontogammarus robustoides and its ecological impact / Kęstutis Arbačiauskas and Simona Gumuliauskaitė -- 26. Changes in the aquatic systems of north-eastern Europe after invasion by Gmelinoides fasciatus / Nadezhda A. Berezina -- 27. The predatory impact of Dikerogammarus villosus on fish / Sandra Casellato, Alessandra Visentin, and Giovanni La Piana -- 28. Understanding the impact of invasive crayfish / Francesca Gherardi -- 29. Predation of invasive crayfish on aquatic vertebrates: the effect of Procambarus clarkii on fish assemblages in Mediterranean temporary streams / Maria Ilhéu, João Manuel Bernardo, and Sílvia Fernandes -- 30. Assessing the trophic ecology of crayfish: a case study of the invasive Procambarus clarkii / María Crehuet, Paloma Alcorlo, Miguel Angel Bravo-Utrera, Angel Baltanás, and Carlos Montes -- 31. Introduction and spread of crayfish (Parastacidae) in Western Australia and their potential to displace indigenous species / Jessica Lynas, Andrew Storey, and Brenton Knott -- 32. The zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha: reproduction and competition with the sponge Ephydatia fluviatilis / Tisza Lancioni and Elda Gaino -- 33. Seasonal effects on the antioxidant response and metal accumulation of Dreissena polymorpha / Antonia C. Elia, Ambrosius J.M. Dörr, Marino Prearo, and Maria C. Abete -- MANAGING INVASIONS -- 34. Towards a European strategy to halt biological invasions in inland waters / Piero Genovesi -- 35. A risk assessment of biological invasions in the inland waterways of Europe: the Northern Invasion Corridor case study / Vadim E. Panov, Yury Yu. Dgebuadze, Tamara A. Shiganova, Andrew A. Filippov, and Dan Minchin -- 36. Logistics of shipboard and dockside testing of ballast water treatment systems in the United States / David A. Wright -- 37. Virtues and shortcomings of EU legal provisions for managing NIS: Rana catesbeiana and Trachemys scripta elegans as case studies / Riccardo Scalera -- 38. Problems and opportunities managing invasive Bullfrogs: is there any hope? / Michael J. Adams and Christopher A. Pearl -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- 39. A role for scientists / Francesca Gherardi -- INDEX -- General keywords -- Families, orders -- Geographical names -- Taxa common names -- Species index.
Summary: As predicted by Charles Elton in 1958, today invasive species have come to dominate 3% of the Earth's ice-free surface, constituting one of the most serious ecological and economic threats of the new millennium. In spite of any prevention effort, the number of invasive species is expected to increase in the next years as an inevitable consequence of both the augmented complexity of international trade and the deregulation of national and international markets. New pathways have been opened and the movement of non-indigenous species along them has been facilitated. Since the 1980s, studies of non-indigenous species have expanded greatly as a reflection of the rise in popularity that the discipline of invasion biology has gained among ecologists. However, the number of published articles is biased towards terrestrial invaders; invasive events occurring in freshwater systems have been most often neglected or analyzed only in a few regional contexts or for a small number of paradigmatic species. Yet freshwater systems, whose value to humankind is obviously priceless, are particularly vulnerable to non-indigenous species as a direct consequence of the intensity with which humans utilize fresh waters for recreation, food sources, and commerce. The book examines the identity, distribution, and impact of freshwater non-indigenous species and the dynamics of their invasion. Rather than providing a broad and comprehensive review of the issue, Biological invaders in inland waters focuses on old and new invaders and also raises questions and opens perspectives that provide a starting point for further research. The ultimate purpose of this book is to help define a more general framework for our knowledge of invasions in fresh waters. Such a framework will be indispensable to the planning of a science-based management program.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
BOOK BOOK WELLINGTON BOOKS 574:504.3 BIO 1 Available B022403

Includes bibliographical references and index.

INTRODUCTION -- 1. Biological invasions in inland waters: an overview / Francesca Gherardi -- DISTRIBUTION OF INVADERS -- 2. Invasive crustaceans in European inland waters / David M. Holdich and Manfred Pöckl -- 3. Non-indigenous freshwater crabs in France: a new occurrence of a potamid near Nice / Pierre Y. Noël and Danièle Guinot -- 4. Status and ecosystem interactions of the invasive Louisianan red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii in East Africa / John Foster and David Harper -- 5. Non-indigenous freshwater molluscs and their distribution in Italy / Simone Cianfanelli, Elisabetta Lori, and Marco Bodon -- 6. Non-indigenous animal species naturalized in Iberian inland waters / Emili García-Berthou, Dani Boix, and Miguel Clavero -- 7. An overview of the natural history of non-indigenous amphibians and reptiles / Riccardo Scalera -- 8. The red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) in Asia: a review / Neil F. Ramsay, Pek Kaye Abigayle Ng, Ruth M. O’Riordan, and Loke Ming Chou -- 9. Semiaquatic mammals introduced into Italy: case studies in biological invasion / Sandro Bertolino and Piero Genovesi -- 10. Invasions by plants in the inland waters and wetlands of Africa / Geoffrey W. Howard and Florence W. Chege -- 11. Non-indigenous aquatic and semiaquatic plant species in France / Gabrielle Thiébaut -- PROFILES OF INVADERS -- 12. Ecological traits of aquatic NIS invading Austrian fresh waters / Leopold Füreder and Manfred Pöckl -- 13. Growth and reproduction of the goldfish Carassius auratus: a case study from Italy / Massimo Lorenzoni, Massimiliano Corboli, Lucia Ghetti, Giovanni Pedicillo and Antonella Carosi -- 14. Epigenetic context in the life history traits of the round goby, Neogobius melanostomus / Mária Balážová-L’avrinčiková and Vladimír Kováč -- 15. Growth and life history traits of introduced pumpkinseed (Lepomis gibbosus) in Europe, and the relevance to its potential invasiveness / Gordon H. Copp and Michael G. Fox -- 16. The biological flexibility of the pumpkinseed: a successful colonizer throughout Europe / Jozef Tomeček, Vladimír Kováč, and Stanislav Katina -- PATTERNS AND PATHWAYS OF INVASIONS -- 17. Marine vs. freshwater invaders: is shipping the key vector for species introductions to Europe? / Stephan Gollasch -- 18. Modeling biological invasions of inland waters / Hugh J. Maclsaac, Leif-Matthias Herborg, and Jim R. Muirhead -- 19. Biomonotony: definition and assessment for macroinvertebrates in European running waters / Jean-Nicolas Beisel and Simon Devin -- 20. Genetics and invasion biology in fresh waters: a pilot study of Procambarus clarkii in Europe / Silvia Barbaresi, Francesca Gherardi, Alessio Mengoni, and Catherine Souty-Grosset -- 21. Do estuaries act as saline bridges to allow invasion of new freshwater systems by non-indigenous fish species? / J. Anne Brown, Dawn M. Scott, and Rod W. Wilson -- 22. Which factors determine non-indigenous fish dispersal? A study of the red piranha in tropical Brazilian lakes / Anderson O. Latini and Miguel Petrere, Jr. -- 23. The relationship between biodiversity and invasibility in central Swedish lakes invaded by Elodea species / Daniel Larson and Eva Willén -- IMPACTS OF INVADERS -- 24. Measuring the impact of freshwater NIS: what are we missing? / Francesca Gherardi -- 25. Invasion of the Baltic Sea basin by the Ponto-Caspian amphipod Pontogammarus robustoides and its ecological impact / Kęstutis Arbačiauskas and Simona Gumuliauskaitė -- 26. Changes in the aquatic systems of north-eastern Europe after invasion by Gmelinoides fasciatus / Nadezhda A. Berezina -- 27. The predatory impact of Dikerogammarus villosus on fish / Sandra Casellato, Alessandra Visentin, and Giovanni La Piana -- 28. Understanding the impact of invasive crayfish / Francesca Gherardi -- 29. Predation of invasive crayfish on aquatic vertebrates: the effect of Procambarus clarkii on fish assemblages in Mediterranean temporary streams / Maria Ilhéu, João Manuel Bernardo, and Sílvia Fernandes -- 30. Assessing the trophic ecology of crayfish: a case study of the invasive Procambarus clarkii / María Crehuet, Paloma Alcorlo, Miguel Angel Bravo-Utrera, Angel Baltanás, and Carlos Montes -- 31. Introduction and spread of crayfish (Parastacidae) in Western Australia and their potential to displace indigenous species / Jessica Lynas, Andrew Storey, and Brenton Knott -- 32. The zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha: reproduction and competition with the sponge Ephydatia fluviatilis / Tisza Lancioni and Elda Gaino -- 33. Seasonal effects on the antioxidant response and metal accumulation of Dreissena polymorpha / Antonia C. Elia, Ambrosius J.M. Dörr, Marino Prearo, and Maria C. Abete -- MANAGING INVASIONS -- 34. Towards a European strategy to halt biological invasions in inland waters / Piero Genovesi -- 35. A risk assessment of biological invasions in the inland waterways of Europe: the Northern Invasion Corridor case study / Vadim E. Panov, Yury Yu. Dgebuadze, Tamara A. Shiganova, Andrew A. Filippov, and Dan Minchin -- 36. Logistics of shipboard and dockside testing of ballast water treatment systems in the United States / David A. Wright -- 37. Virtues and shortcomings of EU legal provisions for managing NIS: Rana catesbeiana and Trachemys scripta elegans as case studies / Riccardo Scalera -- 38. Problems and opportunities managing invasive Bullfrogs: is there any hope? / Michael J. Adams and Christopher A. Pearl -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- 39. A role for scientists / Francesca Gherardi -- INDEX -- General keywords -- Families, orders -- Geographical names -- Taxa common names -- Species index.

As predicted by Charles Elton in 1958, today invasive species have come to dominate 3% of the Earth's ice-free surface, constituting one of the most serious ecological and economic threats of the new millennium. In spite of any prevention effort, the number of invasive species is expected to increase in the next years as an inevitable consequence of both the augmented complexity of international trade and the deregulation of national and international markets. New pathways have been opened and the movement of non-indigenous species along them has been facilitated. Since the 1980s, studies of non-indigenous species have expanded greatly as a reflection of the rise in popularity that the discipline of invasion biology has gained among ecologists. However, the number of published articles is biased towards terrestrial invaders; invasive events occurring in freshwater systems have been most often neglected or analyzed only in a few regional contexts or for a small number of paradigmatic species. Yet freshwater systems, whose value to humankind is obviously priceless, are particularly vulnerable to non-indigenous species as a direct consequence of the intensity with which humans utilize fresh waters for recreation, food sources, and commerce. The book examines the identity, distribution, and impact of freshwater non-indigenous species and the dynamics of their invasion. Rather than providing a broad and comprehensive review of the issue, Biological invaders in inland waters focuses on old and new invaders and also raises questions and opens perspectives that provide a starting point for further research. The ultimate purpose of this book is to help define a more general framework for our knowledge of invasions in fresh waters. Such a framework will be indispensable to the planning of a science-based management program.

GRETA POINT: 574:504.3 BIO

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