Modern Trends in Applied Aquatic Ecology

Front Cover
R.S. Ambasht, Navin K. Ambasht
Springer Science & Business Media, Jan 31, 2003 - Nature - 379 pages
Organisms and environment have evolved through modifying each other over millions of years. Humans appeared very late in this evolutionary time scale. With their superior brain attributes, humans emerged as the most dominating influence on the earth. Over the millennia, from simple hunter-food gatherers, humans developed the art of agriculture, domestication of animals, identification of medicinal plants, devising hunting and fishing techniques, house building, and making clothes. All these have been for better adjustment, growth, and survival in otherwise harsh and hostile surroundings and climate cycles of winter and summer, and dry and wet seasons. So humankind started experimenting and acting on ecological lines much before the art of reading, writing, or arithmetic had developed. Application of ecological knowledge led to development of agriculture, animal husbandry, medicines, fisheries, and so on. Modem ecology is a relatively young science and, unfortunately, there are so few books on applied ecology. The purpose of ecology is to discover the principles that govern relationships among plants, animals, microbes, and their total living and nonliving environmental components. Ecology, however, had remained mainly rooted in botany and zoology. It did not permeate hard sciences, engineering, or industrial technologies leading to widespread environmental degradation, pollution, and frequent episodes leading to mass deaths and diseases.
 

Contents

Bioassessment of Health of Aquatic Systems by the Use of Diatoms
1
The Management of Wetlands for Biological Diversity Four Principles
21
Use of Plants for Monitoring Heavy Metals in Freshwaters
43
Hydrochemical Determinism Ecological Polymorphism and Indicator Values of Aquatic Bryophytes for Water Quality
65
Plant Succession in Littoral Habitats Observations Explanations and Empirical Evidence
97
Phycoremediation Algae as Tools for Remediation of MineVoid Wetlands
133
UVB Impact on the Life of Aquatic Plants
149
The Significance of Ultraviolet Radiation for Aquatic Animals
173
Stress Responses in Cyanobacteria
201
Biomonitoring and Bioindicators in Aquatic Ecosystems
219
The Ecology of Wetlands Created in MiningAffected Landscapes
247
Conservation of Soil and Nutrients through Plant Cover on Wetland Margins
269
Identification Assessment and Mitigation of Environmental Impacts of Dam Projects
281
INDEX
371
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