Listing 1 - 5 of 5 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Unionidae --- Margaritiferidae --- Freshwater mussels --- Clams, Freshwater --- Fresh-water mussels --- Freshwater clams --- Mussels, Fresh-water --- Naiades (Mollusks) --- Naiads (Mollusks) --- Unionacea --- Freshwater invertebrates --- Mussels --- Unionoida --- Margaritanidae --- Amblemidae
Choose an application
An exhaustive guide to all aspects of the freshwater mussel fauna in Florida, Freshwater Mussels of Florida covers the ecology, biology, distribution, and conservation of the many species of bivalve mollusks in the Sunshine State. In the past three decades, researchers, the public, businesses that depend on wildlife, and policy makers have given more attention to the threatened natural diversity of the Southeast, including freshwater mussels. This compendium meets the increasingly urgent need to catalog this imperiled group of aquatic organisms in the United States.
Freshwater mussels --- Clams, Freshwater --- Fresh-water mussels --- Freshwater clams --- Mussels, Fresh-water --- Naiades (Mollusks) --- Naiads (Mollusks) --- Unionacea --- Freshwater invertebrates --- Mussels --- Unionoida
Choose an application
This well-illustrated book highlights freshwater mussels' fabulous diversity, amazing array of often bizarre ecological adaptations and their dire conservation plight. Summarizing and synthesizing historical and contemporary information as well as original research and analysis, the book describes the diverse array of mussel life history strategies and builds a cohesive narrative culminating in the development of explicit frameworks to explain pervasive patterns in mussel ecology. The fascinating and colorful role of mussels in human society is also described in detail, including the little-known pearl button industry of the early 1900s and the wild and often violent shell harvest of the 1990s. The final chapter details humans' efforts to save these fascinating animals and gives a prognosis for the future of the North American fauna. The book provides the first comprehensive review of mussel ecology and conservation for scientists, natural resource professionals, students and natural history enthusiasts.
Freshwater mussels --- Clams, Freshwater --- Fresh-water mussels --- Freshwater clams --- Mussels, Fresh-water --- Naiades (Mollusks) --- Naiads (Mollusks) --- Unionacea --- Freshwater invertebrates --- Mussels --- Unionoida --- Conservation
Choose an application
Abbie Gascho Landis brings readers to a hotbed of mussel diversity, the American Southeast, to seek mussels where they eat, procreate, and, too often, perish. Accompanied often by her husband, a mussel scientist, and her young children, she learned to see mussels on the creekbed, to tell a spectaclecase from a pigtoe, and to worry what vanishing mussels--70 percent of North American species are imperiled--will mean for humans and wildlife alike. Landis shares this journey, traveling from perilous river surveys to dry streambeds and into laboratories where endangered mussels are raised one precious life at a time. Mussels have much to teach us about the health of our watersheds if we step into the creek and take a closer look at their lives. In the tradition of writers like Terry Tempest Williams and Sy Montgomery, Landis gracefully chronicles these untold stories with a veterinarian's careful eye and the curiosity of a naturalist.--
Freshwater mussels. --- Freshwater mussels --- Stream ecology --- Freshwater biodiversity conservation --- Freshwater biodiversity conservation. --- Stream ecology. --- River ecology --- Freshwater ecology --- Hyporheic zones --- Conservation of freshwater biodiversity --- Freshwater biological diversity conservation --- Aquatic biodiversity conservation --- Freshwater biodiversity --- Clams, Freshwater --- Fresh-water mussels --- Freshwater clams --- Mussels, Fresh-water --- Naiades (Mollusks) --- Naiads (Mollusks) --- Unionacea --- Freshwater invertebrates --- Mussels --- Unionoida --- Conservation --- Southern States. --- American South --- American Southeast --- Former Confederate States --- Southeast --- Southeast United States --- Southeastern States --- Southern United States --- The South --- U.S.
Choose an application
Pearly mussels (Unionoidea) live in lakes, rivers, and streams around the world. These bivalves play important roles in freshwater ecosystems and were once both culturally and economically valuable as sources of food, pearls, and mother-of-pearl. Today, however, hundreds of species of these mussels are extinct or endangered. David L. Strayer provides a critical synthesis of the factors that control the distribution and abundance of pearly mussels. Using empirical analyses and models, he assesses the effects of dispersal, habitat quality, availability of fish hosts, adequate food, predators, and parasites. He also addresses conservation issues that apply to other inhabitants of fresh waters around the globe and other pressing issues in contemporary ecology.
Freshwater mussels --- Clams, Freshwater --- Fresh-water mussels --- Freshwater clams --- Mussels, Fresh-water --- Naiades (Mollusks) --- Naiads (Mollusks) --- Unionacea --- Freshwater invertebrates --- Mussels --- Unionoida --- Ecology. --- bivalves. --- conservation issues. --- contemporary ecology. --- critical approach. --- cultural value. --- economic value. --- endangered species. --- extinct mussels. --- food mussels. --- freshwater ecology. --- freshwater ecosystems. --- freshwater lakes. --- habitat quality. --- healthy ecosystems. --- mother of pearl. --- mussel abundance. --- mussel distribution. --- mussel ecology. --- mussel populations. --- mussel predators. --- mussels. --- parasites. --- pearls. --- pearly mussels. --- rivers and streams. --- scientists. --- textbook. --- zoology.
Listing 1 - 5 of 5 |
Sort by
|