Acknowledgements
Preface
List of acronyms
1: Manuel Barange, John G. Field & Will Steffen: Introduction:
oceans in an earth system
Section 1 - The Changing Ocean Ecosystems
2: Ken Drinkwater et al: Climate Forcing on Marine Ecosystems
3: Keith Brander et al: Human Impacts on Marine Ecosystems
Section 2 - Advances in Understanding the Structure and Dynamics of
Marine Ecosystems
4: Dian J. Gifford et al: Dynamics of Marine Ecosystems: target
species
5: Brad deYoung et al: Dynamics of Marine Ecosystems:
physical-biological interactions - integration and modelling
6: Roger P. Harris et al: Dynamics of Marine Ecosystems:
observation and experimentation
7: Coleen L. Moloney et al: Dynamics of Marine Ecosystems:
ecological processes
Section 3 - The Human Dimensions of Changes in Marine
Ecosystems
8: R. Ian Perry et al: Interactions between Changes in Marine
Ecosystems and Human Communities
9: Manuel Barange et al: Marine Resources Management in the Face of
Change: from ecosystem science to ecosystem-based management
Section 4 - A Way Forward
10: Shin-ichi Ito et al: Ocean Ecosystem Responses to Future Global
Change Scenarios: a way forward
11: Eileen E. Hofmann, Manuel Barange, John G. Field, Roger P.
Harris, R. Ian Perry & Francisco Werner: Marine Ecosystems and
Global Change: a synthesis
References
Index
Manuel Barange is Director of the International Project Office of
GLOBEC, based at the Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK. His scientific
interests include Climate and Anthropogenic impacts on Marine
Ecosystems, Assessment and management of marine fisheries and
Marine Physical/Biological interactions. He is an advisor to the UK
Natural Environmental Research Council and the UK Department of
Environment, Fisheries and Rural Affairs on sustainable marine
bioresources and
a member of the European Commission Framework 7 Advisory board for
"Environment (including climate change)". Dr Barange has over 60
peer-reviewed publications and has recently edited a book on
Climate
Change and the Economics of the World's Fisheries through Elgar
publishers. Professor John Field is Director of the Marine Research
(MA-RE) Institute at the University of Cape Town. He specializes in
analysis of marine ecosystems, the effects of climate change on
fisheries, and developing an ecosystem approach to managing
fisheries. He is past President of the Scientific Committee on
Oceanic Research (SCOR) and presently chairs the Scientific
Steering Committee of the Global Ocean Observing
System (GOOS). He is listed as an ISI-Highly Cited Scientist for
his work on analysing marine distribution patterns, and for
co-authoring the article that coined the term "microbial loop",
which won the
2006 John Martin ASLO Award for a paradigm shift in aquatic
science. Dr. Roger Harris is a Senior Scientist at the Plymouth
Marine Laboratory, UK. His main research interests are: the control
of biological production by physical processes, the role of water
column biology in global oceanic carbon flux and the ecology and
physiology of calanoid copepods. He has considerable experience in
international and interdisciplinary project management. He is past
Chairman of the IGBP/SCOR/IOC GLOBEC
Steering Committee and continues to serve on the GLOBEC SSC and
leads the Focus 2 Process Studies Working Group. Involved in a
number of editorial roles, currently principally as Strategic
Editor of the
Journal of Plankton Research and editing a Special Issue of ICES
Journal of Marine Science for the 4th International Zooplankton
Symposium. Published over 100 peer-reviewed scientific papers.
Eileen E. Hofmann is a Professor in the Department of Ocean, Earth
and Atmospheric Sciences and a member of the Center for Coastal
Physical Oceanography, both at Old Dominion University, Norfolk,
Virginia. Her research interests are in the areas of understanding
physical-biological interactions in marine
ecosystems, climate control of diseases of marine shellfish
populations, descriptive physical oceanography, and mathematical
modeling of marine ecosystems. Dr. Hofmann has worked in a variety
of marine
environments, most recently the continental shelf region off the
western Antarctic Peninsula. She is a member of the US and
International GLOBEC Science Steering Committees and is Chair of
the Southern Ocean GLOBEC programme. She presently serves as
co-Editor of the Journal of Marine Systems. Dr. Hofmann has
published over 100 scientific publications to date. Dr. Ian Perry
is a fisheries oceanographer working for Fisheries & Oceans Canada,
in Nanaimo, BC, Canada. His research expertise
includes the structure, function, and processes of fish production
in marine ecosystems; the human dimensions of marine ecosystem
changes; methods for providing scientific advice for new and
developing
fisheries; and scientific leadership of international and
inter-governmental programs on marine ecosystems and global change.
He is a past Editor for North America and Oceania for the
professional journal Fisheries Oceanography, has been a visiting
lecturer at universities in Canada, Chile and Portugal, is the
concluding Chair of the international Global Ocean Ecosystem
Dynamics (GLOBEC) program, and a past "Chief Scientist" for the
inter-governmental North Pacific Marine Science Organisation
(PICES). He has written over 125 scientific publications to date.
Cisco Werner is the past Chair of the GLOBEC Scientific Steering
Committee and is the Director of the Institute of Marine and
Coastal
Sciences at Rutgers University, USA. He specialises in the
development of numerical models of ocean circulation and in studies
of coupled physical oceanographic and biological processes. He has
studied components of marine ecosystems of the North Atlantic,
North Pacific and the European Shelf focusing on the dynamics of
lower trophic levels, and the dispersal, growth and survival of
early life stages of fish and invertebrates. He presently serves as
co-Editor of Progress in Oceanography.
The books writing is noticeably clear and even, a major
accomplishment for an edited volume... any academic bookshelf would
wear [it] well.
*Carl Safina, BioScience*
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