Essays on ecology and biogeography:
Freswater snails are common and familiar inhabitants of rivers, lakes and streams throughout North America. In some environments they comprise the majority of the macroinvertabrate biomass, significantly influencing community composition, energy flow and nutrient cycling. Yet their biology remains a...
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Charleston, South Carolina
Freshwater Gastropods of North America Project
2019
|
Schriftenreihe: | Freshwater gastropods of North America
Volume IV |
Schlagworte: | |
Zusammenfassung: | Freswater snails are common and familiar inhabitants of rivers, lakes and streams throughout North America. In some environments they comprise the majority of the macroinvertabrate biomass, significantly influencing community composition, energy flow and nutrient cycling. Yet their biology remains almost as obscure to the scientific community as to the lay public. Collected in this volume are 30 essays on the ecology and biogeography of North American freshwater gastropods. Patterns of distribution are reviewed and analyzed at regional scales, with particular emphasis on mechanisms of dispersal. New invasions are reported, their progress monitored, and their consequences examined. The subjects of rarity and endemism, first introduced in Volume III, are explored at greater depth in Volume IV as well. The scholarly study of biogeography has, in recent years, become entangled with public policies regarding endangered species conservation and invasive species control. Here we review several striking cases where natural resource agencies have been misled by conservation biologists biased by research funding. We suggest that the correct relationship between science and public policy is analogous to playing baseball and playing the banjo -neither compatible nor incompatible, neither better nor worse, just entirely different. Volume I in this series analyzed the results of a scientific survey of the freshwater gastropod fauna of the Atlantic drainages from Georgia to the New York line. The essays collected here in Volume IV, together with those in Volume II (Pulmonates) and Volume III (Prosobranchs) will be essential companions to Volume I, as well as to additional volumes on the gastropod faunas of interior drainages forthcoming |
Beschreibung: | viii, 257 pages illustrations (chiefly color) 22 cm |
ISBN: | 9780960084333 0960084339 |
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490 | 0 | |a Freshwater gastropods of North America |v Volume IV | |
505 | 8 | 0 | |t Invasive viviparids in South Carolina -- |t Bellamya ranching in North Carolina -- |t Ducks, snails, and worms: when invasive species conspire! -- |t Pomacea spreads to South Carolina -- |t Seven dispatches from the Pomacea front -- |t Invaders great and small -- |t The most improbable invasion? -- |t Potamopyrgus in US Atlantic drainages -- |t Community consequences of Bellamya invasion -- |t Just before the bust -- |t To only know invasives -- |t To only know invasives in my general vicinity -- |t The many invasions of Hilton Head -- |t Freshwater gastropods take to the air, 1991 -- |t Everett's symbiosis -- |t Accelerating the snail's pace, 2012 -- |t Freshwater snails and passerine birds -- |t Non-plants, non-pests, and non-sense at the USDA -- |t Malacoterrorist watch list! -- |t Idaho springsnail showdown -- |t Report from the Idaho Springsnail Science Panel -- |t When pigs fly in Idaho -- |t Red flags, water resources and Physa natricina -- |t Valvata utahensis and hypothesis #2 (of 3) -- |t The mystery of the SRALP: a bidding -- |t The mystery of the SRALP: a twofold quest -- |t The mystery of the SRALP: dixie-cup showdown -- |t The mystery of the SRALP: no Physa acuta were found -- |t Crisis at Lake Waccamaw? -- |t The Clean Water Act at 40 -- |t Surveying the heartland -- |t Field guide to the freshwater mollusks of Colorado -- |t The freshwater gastropods of Indiana -- |t Unlocking the keystone state -- |t Toward the scientific ranking of conservation status -- |t Cornhusker freshwater gastropods -- |
505 | 8 | 0 | |t Delaware and what we think we know, we do not -- |t Plagiarism, Paul Johnson, and the American Fisheries Society |
520 | 3 | |a Freswater snails are common and familiar inhabitants of rivers, lakes and streams throughout North America. In some environments they comprise the majority of the macroinvertabrate biomass, significantly influencing community composition, energy flow and nutrient cycling. Yet their biology remains almost as obscure to the scientific community as to the lay public. Collected in this volume are 30 essays on the ecology and biogeography of North American freshwater gastropods. Patterns of distribution are reviewed and analyzed at regional scales, with particular emphasis on mechanisms of dispersal. New invasions are reported, their progress monitored, and their consequences examined. The subjects of rarity and endemism, first introduced in Volume III, are explored at greater depth in Volume IV as well. The scholarly study of biogeography has, in recent years, become entangled with public policies regarding endangered species conservation and invasive species control. Here we review several striking cases where natural resource agencies have been misled by conservation biologists biased by research funding. We suggest that the correct relationship between science and public policy is analogous to playing baseball and playing the banjo -neither compatible nor incompatible, neither better nor worse, just entirely different. Volume I in this series analyzed the results of a scientific survey of the freshwater gastropod fauna of the Atlantic drainages from Georgia to the New York line. The essays collected here in Volume IV, together with those in Volume II (Pulmonates) and Volume III (Prosobranchs) will be essential companions to Volume I, as well as to additional volumes on the gastropod faunas of interior drainages forthcoming | |
653 | 0 | |a Gastropoda / North America / Geographical distribution | |
653 | 0 | |a Gastropoda / Ecology / North America | |
653 | 0 | |a Biogeography / Climatic factors / North America | |
653 | 0 | |a Introduced snails / North America | |
653 | 0 | |a Gastéropodes / Amérique du Nord / Distribution géographique | |
653 | 0 | |a Gastéropodes / Écologie / Amérique du Nord | |
653 | 0 | |a Biogéographie / Facteurs climatiques / Amérique du Nord | |
653 | 0 | |a Escargots introduits / Amérique du Nord | |
653 | 0 | |a Introduced snails | |
653 | 0 | |a Gastropoda / Geographical distribution | |
653 | 0 | |a Gastropoda / Ecology | |
653 | 0 | |a Biogeography / Climatic factors | |
653 | 2 | |a North America | |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033952902 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_txt | |
any_adam_object | |
any_adam_object_boolean | |
author | Dillon, Robert T. 1955- |
author_facet | Dillon, Robert T. 1955- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Dillon, Robert T. 1955- |
author_variant | r t d rt rtd |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048576933 |
contents | Invasive viviparids in South Carolina -- Bellamya ranching in North Carolina -- Ducks, snails, and worms: when invasive species conspire! -- Pomacea spreads to South Carolina -- Seven dispatches from the Pomacea front -- Invaders great and small -- The most improbable invasion? -- Potamopyrgus in US Atlantic drainages -- Community consequences of Bellamya invasion -- Just before the bust -- To only know invasives -- To only know invasives in my general vicinity -- The many invasions of Hilton Head -- Freshwater gastropods take to the air, 1991 -- Everett's symbiosis -- Accelerating the snail's pace, 2012 -- Freshwater snails and passerine birds -- Non-plants, non-pests, and non-sense at the USDA -- Malacoterrorist watch list! -- Idaho springsnail showdown -- Report from the Idaho Springsnail Science Panel -- When pigs fly in Idaho -- Red flags, water resources and Physa natricina -- Valvata utahensis and hypothesis #2 (of 3) -- The mystery of the SRALP: a bidding -- The mystery of the SRALP: a twofold quest -- The mystery of the SRALP: dixie-cup showdown -- The mystery of the SRALP: no Physa acuta were found -- Crisis at Lake Waccamaw? -- The Clean Water Act at 40 -- Surveying the heartland -- Field guide to the freshwater mollusks of Colorado -- The freshwater gastropods of Indiana -- Unlocking the keystone state -- Toward the scientific ranking of conservation status -- Cornhusker freshwater gastropods -- Delaware and what we think we know, we do not -- Plagiarism, Paul Johnson, and the American Fisheries Society |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1176468975 (DE-599)BVBBV048576933 |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV048576933 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T21:03:37Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:41:58Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780960084333 0960084339 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033952902 |
oclc_num | 1176468975 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-B16 |
owner_facet | DE-B16 |
physical | viii, 257 pages illustrations (chiefly color) 22 cm |
publishDate | 2019 |
publishDateSearch | 2019 |
publishDateSort | 2019 |
publisher | Freshwater Gastropods of North America Project |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Freshwater gastropods of North America |
spelling | Dillon, Robert T. 1955- Verfasser aut Essays on ecology and biogeography Robert T. Dillon, Jr Charleston, South Carolina Freshwater Gastropods of North America Project 2019 viii, 257 pages illustrations (chiefly color) 22 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Freshwater gastropods of North America Volume IV Invasive viviparids in South Carolina -- Bellamya ranching in North Carolina -- Ducks, snails, and worms: when invasive species conspire! -- Pomacea spreads to South Carolina -- Seven dispatches from the Pomacea front -- Invaders great and small -- The most improbable invasion? -- Potamopyrgus in US Atlantic drainages -- Community consequences of Bellamya invasion -- Just before the bust -- To only know invasives -- To only know invasives in my general vicinity -- The many invasions of Hilton Head -- Freshwater gastropods take to the air, 1991 -- Everett's symbiosis -- Accelerating the snail's pace, 2012 -- Freshwater snails and passerine birds -- Non-plants, non-pests, and non-sense at the USDA -- Malacoterrorist watch list! -- Idaho springsnail showdown -- Report from the Idaho Springsnail Science Panel -- When pigs fly in Idaho -- Red flags, water resources and Physa natricina -- Valvata utahensis and hypothesis #2 (of 3) -- The mystery of the SRALP: a bidding -- The mystery of the SRALP: a twofold quest -- The mystery of the SRALP: dixie-cup showdown -- The mystery of the SRALP: no Physa acuta were found -- Crisis at Lake Waccamaw? -- The Clean Water Act at 40 -- Surveying the heartland -- Field guide to the freshwater mollusks of Colorado -- The freshwater gastropods of Indiana -- Unlocking the keystone state -- Toward the scientific ranking of conservation status -- Cornhusker freshwater gastropods -- Delaware and what we think we know, we do not -- Plagiarism, Paul Johnson, and the American Fisheries Society Freswater snails are common and familiar inhabitants of rivers, lakes and streams throughout North America. In some environments they comprise the majority of the macroinvertabrate biomass, significantly influencing community composition, energy flow and nutrient cycling. Yet their biology remains almost as obscure to the scientific community as to the lay public. Collected in this volume are 30 essays on the ecology and biogeography of North American freshwater gastropods. Patterns of distribution are reviewed and analyzed at regional scales, with particular emphasis on mechanisms of dispersal. New invasions are reported, their progress monitored, and their consequences examined. The subjects of rarity and endemism, first introduced in Volume III, are explored at greater depth in Volume IV as well. The scholarly study of biogeography has, in recent years, become entangled with public policies regarding endangered species conservation and invasive species control. Here we review several striking cases where natural resource agencies have been misled by conservation biologists biased by research funding. We suggest that the correct relationship between science and public policy is analogous to playing baseball and playing the banjo -neither compatible nor incompatible, neither better nor worse, just entirely different. Volume I in this series analyzed the results of a scientific survey of the freshwater gastropod fauna of the Atlantic drainages from Georgia to the New York line. The essays collected here in Volume IV, together with those in Volume II (Pulmonates) and Volume III (Prosobranchs) will be essential companions to Volume I, as well as to additional volumes on the gastropod faunas of interior drainages forthcoming Gastropoda / North America / Geographical distribution Gastropoda / Ecology / North America Biogeography / Climatic factors / North America Introduced snails / North America Gastéropodes / Amérique du Nord / Distribution géographique Gastéropodes / Écologie / Amérique du Nord Biogéographie / Facteurs climatiques / Amérique du Nord Escargots introduits / Amérique du Nord Introduced snails Gastropoda / Geographical distribution Gastropoda / Ecology Biogeography / Climatic factors North America |
spellingShingle | Dillon, Robert T. 1955- Essays on ecology and biogeography Invasive viviparids in South Carolina -- Bellamya ranching in North Carolina -- Ducks, snails, and worms: when invasive species conspire! -- Pomacea spreads to South Carolina -- Seven dispatches from the Pomacea front -- Invaders great and small -- The most improbable invasion? -- Potamopyrgus in US Atlantic drainages -- Community consequences of Bellamya invasion -- Just before the bust -- To only know invasives -- To only know invasives in my general vicinity -- The many invasions of Hilton Head -- Freshwater gastropods take to the air, 1991 -- Everett's symbiosis -- Accelerating the snail's pace, 2012 -- Freshwater snails and passerine birds -- Non-plants, non-pests, and non-sense at the USDA -- Malacoterrorist watch list! -- Idaho springsnail showdown -- Report from the Idaho Springsnail Science Panel -- When pigs fly in Idaho -- Red flags, water resources and Physa natricina -- Valvata utahensis and hypothesis #2 (of 3) -- The mystery of the SRALP: a bidding -- The mystery of the SRALP: a twofold quest -- The mystery of the SRALP: dixie-cup showdown -- The mystery of the SRALP: no Physa acuta were found -- Crisis at Lake Waccamaw? -- The Clean Water Act at 40 -- Surveying the heartland -- Field guide to the freshwater mollusks of Colorado -- The freshwater gastropods of Indiana -- Unlocking the keystone state -- Toward the scientific ranking of conservation status -- Cornhusker freshwater gastropods -- Delaware and what we think we know, we do not -- Plagiarism, Paul Johnson, and the American Fisheries Society |
title | Essays on ecology and biogeography |
title_alt | Invasive viviparids in South Carolina -- Bellamya ranching in North Carolina -- Ducks, snails, and worms: when invasive species conspire! -- Pomacea spreads to South Carolina -- Seven dispatches from the Pomacea front -- Invaders great and small -- The most improbable invasion? -- Potamopyrgus in US Atlantic drainages -- Community consequences of Bellamya invasion -- Just before the bust -- To only know invasives -- To only know invasives in my general vicinity -- The many invasions of Hilton Head -- Freshwater gastropods take to the air, 1991 -- Everett's symbiosis -- Accelerating the snail's pace, 2012 -- Freshwater snails and passerine birds -- Non-plants, non-pests, and non-sense at the USDA -- Malacoterrorist watch list! -- Idaho springsnail showdown -- Report from the Idaho Springsnail Science Panel -- When pigs fly in Idaho -- Red flags, water resources and Physa natricina -- Valvata utahensis and hypothesis #2 (of 3) -- The mystery of the SRALP: a bidding -- The mystery of the SRALP: a twofold quest -- The mystery of the SRALP: dixie-cup showdown -- The mystery of the SRALP: no Physa acuta were found -- Crisis at Lake Waccamaw? -- The Clean Water Act at 40 -- Surveying the heartland -- Field guide to the freshwater mollusks of Colorado -- The freshwater gastropods of Indiana -- Unlocking the keystone state -- Toward the scientific ranking of conservation status -- Cornhusker freshwater gastropods -- Delaware and what we think we know, we do not -- Plagiarism, Paul Johnson, and the American Fisheries Society |
title_auth | Essays on ecology and biogeography |
title_exact_search | Essays on ecology and biogeography |
title_exact_search_txtP | Essays on ecology and biogeography |
title_full | Essays on ecology and biogeography Robert T. Dillon, Jr |
title_fullStr | Essays on ecology and biogeography Robert T. Dillon, Jr |
title_full_unstemmed | Essays on ecology and biogeography Robert T. Dillon, Jr |
title_short | Essays on ecology and biogeography |
title_sort | essays on ecology and biogeography |
work_keys_str_mv | AT dillonrobertt essaysonecologyandbiogeography |