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Life in the Open Ocean: The Biology of Pelagic Species provides in-depth coverage of the different marine animal groups that form the communities inhabiting the ocean’s pelagic realm. This comprehensive resource explores the physical environment, foraging strategies, energetics, locomotion, sensory mechanisms, global and vertical distributions, special adaptations, and other characteristics of a wide array of marine taxa.
Bringing together the most recent information available in a single volume, authors Joseph J. Torres and Thomas G. Bailey cover the Cnidaria (stinging jellies), the ctenophores (comb jellies), pelagic nemerteans, pelagic annelids, crustaceans, cephalopods and pelagic gastropods, invertebrate chordates, as well as micronektonic and larger fishes such as sharks, tunas, mackerels, and mahi-mahi. Detailed chapters on each pelagic group describe internal and external anatomy, classification and history, feeding and digestion, bioluminescent systems and their function, reproduction and development, respiration, excretion, nervous systems, and more. The first book of its kind to address all of the major animal groups comprising both the swimmers and drifters of the open sea, this important resource:
Life in the Open Ocean: The Biology of Pelagic Species is an excellent senior-level undergraduate and graduate textbook for courses in biology and biological oceanography, and a valuable reference for all those with interest in open-ocean biology.
Joseph J. Torres is Emeritus Professor of Marine Science, College of Marine Science, University of South Florida, St Petersburg, FL, USA. He is an internationally-renowned marine biologist with research interests in the physiological ecology of the deep- and open-oceanic realms.
Thomas G. Bailey is retired director of NOAA’s Caribbean Marine Research Center following a long career in deep-ocean science at the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution as head of the Department of Zooplankton Ecology. He is a highly respected in-situ marine scientist known for innovative techniques in capturing and experimenting with delicate sea creatures at great depth.
1. PHYSICS AND THE PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT
THE VASTNESS OF THE OPEN OCEAN
THE PROPERTIES OF WATER
TEMPERATURE
THE OCEANS AND OCEAN BASINS
OXYGEN
PRESSURE
SOUND
LIGHT
TRADITIONAL DEPTH ZONES IN THE OCEAN
CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
2. PHYSIOLOGICAL ACCOMMODATION TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES
SALINITY
DEPTH
3. THE CNIDARIA
INTRODUCTION
CLASSIFICATION
PHYLUM CNIDARIA
THE HYDROMEDUSAE
THE SCYPHOMEDUSAE
THE CUBOMEDUSAE
FORAGING STRATEGIES
LOCOMOTION
THE SIPHONOPHORES
THE CNIDARIA FORMERLY KNOWN AS CHONDROPHORA
4. CTENOPHORA
CTENOPHORE BASICS
MORPHOLOGY
CTENOPHORES AS INVASIVE SPECIES
DIGESTION
NERVES AND SENSE ORGANS: COORDINATION AND CONDUCTION
DISTRIBUTION
CTENOPHORES AND EVOLUTION
5. NEMERTEA
NERVOUS SYSTEM
CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
EXCRETORY SYSTEM
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
REPRODUCTION
VERTICAL AND GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTIONS
6. ANNELIDA
HISTORY
PHYLUM ANNELIDA
EXTRETORY SYSTEM
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
GAS EXCHANGE
DISTRIBUTIONS
BIOLUMINESCENCE
7. CRUSTACEA
ARTHROPOD CLASSIFICATION
PANARTHROPODAN PHYLA
SYNOPSIS OF UNIVERSAL ARTHROPOD CHARACTERISTICS
THE CRUSTACEA
SUBPHYLUM CRUSTACEA
CRUSTACEAN SYSTEMS
INTEGUMENT AND MOLTING
JOINTS AND APPENDAGES
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM AND SENSORY MECHANISMS
CIRCULATORY AND RESPIRATORY SYSTEMS
BASIC DEVELOPMENT
THE MICRONEKTONIC CRUSTACEA
THE PELAGIC EUCARIDA
8. MOLLUSCA
PHYLUM MOLLUSCA
THE GASTROPODA
CLASS GASTROPODA
TRADITIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF THE PELAGIC GASTROPODA
GASTROPOD SYSTEMS AND STRUCTURES
THE PELAGIC GASTROPODS: ANATOMY AND HABITS
THE CEPHALOPODS
BASIC ANATOMY OF THE MAJOR CEPHALOPOD GROUPS
CEPHALOPOD SYSTEMS
9. THE CHORDATA
DEUTEROSTOMES AND THE PHYLOGENETIC TOOLKIT
SUBPHYLUM TUNICATA
BASIC ANATOMY AND LIFE HISTORY
TUNICATE SYSTEMS
10. THE FISHES
THE DEEP SEA GROUPS
A BRIEF HISTORY OF FISHES
THE CLASSES OF LIVING FISHES
FISH SYSTEMS
BASIC ANATOMY
FEEDING AND DIGESTION
CIRCULATION, RESPIRATION, AND EXCRETION
CIRCULATION
GAS EXCHANGE IN THE TELEOSTS AND ELASMOBRANCHS
NITROGEN EXCRETION
OSMOTIC AND IONIC REGULATION
SENSORY MECHANISMS
CAMOUFLAGE, BIOLUMINESCENCE, PHOTOPHORES
11. COMMUNITIES
THE GULF OF MEXICO
THE NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CURRENT
THE ANTARCTIC
SYSTEM COMPARISONS
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL FACTORS THAT CHANGE
12. ENERGETICS
A MODEL ENERGY BUDGET
DIGESTIBILITY OF BIOMOLECULES
ENERGY VALUE OF BIOMOLECULES
MEASURING METABOLIC RATE
LIFE HISTORY STRATEGIES
METABOLISM AND COMPOSITION OF PELAGIC SPECIES
CONCLUSIONS
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.