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Coral Reef Conservation
Edited by Isabelle M. Côté, John D. Reynolds
CUP
August 2006
Paperback 588 pages ISBN 0521671450
£38.00
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Hardback 588 pages ISBN 0521855365
£75.00
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- Comprehensive overview of status of reefs, the problems they face, and potential solutions to
the coral reef crisis
- Written by a team of internationally renowned authors
- Non-technical presentation readily accessible to a wide audience
Coral reefs are the 'rain forests' of the ocean, containing the highest diversity of marine organisms
and facing the greatest threats from humans. As shallow-water coastal habitats, they support a wide
range of economically and culturally important activities, from fishing to tourism. Their accessibility makes
reefs vulnerable to local threats that include over-fishing, pollution and physical damage. Reefs also face
global problems, such as climate change, which may be responsible for recent widespread coral mortality
and increased frequency of hurricane damage. This book summarises the current state of knowledge about
the status of reefs, the problems they face, and potential solutions. The topics considered range from concerns
about extinction of coral reef species to economic and social issues affecting the well-being of people who
depend on reefs.
The result is a multi-disciplinary perspective on problems and solutions to the coral reef crisis.
Contents
Foreward
Preface
Part I. Setting the Stage:
- 1. Status of coral reefs of the world: summary of threats and remedial action Clive Wilkinson
- 2. Death and resurrection of Caribbean coral reefs: a paleoecological perspective William F. Precht and Richard
B. Aronson
- 3. A seascape-level perspective of coral reef ecosystems Peter J. Mumby and Alastair R. Harborne
- 4. Cold-water coral reefs: status and conservation Emily Corcoran and Stefan Hain
Part II. Uses and Abuses: Ecological and Socioeconomic Issues
- 5. Challenges and accomplishments towards sustainable reef fisheries Tim McClanahan
- 6. Live food and non-food fisheries on coral reefs, and their potential management Amanda C. J. Vincent
- 7. Tourism and coral reef-based conservation: can they coexist? Guy Jobbins
- 8. Longer-term impacts of climate change on coral reefs Charles Sheppard
Part III. The Way Forward: Tools and Approaches
- 9. New approaches to estimating recent ecological changes on coral reefs Isabelle M. Côté, Toby A. Gardner,
Jennifer A. Gill, David J. Hutchinson and Andrew R. Watkinson
- 10. Assessing management effectiveness of marine protected areas as a tool for improving coral reef management
Sue Wells
- 11. Environmental impact assessment for coral reefs: advocating direct protective approaches John R.
Turner, Richard Boak, Rebecca Klaus, Deolall Daby and Emily Hardman
- 12. Time for a third generation economics-based approach to coral management James Spurgeo
- 13. Collaborative and community-based conservation of coral reefs, with reference to marine reserves
in the Philippines Angel C. Alcala, Gary R. Russ and Portia Nillos
- 14. Education as a tool for coral reef conservation: lessons from marine protected areas Lisa J. Browning,
R. Andrew, O. Finlay and Lorna R. E. Fox
- 15. Adaptive institutions for coral reef conservation Katrina Brown
- 16. Coral reef restoration with case studies from Florida Walter C. Jaap, J. Harold Hudson, Richard E. Dodge,
David Gilliam and Richard Shaul
- 17. Redesigning coral reef conservation Callum M. Roberts, John D. Reynolds, Isabelle M. Côté
and Julie P. Hawkins
- 18. Coral reef coda: what can we hope for? Nancy Knowlton.
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