Freshwater Algae of North America: Ecology and Classification

Front Cover
Elsevier, Dec 15, 2002 - Science - 917 pages
Freshwater algae are among the most diverse and ubiquitous organisms on earth. They occupy an enormous range of ecological conditions from lakes and rivers to acidic peat swamps, inland saline lakes, snow and ice, damp soils, wetlands, desert soils, wastewater treatment plants, and are symbionts in and on many plants, fungi, and animals. In North America, the variety of freshwater habitats colonized by algae is very rich, and offers an enormous and fascinating range of environments for their study. They form the base of most aquatic food webs and are critical to studies of ecosystem health. Algal ecologists and taxonomists play an important role in the understanding of aquatic ecosystems: their biodiversity, productivity, interactions with other organisms, and water quality. This book provides in one volume a practical and comprehensive guide to the genera of freshwater algae known from North America. The format combines the necessary ecological, taxonomic and methodological information for all scientists working in aquatic environments, whether their specialty is in environmental monitoring and water quality assessment, biological composition, ecology, evolution, or molecular biology.

Key Features
* The first complete accounting of North America's freshwater algal genera in more than 50 years
* Includes a guide to the current literature on species identification in each group of algae
* High-quality photographs and drawings of more than 770 genera
* A clear, easy-to-use introductory key to the diagnostic chapters
* Synthetic chapters on freshwater habitats, use of algae in environmental assessment, and control of nuisance algae
* Contributions from 27 experts in all areas of freshwater algae
* Extensive literature citations
* Companion volume of Ecology and Classification of North American Freshwater Invertebrates 2nd edition, edited by Throp and Covich
 

Contents

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO FRESHWATER ALGAE
1
CHAPTER 2 FRESHWATER HABITATS OF ALGAE
11
CHAPTER 3 COCCOID AND COLONIAL CYANOBACTERIA
59
CHAPTER 4 FILAMENTOUS CYANOBACTERIA
117
CHAPTER 5 RED ALGAE
197
CHAPTER 6 FLAGELLATED GREEN ALGAE
225
CHAPTER 7 NONMOTILE COCCOID AND COLONIAL GREEN ALGAE
253
CHAPTER 8 FILAMENTOUS AND PLANTLIKE GREEN ALGAE
311
CHAPTER 16 ARAPHID AND MONORAPHID DIATOMS
595
CHAPTER 17 SYMMETRICAL NAVICULOID DIATOMS
637
CHAPTER 18 EUNOTIOID AND ASYMMETRICAL NAVICULOID DIATOMS
655
CHAPTER 19 KEELED AND CANALLED RAPHID DIATOMS
669
CHAPTER 20 DINOFLAGELLATES
685
CHAPTER 21 CRYPTOMONADS
715
CHAPTER 22 BROWN ALGAE
757
CHAPTER 23 USE OF ALGAE IN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENTS
775

CHAPTER 9 CONJUGATING GREEN ALGAE AND DESMIDS
353
CHAPTER 10 PHOTOSYNTHETIC EUGLENOIDS
383
CHAPTER 11 EUSTIGMATOPHYTE RAPHIDOPHYTE AND TRIBOPHYTE ALGAE
423
CHAPTER 12 CHRYSOPHYCEAN ALGAE
471
CHAPTER 13 HAPTOPHYTE ALGAE
511
CHAPTER 14 SYNUROPHYTE ALGAE
523
CHAPTER 15 CENTRIC DIATOMS
559
CHAPTER 24 CONTROL OF NUISANCE ALGAE
805
Glossary
835
Author Index
849
Subject Index
885
Taxonomic Index
897
Copyright

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Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 53 - In: Whitton BA, Potts M (eds) The ecology of cyanobacteria: their diversity in time and space. Kluwer Academic...
Page 52 - Lund, JWG & Reynolds, CS (1982). The development and operation of large limnetic enclosures in Blelham Tarn, English Lake District, and their contribution to phytoplankton ecology.
Page 54 - Sondergaard. 1981. Phytoplankton and epiphyte development and their shading effect on submerged macrophytes in lakes of different nutrient status.
Page 48 - GMJ, van Zanten, B. 1992. Plankton in the River Rhine: structural and functional changes observed during downstream transport.
Page 55 - DM, 1976. Phytoplankton production in the Great Salt Lake, Utah, and a laboratory study of algal response to enrichment. Limnol. Oceanogr.

About the author (2002)

Dr. John Patrick Kociolek is Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology with University of Colorado's Museum of Natural History. He obtained his MSc from Bowling Green State University and his PhD from University of Michigan Ann Arbor. His research focuses on the taxonomy, systematics, evolution, biogeography, and ecology of diatoms. He brings more than 35 years of experience to the study of freshwater diatoms spanning the United States, South America, Europe, China, Southeast Asia, and India.

Dr. James H. Thorp is a professor and senior scientist at the University of Kansas (Lawrence, KS, United States). Prior to 2001, he was a distinguished professor and dean at Clarkson University, department chair and professor at the University of Louisville, associate professor and director of the Calder Ecology Center at Fordham University, and research ecologist at Georgia’s Savannah River Ecology Laboratory. He received his Baccalaureate from the University of Kansas and Masters and PhD degrees from North Carolina State. Prof. Thorp has been on the editorial board of three freshwater journals and is a former president of the International Society for River Science. His research interests run the gamut from organismal biology to community, ecosystem, and macrosystem ecology. While his research emphasizes aquatic invertebrates, he also studies fish ecology, especially food webs related. He has published more than 150 research articles and 10 books, including five volumes so far in the fourth edition of Thorp and Covich’s Freshwater Invertebrates.

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