Beyond the sea The hidden life in lakes, streams, and wetlands

David Lowell Strayer, 1955-

Book - 2024

"This work brings to life the wonders of our inland waters and the vibrant species that live there"--

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577.6/Strayer
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2nd Floor New Shelf 577.6/Strayer (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 24, 2025
Subjects
Published
Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
David Lowell Strayer, 1955- (author)
Physical Description
xi, 215 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781421450070
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1. Theme and Variations: The Rest of the Blue Planet
  • Chapter 2. Inland Waters: Types, Sizes, and Shapes
  • Chapter 3. Origins: How Inland Waters Are Made
  • Chapter 4. Age: Lifespans of Inland Waters
  • Chapter 5. Disruption: Stability and Disturbance in Inland Waters
  • Chapter 6. Materials: The Chemical Diversity of Inland Waters
  • Chapter 7. Isolation: All Inland Waters Are Islands
  • Chapter 8. Life: Inland-Water Biodiversity
  • Chapter 9. Challenges 1: How Do You Keep from Getting Washed to the Sea?
  • Chapter 10. Challenges 2: What Do You Do When the Water Dries Up?
  • Chapter 11. Challenges 3: How Do You Find Some Lunch?
  • Chapter 12. Challenges 4: And Then There's Sex
  • Chapter 13. Peril: Human Impacts on Inland Waters and Their Biodiversity
  • Chapter 14. Solutions: Protecting and Restoring Inland-Water Ecosystems
  • Chapter 15. Back to the Theme: Closing Remarks
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This fluent study from Strayer (The Hudson Primer), an ecologist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, explores the biodiversity found in inland bodies of water. Strayer explains that lakes are commonly created when landslides or humans create a blockage in a valley, and that waterfalls are usually produced when a river cuts through hard rock to reach softer rock beneath, which erodes with the current. Highlighting the impressive adaptations of freshwater life-forms, Strayer discusses how the African lungfish can survive for over a year after its home dries up by burrowing into the mud, and how hornleaf riverweed thrives in strong currents by producing seeds covered in a natural glue that stick to riverbed rocks. Elsewhere, he surveys strategies for saving species from human-made threats, advocating for the removal of dams that block the paths of migratory fish and for requiring that irrigation channels be lined with concrete to prevent leakage and reduce overall water diversion. The abilities of the freshwater organisms Strayer spotlights amaze (scientists have found alga capable of thriving in volcanic craters filled with water four times more acidic than battery acid), proving lakes and streams possess wildlife as wonderful and bizarre as the deep sea. It's an enjoyable freshwater complement to Helen Czerski's The Blue Machine. Photos. (Nov.)

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