Freshwater Fish Ecology Kordell Payne
- ISBN: 9781788821858
- Edition: 1st
- ©Year: 2020
- List Price : 165
About the Book
Freshwater fish are those that spend some or all of their lives in fresh water, such as rivers and lakes, with a salinity of less than 0.05%. These environments differ from marine conditions in many ways, the most obvious being the difference in levels of salinity. To survive fresh water, the fish need a range of physiological adaptations. 41.24% of all known species offish are found infresh water. A fish is defined as an aquatic or marine animal with vertebrae. All fish have vertebra, except sharks and rays that have cartilage. Cartilage is more flexible than bone, but strong enough to support the body. They usually possess gills in the adult stage and have limbs in the form of fins. Fishes also include the jawless vertebrates such as the lamprey and hagfish; and the shark, ray, chimaera, lungfish, and bony fishes. The bony fishes are the most common. A bony fish has jaws that are well developed, formed by true bone rather than cartilage. Fish are very different in appearance, size and shape.This all depends on the environment that it lives in. Fish are part of the ecosystem entering the flux of energy at different levels of the food chain. This book introduces the ecology of fishes by describing the inter¬relationships between fishes and the aquatic habitats they occupy. Sequential reading, chapter by chapter, covers the main themes of ecology, including habitat use, species interactions, migration, feeding, population dynamics and reproduction in relation to the major habitats occupied by fishes.
Contents: 1. Introduction, 2. Freshwater Ornamental Fishes, 3. Characteristics of Impounded Waters versus Flowing Waters for Fish, 4. Environmental Issues, Dams and Fish Migration, 5. Freshwater Fish Culture, 6. Fish Adaptations to Aquatic Habitat, 7. Fish Microbiology, 8. Cultivable Freshwater Fishes.
Kordell Payne is a famous African fish biologist and water ecologist. Fie received his Ph.D. in Biology and post-doctoral fellow in the Department of Biology. Payne has studied myriad aspects of the ecology of freshwater fish, including the early life history of fishes and relationships between fish ecology and river flow, as well as the history of science. Fie has published some 120 scientific papers, book chapters, reviews and identification keys relating to fish. At first a zoologist, his research has included collaborations in botany, hydrology, geomorphology and engineering. Fie has presented at numerous national and international scientific conferences and has produced over 80 peer reviewed publications. Payne has edited a Special Issue of the journal Freshwater Biology, and is on the Editorial Board of the international journal River Research and Applications.