1: Mangroves and seagrasses
2: Mangroves and their environment
3: Seagrasses and their environment
4: Community structure and dynamics
5: The mangrove community: terrestrial components
6: The mangrove community: marine components
7: Seagrass communities
8: Measuring and modelling
9: Comparisons and connections
10: Biodiversity and biogeography
11: Impacts
12: Global climate change
Peter J. Hogarth studied Zoology at Edinburgh University,
graduating with BSc Zoology in 1965. He then did a PhD at the
Department of Biology at the University of York, and was appointed
Assistant Lecturer, then Lecturer and Senior Lecturer. He retired
in 2008, and currently holds an Honorary Fellowship in the
Department. He has worked in Malaysia, China, Pakistan, Maldives,
UAE, Oman, Yemen and Iran, studying mangroves and other tropical
marine habitats, and has
produced over 70 publications.
`This book would seem most appropriate for upper-level
undergraduate orgraduate courses. For graduate students or faculty
working with mangrove or seagrasses, this is a perfect one-stop
source on the "big picture" regarding these systems.'
Craig Layman, Quarterly Review of Biology
`Review from previous edition The book is a well-written,
introductory text covering a wide range of topics ... and is the
first book that can be realistically used as an undergraduate
textbook on the subject.
'
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
`Hogarth has produced an impressive book on the mangrove
ecosystem...I strongly recommend it as an introductory text for
naturalists, students, and professional biologists embarking on
studies in mangrove environments.'
Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin
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