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The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems
Ittekkot, V.; Unger, D.; Humborg, C.; An, N.T. (Ed.) (2006). The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66. Island Press: Washington, Covelo, London. ISBN 1-59726-114-9. 275 pp.
Part of: Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series. Island Press: Washington. ISSN 1998-0477; e-ISSN 1998-0485, more

Available in  Authors 
    VLIZ: Chemistry CHE.18 [101034]

Keywords
    Aquatic ecology
    Cycles > Chemical cycles > Geochemical cycle > Biogeochemical cycle > Nutrient cycles > Silicon cycle
    Marine/Coastal; Brackish water; Fresh water; Terrestrial

Authors  Top 
  • Ittekkot, V., editor
  • Unger, D., editor
  • Humborg, C., editor
  • An, N.T., editor

Content
  • Conley, D.J. (2006). Silicon in the terrestrial biogeosphere, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 13-28, more
  • Zhang, J.; Liu, S.M.; Wu, Y.; Qi, X.H.; Zhang, G.S.; Li, R.X. (2006). Dissolved silica in the Changjiang (Yangtze River) and adjacent coastal waters of the East China Sea, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 71-80, more
  • Chou, L.; Wollast, R. (2006). Estuarine silicon dynamics, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 93-120, more
  • Claquin, P.; Leynaert, A.; Sferratore, A.; Garnier, J.; Ragueneau, O. (2006). Physiological ecology of diatoms along the river-sea continuum, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 121-137, more
  • Ragueneau, O.; Conley, D.J.; Leynaert, A.; Longphuirt, S. Ni.; Slomp, C.P. (2006). Role of diatoms in silicon cycling and coastal marine food webs, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 163-195, more
  • Ragueneau, O.; Conley, D.J.; Leynaert, A.; Longphuirt, S. Ni.; Slomp, C.P. (2006). Responses of coastal ecosystems to anthropogenic perturbations of silicon cycling, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 197-213, more
  • De La Rocha, C.L. (2006). Silicon isotope-based reconstructions of the silica cycle, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 215-227, more
  • Heinze, C. (2006). Long-term oceanic silicon cycle and the role of opal sediment, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 229-243, more
  • Ittekkot, V.; Unger, D.; Humborg, C.; An, N.T. (2006). The perturbed silicon cycle, in: Ittekkot, V. et al. (Ed.) The silicon cycle: human perturbations and impacts on aquatic systems. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) Series, 66: pp. 245-252, more

Abstract
    Silicon is among the most abundant elements on earth. It plays a key but largely unappreciated role in many biogeochemical processes, including those that regulate climate and undergird marine food webs. The Silicon Cycle is the first book in more than 20 years to present a comprehensive overview of the silicon cycle and issues associated with it. The book summarizes the major outcomes of the project Land-Ocean Interactions: Silica Cycle, initiated by the Scientific Community on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) of the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU). It tracks the pathway of silicon from land to sea and discusses its biotic and abiotic modifications in transit as well as its cycling in the coastal seas. Natural geological processes in combination with atmospheric and hydrological processes are discussed, as well as human perturbations of the natural controls of the silicon cycle.

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