one publication added to basket [70002] | Estuarine research, monitoring, and resource protection
Kennish, M.J.; Kennish, M.J. (2004). Estuarine research, monitoring, and resource protection. CRC Marine Science Series. CRC Press: Boca Raton. ISBN 0-8493-1960-9. 297 pp.
Part of: Kennish, M.J.; Lutz, P.L. (Ed.) CRC Marine Science Series., more
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Keywords |
Biodiversity Conservation > Resource conservation Man-induced effects Monitoring > Environmental monitoring Taxa > Species Water bodies > Coastal waters > Coastal landforms > Coastal inlets > Estuaries Water quality Marine/Coastal |
Authors | | Top |
- Kennish, M.J., editor
- Kennish, M.J.
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Abstract |
The ongoing growth of human populations within US coastal regions continues to increase habitat loss, eutrophication, organic loading, overfishing, and other anthropogenic stressors in estuarine waters. The National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS) is a federally funded initiative that addresses these critical estuarine problems and coastal resource issues at 25 sites in 21 states. Now estuarine and watershed scientists, resource managers, community planners, and other professionals dealing with coastal zone issues have an expert resource describing the NERRS program, organization, goals, and management strategy. Estuarine Research, Monitoring, and Restoration first defines the components and technical aspects of the NERRS program, then provides valuable insight into the program through the presentation of six case studies of NERRS sites. This book examines estuarine problems including degraded water quality, reduction of biodiversity, and problematic invasive species, then analyzes the human impacts affecting estuaries. The comprehensive analysis of the six estuarine reserve locations characterizes each region's physical, chemical, and biological conditions from the perspective of the NERRS program. These case studies include a cross section of sites from three coasts, each study emphasizing the importance of unified efforts of government and citizens to successfully maintain the ecology of these critical areas. |
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