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Marine biofouling: Colonization processes and defenses
Railkin, A.I. (2004). Marine biofouling: Colonization processes and defenses. Translated from Russian. CRC Press: Boca Raton. ISBN 0-8493-1419-4. 303 pp.

Available in  Author 
    VLIZ: Aquatic communities PBC.6 [104584]

Keywords
    Aquatic organisms > Fouling organisms
    Colonization
    Control > Fouling control
    Fouling
    Marine/Coastal

Author  Top 
  • Railkin, A.I.

Abstract
    Recent instances of bioinvasion, such as the emergence of the zebra mussel in the American Great Lakes, generated a demand among marine biologists and ecologists for groundbreaking new references that detail how organisms colonize hard substrates, and how to prevent damaging biomass concentrations. Marine Biofouling: Colonization Processes and Defenses is the English language version of a comprehensive work by eminent Russian scientist Alexander I. Railkin, who details the causes of vast biomass concentrations on submerged hard substrates. He also delivers a quantitative description of colonization processes and provides detailed models for preventing biofouling. This volume expounds on many topics rarely discussed in the frame of one book: types of hard substrate communities; comparison of hard and soft substrate communities; harm caused by micro- and macrofoulers; larval taxes and drift; mechanisms of settlement and attachment of microorganisms, invertebrates, ascidians and macroalgae; the impact of currents; protection from epibionts; industrial biofouling protection; successions on hard substrates; and the recovery of disturbed communities or the self-assembly of communities. The text includes much Russian-language research translated for the first time. Through a thorough examination of substrate organisms and an exploration of preventive methods, this monograph prepares those concerned with marine biology to help protect the self-purifying organisms that keep marine ecosystems healthy and productive.

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