 |
 |
 | AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS: INTERACTIVITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER
|  |
 |  |  |
 |
 |
To order this title, and for more information, click here
Stuart Findlay
Robert Sinsabaugh, University of Toledo, OH,U.S.A.
Included in series
Aquatic Ecology,
Description
Aquatic Ecosystems explains the interplay between various movements of matter and energy through ecosystems mediated
by Dissolved Organic Matter. This book provides information on how much DOM there is in a particular aquatic ecosystem and where it originates.
It explains whether the DOM composition varies from time to time and place to place. It also details how DOM becomes incorporated into
microbial food webs, and gives a better, clarifying, understanding to its significance of DOM.
Audience
Aquatic ecologists, freshwater biologists, limnologists, hydrologists, water quality specialists, and graduate students interested in aquatic ecosystems.
Contents
Preface.
Section I: Sources and Composition
Supply of DOM to Aquatic Ecosystems: Autochthonous Sources.
Sources, Production
and Regulation of Allochthonous Dissolved Organic Matter Inputs to Surface Waters.
Trace Organic Moieties of Dissolved Organic Material
in Natural Waters.
The Role of Monomers in Stream Ecosystem Metabolism.
Molecular Indicators of the Bioavailability of Dissolved Organic
Matter.
Large-Scale Patterns in DOC Concentration, Flux, and Sources.
The Speciation of Hydrophobic Organic Compounds by Dissolved Organic
Matter.
Elemental Complexation by Dissolved Organic Matter in Lakes: Implications for Fe Speciation and the Bioavailability of Fe and
P.
Section II: Transformation and Regulation
The Contribution of Monomers and Other Low Molecular Weight Compounds
to the Flux of DOM in Aquatic Ecosystems.
Photochemically-Mediated Linkages Between Dissolved Organic Matter and Bacterioplankton.
The
Importance of Organic Nitrogen Production in Aquatic Systems: A Landscape Perspective.
The Role of Biofilms in the Uptake and Transformation
of Dissolved Organic Matter.
Microbial Extracellular Enzymes and Their Role in DOM Cycling.
Linkages between DOM Composition and Bacterial
Community Structure.
Bacterial Response to Variation in Dissolved Organic Matter.
Section III: Approaches to Synthesis
Physiological Models in the Context of Microbial Food Webs.
Patterns in DOM Iability and Consumption across Aquatic Systems.
Integrating
DOM Metabolism and Microbial Diversity: An Overview of Conceptual Models.
Dissolved Organic Carbon: Detrital Energetics, Metabolic Regulators,
and Drivers of Ecosystem Stability of Aquatic Ecosystems.
Synthesis.
| Bibliographic details |
Hardbound, 512 pages, publication date: OCT-2002
ISBN-13: 978-0-12-256371-3
ISBN-10: 0-12-256371-9
Imprint: ACADEMIC PRESS
|
| Price and Ordering |
Price:
GBP 95 USD 130 EUR 111.95
|  |
Books and book related electronic products are priced in US dollars (USD), euro (EUR), and Great Britain Pounds (GBP). USD prices apply to the Americas and Asia Pacific. EUR prices apply in Europe and the Middle East. GBP prices apply to the UK and all other countries.
|
See also information about conditions of sale & ordering procedures, and links to our regional sales offices.
|
090/921
Last update: 4 Sep 2009
|
 |
|  |
 |  |  |
 |
|
|  |