Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £76.59 GBP
Regular price £87.99 GBP Sale price £76.59 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 10 days lead

Fish Physiology: Euryhaline Fishes

This volume provides the first integrative review of euryhalinity in fish

Stephen D. McCormick (Edited by), Anthony Peter Farrell (Edited by), Colin J. Brauner (Edited by)

9780123969514, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 15 March 2013

594 pages
22.9 x 15.1 x 3.3 cm, 1.07 kg

"...I found the book very worthwhile reading and have learned a great deal from it." --The Quarterly Review of Biology

"...especially useful to research scientists interested in ion and water homeostasis and veterinarians involved with aquaculture or fisheries who are interested in wild and cultured euryhaline fishes." --Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, December 15, 2014

The need for ion and water homeostasis is common to all life. For fish, ion and water homeostasis is an especially important challenge because they live in direct contact with water and because of the large variation in the salt content of natural waters (varying by over 5 orders of magnitude). Most fish are stenohaline and are unable to move between freshwater and seawater. Remarkably, some fishes are capable of life in both freshwater and seawater. These euryhaline fishes constitute an estimated 3 to 5% of all fish species. Euryhaline fishes represent some of the most iconic and interesting of all fish species, from salmon and sturgeon that make epic migrations to intertidal mudskippers that contend with daily salinity changes. With the advent of global climate change and increasing sea levels, understanding the environmental physiology of euryhaline species is critical for environmental management and any mitigative measures. This volume will provide the first integrative review of euryhalinity in fish. There is no other book that focuses on fish that have the capacity to move between freshwater and seawater. The different challenges of salt and water balance in different habitats have led to different physiological controls and regulation, which heretofore has not been reviewed in a single volume.

1. Principles and patterns of osmoregulation and euryhalinity in fish
Sue Edwards
2. Osmosensing and autoregulation of euryhalinity
Dietmar Kueltz
3. Hormonal Control of euryhalinity
Yosio Takei and Stephen D. McCormick
4. Euryhaline Elasmobranchs
James S. Ballantyne and David I. Fraser
5. Smolt Physiology: the freshwater-seawater transitions in salmonids
Stephen D. McCormick
6. Freshwater-Seawater transitions in migratory fish
Joseph Zydlewski
7. Seawater-Freshwater transitions in migratory fish
J. Mark Shrimpton
8. Euryhalinity: Intertidal fish
William Marshall
9. Euryhalinity: extreme environments
Colin Brauner and Jonathan Wilson
10. Evolution of euryhalinity
Eric Schultz and Stephen D. McCormick

Subject Areas: Fishes [ichthyology PSVW1], Marine biology [PSPM], Fisheries & related industries [KNAF]

View full details