Edited by C. E. Cushing, K. W. Cummins, and G. W. Minshall
River and Stream Ecosystems of the World
With a New Introduction
833 pages, 7-1/2 x 10-1/4 inches, 68 b/w photographs, 215 line illustrations, 5 maps, 120 tables
February 2006, Available worldwide
Categories: Ecology, Evolution, Environment; Water & Freshwater Science; Ecology; Natural History
February 2006, Available worldwide
Categories: Ecology, Evolution, Environment; Water & Freshwater Science; Ecology; Natural History
"Useful for anyone interested in streams and rivers as ecosystems worldwide or looking for broad and accessible information about rivers in a particular region."—Environmental Conservation
"Accessible."—Fisheries
"Accessible."—Fisheries
Rivers and streams around the world that once flowed wild and unchecked are rapidly disappearing into dams or being channelized between concrete banks. This valuable sourcebook, now available to a wide audience in a paperback edition, is an important comparative documentation of what is being lost: naturally flowing river and stream ecosystems. No other single volume brings together so much critical information on rivers and streams worldwide. Each chapter is packed with a wealth of raw data on waterways including the prominent rivers of North America, Central and South America, Europe, Africa, Australia, and Oceania. The volume evaluates the usefulness of the River Continuum Concept and ecosystem-level measurements for evaluating the structure and function of rivers and streams. The new introductory chapter examines the relevance of other useful concepts including Nutrient Spiraling, Patch Dynamics, the Flood Pulse Concept, the Network Dynamics Hypothesis, and the Hyporheic Corridor Concept.















