Skip to content

Fish Physiology: Euryhaline Fishes

Best in textbook rentals since 2012!

ISBN-10: 0123969514

ISBN-13: 9780123969514

Edition: 2013

Authors: Stephen D. McCormick, Anthony Peter Farrell, Colin Brauner

List price: $119.95
Blue ribbon 30 day, 100% satisfaction guarantee!
what's this?
Rush Rewards U
Members Receive:
Carrot Coin icon
XP icon
You have reached 400 XP and carrot coins. That is the daily max!

Description:

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…    
Customers also bought

Book details

List price: $119.95
Copyright year: 2013
Publisher: Elsevier Science & Technology
Publication date: 3/15/2013
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 594
Size: 5.94" wide x 9.00" long x 1.50" tall
Weight: 2.354
Language: English

Dr. Colin Brauner was educated in Canada at the University of British Columbia (Ph D), followed by a Post-doctoral fellowship at Aarhus University and the University of Southern Denmark, and was a Research Associate at McMaster University. He is a Professor of Zoology, UBC and Director of the UBC Aquatics Facility. He has been a Co-Editor of the Fish Physiology series since 2006. His research investigates environmental adaptations (both mechanistic and evolutionary) in relation to gas-exchange, acid-base balance and ion regulation in fish, integrating responses from the molecular, cellular and organismal level. The ultimate goal is to understand how evolutionary pressures have shaped…    

Contributors
Preface
Glossary of Terms
List of Abbreviations
Principles and Patterns of Osmoregulation and Euryhalinity in Fishes
Introduction
Principles of Ion and Water Transport
Osmoregulatory Organs
Hagfishes
Lampreys
Elasmobranchs
Teleost Fishes
Conclusions and Perspectives
Osmosensing
Introduction
Whole-Organism (Systemic) Osmosensing
Molecular Mechanisms of Cellular Osmosensing
Conclusions and Perspectives
Hormonal Control of Fish Euryhalinity
Introduction
Rapid-Acting Hormones
Slow-Acting Hormones
Target Tissues
Developmental (Ontogenic) Aspects
Evolutionary (Phylogenetic) Aspects
Conclusions and Perspectives
Euryhaline Elasmobranchs
Introduction
Distribution
Phylogeny of Euryhaline Elasmobranchs
Osmoregulation
Metabolism
Sensory Biology
Behavior
Reproduction
Conclusions and Perspectives
Smolt Physiology and Endocrinology
Introduction
Morphology
Migration
Imprinting
Osmoregulation
Endocrine Control
Developmental and Environmental Regulation
Conclusions and Perspectives
Freshwater to Seawater Transitions in Migratory Fishes
Introduction
Life History Patterns
Movement Patterns
Osmoregulatory Competence
Preparatory Adaptation and Mechanistic Trends
Growth and Osmoregulation
Conclusions and Perspectives
Seawater to Freshwater Transitions in Diadromous Fishes
Introduction
Behavior and Timing
Ionoregulation
Endocrine Control
Mechanisms for Selection of Freshwater Habitat
Effect of Diadromy on Genetic Population Structure
Conclusions and Perspectives
Osmoregulation in Estuarine and Intertidal Fishes
Introduction
Intertidal Habitats: Estuaries and Tide Pools
Osmoregulatory Strategies
Osmoregulatory Stresses
Estuarine Fishes as Physiological Models
Conclusions and Perspectives
Extreme Environments: Hypersaline, Alkaline, and Ion-Poor Waters
Introduction
Hypersaline Waters
Alkaline Lakes
Ion-Poor Waters
Conclusions and Perspectives
Euryhalinity in an Evolutionary Context
Introduction
Diversity of Halotolerance
Evolutionary Transitions in Euryhalinity
Convergence and Euryhalinity
Conclusions and Perspectives
Index
Other Volumes in the Fish Physiology Series
Color Plate Section