Coastal Pollution

Coastal Pollution: Effects on Living Resources and Humans

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ISBN 9780849396779
Cat# 9677
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ISBN 9781420036411
Cat# E9677
 

Features

  • Offers a reader-friendly style, enhanced with numerous illustrations and tables, that is accessible to the non-scientist, yet retains enough technical data and methodology to inform the active researcher
  • Analyzes findings from modeling and a variety of other research methods to cover the effects of coastal and estuarine pollution on resource population size, ecosystem habitats, and aquaculture
  • Provides an in-depth review of pollution-related problems, including PCBs, algae blooms, cholera, and black tides
  • Offers guidance for implementing more effective coastal management
  • Summary

    In 1996, after more than a decade of researching the effects of over-population and the consequent pollution of the greater metropolitan New York City area, Carl Sindermann published his observations and conclusions in Ocean Pollution: Effects on Living Resources and Humans, a mostly technical document that emphasized the pathological effects of coastal pollution. The stressed species inhabiting the coastal waters of New York Bight had been the subject of several laboratory programs, which when integrated with ongoing pollution studies, provided a superb opportunity to assess the effects of human impact upon a fragile coastal system.

    Coastal Pollution: Effects on Living Resources and Humans is a highly lucid expansion and revision of that earlier book that preserves some of the technical aspects and enlightening vignettes recorded in the original. Organized into three distinct sections this work-
    I. Recounts eight specific horror stories based mostly on the consequences of coastal pollution
    II. Surveys the effects of coastal pollution on resource species such as fish and shellfish and marine mammals
    III. Examines the effects of coastal pollution on humans

    Sindermann ends the work by drawing conclusions and offering predictions for the future. Reflecting back over his notable career and beyond, the author ventures back as far as the 1950s in an effort to make readers appreciate the long historical record that is often forgotten due to our focus on the here ad now.

    "Science practiced without occasional genuflection to its history is too flat and featureless - intense but without depth - stimulating but lacking an important link with the past. We can do better."

    Intending to express insight that goes beyond the discussion of any one area, the author uses his experiences at the Sandy Hook laboratory as a lens to provide us with a poignant and well-documented understanding of the human impact on the inshore marine environment and its inhabitants, worldwide.

    Table of Contents

    Gulf of Mexico oil spill (1990)
    "Brown tide" in Long Island waters (1994)
    Died at sea, of unknown causes (1992)
    Cholera in the western hemisphere (1994)
    The "dancing cat disease" of Minamata (1983)
    Early experiences with PCBs in New England (1990)
    A perspective from the beach at Sandy Hook, New Jersey (2000)
    Enjoy the beach, but don't go in the water (2004)
    Algal toxins make unwelcome landfall in Florida (2003)
    The "microbe from hell" (1998)
    The day of the tall ships (1980)
    The great IXTOC?1 oil spill (1990)
    Life in the wake of the Exxon Valdez (2000)
    An alien pathogen of oysters in American waters (2003)
    Spread of the introduced "killer alga" Caulerpa taxifolia in the Mediterranean Sea and beyond (2004)
    Population explosion of a comb jelly in the Black Sea (1998)
    A proposed solution to problems created by introduced marine species (1999)
    Abnormal Pacific oysters on the coast of France (1986)
    Mackerel migrations in the western North Atlantic (1995)
    Mass mortalities of herring in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence (1968)
    Destruction of Georges Bank herring stock by overfishing (1998)
    Dolphin mortalities on the Atlantic coast (1992)
    Plight of the Hudson River fisherman (1978)
    The great contaminated fish scare in Japan (1981)
    Query from a pregnant editor (1989)
    A small incident on the wharf in East Boston (1988)

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