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Seashore ecology of New Zealand and the Pacific / John Morton ; scientific editor Bruce W. Hayward.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Auckland, N.Z. : Bateman, 2004.Description: 504 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 30 cmISBN:
  • 1869533992
  • 9781869533991
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 577.6990993 22
LOC classification:
  • QH95.7 .M622 2004
Contents:
pt. 1. New Zealand shores. -- Ch. 1. The pattern of shores -- Ch. 2. Life-forms of the zoned shore -- Ch. 3. Some basic zoning -- Ch. 4. The tides and waves -- Ch. 5. High energy (exposed) shores -- Ch. 6. Close shelter -- Ch. 7. Shores with enriched algae -- Ch. 8. Pools, crevices and borings -- Ch. 9. Coastal bedrock -- Ch. 10. Islands and biogeography -- Ch. 11. Boulder shores -- Ch. 12. Life-forms under boulders -- Ch. 13. Dark communities -- Ch. 14. Overhangs, wharves and caves -- Ch. 15. Communities and succession -- Ch. 16. Beyond the tides -- pt. 2. The Pacific Rim. -- Ch. 17. East Australia -- Ch. 18. Pacific Asia -- Ch. 19. Pacific America -- pt. 3. Pacific Coral shores -- Ch. 20. Reefs and their building -- Ch. 21. Crossing the reef -- Ch. 22. The richly inhabited shore -- Ch. 23. Mangroves -- Ch. 24. Coral outposts -- Classification of seashore organisms.
Summary: This huge book is from one of New Zealand's most respected scientists, Professor John Morton, and is the culmination of a life's work. Professor Morton and Dr Bruce Hayward (scientific editor) have painstakingly documented and described New Zealand's sea shore, and extended this commentary to include major coastal environments in the Pacific. This book is destined to become a classic of New Zealand science and be taken up as a vital text for all undergraduate study in this subject. With nearly 500 pages and over 300 diagrams and illustrations, it is the definitive guide to the environments, flora and fauna of our unique and varied coast. The book is about the animal and plant communities set up where the margins of islands and continents slope into the sea. The primary story - to be told in greater detail - is concerned with the intertidal zone, the narrow belt over which the interface of land and sea regularly shifts back and forth, in most parts of the world twice daily, First New Zealand shores are systematically described in their regional detail, with the addition of material from 25 years' investigation, particularly in the subtidal zone. Then with a broader brush follows a comparative account of the equivalent hard shores, with their biogeography, around the entire Pacific Rim. The final chapter culminates with an account of the coral shores of the tropical Pacific, based first on the atoll of Aitutaki in the Cook Islands, easily reached from New Zealand and still - for the present at least - unspoiled.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Non-Fiction - New Zealand Non-Fiction - New Zealand Waimate Non-Fiction Non Fiction 577.699 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan Not for loan A0045118X

Includes bibliographical references (pages 479-484) and indexes.

pt. 1. New Zealand shores. -- Ch. 1. The pattern of shores -- Ch. 2. Life-forms of the zoned shore -- Ch. 3. Some basic zoning -- Ch. 4. The tides and waves -- Ch. 5. High energy (exposed) shores -- Ch. 6. Close shelter -- Ch. 7. Shores with enriched algae -- Ch. 8. Pools, crevices and borings -- Ch. 9. Coastal bedrock -- Ch. 10. Islands and biogeography -- Ch. 11. Boulder shores -- Ch. 12. Life-forms under boulders -- Ch. 13. Dark communities -- Ch. 14. Overhangs, wharves and caves -- Ch. 15. Communities and succession -- Ch. 16. Beyond the tides -- pt. 2. The Pacific Rim. -- Ch. 17. East Australia -- Ch. 18. Pacific Asia -- Ch. 19. Pacific America -- pt. 3. Pacific Coral shores -- Ch. 20. Reefs and their building -- Ch. 21. Crossing the reef -- Ch. 22. The richly inhabited shore -- Ch. 23. Mangroves -- Ch. 24. Coral outposts -- Classification of seashore organisms.

This huge book is from one of New Zealand's most respected scientists, Professor John Morton, and is the culmination of a life's work. Professor Morton and Dr Bruce Hayward (scientific editor) have painstakingly documented and described New Zealand's sea shore, and extended this commentary to include major coastal environments in the Pacific. This book is destined to become a classic of New Zealand science and be taken up as a vital text for all undergraduate study in this subject. With nearly 500 pages and over 300 diagrams and illustrations, it is the definitive guide to the environments, flora and fauna of our unique and varied coast. The book is about the animal and plant communities set up where the margins of islands and continents slope into the sea. The primary story - to be told in greater detail - is concerned with the intertidal zone, the narrow belt over which the interface of land and sea regularly shifts back and forth, in most parts of the world twice daily, First New Zealand shores are systematically described in their regional detail, with the addition of material from 25 years' investigation, particularly in the subtidal zone. Then with a broader brush follows a comparative account of the equivalent hard shores, with their biogeography, around the entire Pacific Rim. The final chapter culminates with an account of the coral shores of the tropical Pacific, based first on the atoll of Aitutaki in the Cook Islands, easily reached from New Zealand and still - for the present at least - unspoiled.

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