Skip to content
  • About Us
  • Publishers
  • Contact
  • Help & Resources
    • column
      • Inspection and Review Copy Requests
      • Delivery Information
  • My Account
Filter ResultsOPEN +
  • Home
  • Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies Series
  • Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota
Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota

Gulf of Mexico Origin, Waters, and Biota

Volume 4, Ecosystem-Based Management

Edited by John W. Day and Alejandro Yáñez-Arancibia

Contributions by Hector Alafita Vásquez, William W. Arzapalo, Donald M. Baltz, Alfonso Banda, Thomas S. Bianchi, Donald F. Boesch, Luis Capurro Filograsso, John F. Caddy, Ernesto A. Chávez, Francisco A. Comin, Michael Dardeau, Alejandro Fierro-Cabo, Lisa González, Gerardo Quiroga Goode, José R. Hernández Santana, Jorge A. Herrera-Silveira, Sergio Jiménez Hernández, Eric Jordan Dahlgren, Ana Laura Lara-Domínguez, L. James Lester, Patricia Méndez-Linares, William J. Mitsch, Maria A. Ortíz-Pérez, Roberto Padilla-Hernández, Jonathan R. Pennock, Gary L. Powell, Hector Reyes Bonilla, John R. Rybczyk, Patricia Sánchez-Gil, Juan Carlos Seijo, Elizabeth H. Smith, Paul H. Templet, John W. Tunnell, Robert R. Twilley, John F. Valentine, Guillermo J. Villalobos, Priscilla A. Weeks, Kim Withers, David Zárate-Lomelí, Bruce Currie-Alder, Kenneth L. Heck, Robert J. Livingston, Christopher J. Madden, Enrique Reyes, Daniel O. Suman and Alfonso J. Cuevas

Published by: Texas A&M University Press

Series: Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies Series

Imprint: Texas A&M University Press

480 Pages, 223.00 × 284.00 × 35.00 mm, 9 color, 1 b&w photos. 7 line art. 62 maps. 55 figs. 53 tables. Appendix. Bib. I

  • Hardcover
  • 9781603447652
  • Published: June 2013

£100.00

Buy
  • Description
  • Authors
The fourth volume in the Harte Research Institute’s landmark scientific series on the Gulf of Mexico provides a comprehensive study of ecosystem-based management, analysing key coastal ecosystems in eleven Gulf Coast states from Florida to Quintana Roo and presenting case studies in which this integrated approach was tested in both the US and in Mexico. Two overview chapters cover related information on Cuba and on coastal zone management in Mexico. The comprehensive data on management policies and practices in this volume give researchers, policy makers, and other concerned parties the most up-to-date information available, supporting and informing initiatives to sustain healthy ecosystems so that they can, in turn, sustain human social and economic systems in this important transnational region.

Combined with the second volume in this series, which examines the coastal and ocean-based economy of the Gulf region, Ecosystem-Based Management provides pivotal empirical information on how human activity can be managed in an environmentally sustainable way. This important research points the way to better stewardship of the Gulf’s valuable natural resources, ensuring their availability for future generations.

Dr. John W. Day is distinguished professor emeritus in the Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences at Louisiana State University, USA. He is the coauthor of Estuarine Ecology (Wiley Interscience 1989) and coeditor of three other books.

Alejandro Yanez-Arancibia, a senior scientist and professor, is head of the Coastal Ecosystems Unit, Network of Environment and Sustainability at the Institute of Ecology A. C. in Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico. He is the coauthor of Estuarine Ecology (Wiley Interscience 1989), and other books.

Keep up to date about books from Mare Nostrum

Sign up to our newsletter
  • Column
    • About MNG
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy

© 2025 The Mare Nostrum Group Bookshop. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by Supadu