This textbook for advanced level courses in oceanography focuses on the interaction of ecological and physical processes that govern the ocean. The book begins with an introduction to ecology, using foraging theory and analytic formulation of encounter rates of predator and prey as organizing principles. Examples used are primarily marine to convey how marine systems differ from terrestrial environments. These differences, which carry through the remainder of the book, arise primarily through the ways in which deposit feeders process seafloor muds, suspension feeders extract particles from seawater, bacteria absorb solutes, and marine plants gather nutrients and light. The next section of the book is devoted to central issues of biological oceanography: controls of primary production, the role of bacteria, and questions of recruitment. The last part treats interdisciplinary topics as the arena in which the non-biological environmental scientist is most likely to find need for some biological background. The book is designed to introduce and develop concepts rather than to give extensive factual detail.
1. Introduction PART I: An Introduction to Ecological Principles 2. Individuals and Their Mass and Energy Balances 3. Encounter Rates and Functional Responses 4. Modes of Mass and Energy Acquisition by Individuals 5. Populations 6. Communities 7. Ecosystems and Alternative Perspectives PART II: Central Issues in Biological Oceanography 8. Biological Structure in Space and Time 9. Magnitude and Time Variation of Primary, New, and Export Production 10. Microbial Loops 11. Recruitment PART III: Interdisciplinary Topics Other Disciplines 12. Marine Optics 13. Physical Oceanography 14. Particle Dynamics in the Water Column 15. Sediment Transport and Bottom Boundary Layer Structure 16. Fouling and Biodeterioration 17. Stratigraphy 18. Diagenesis 19. Geophl-