Wetlands are crucial ecosystems that help filter a great number of toxicants out of the earth's waters. They must be managed and occasionally even built from scratch, including all of the flora and fauna that grows there. Invertebrates play a key role in the wetland food chain. This comprehensive resource is the first dedicated solely to the ecology and management of invertebrates.Partial table of contents:
MARSHES AND SWAMPS OF THE SOUTHEAST.
The Florida Everglades: Natural Variability, Invertebrate Diversity, and Foodweb Stability (R. Rader).
The Kissimmee River-Riparian Marsh Ecosystem, Florida: Seasonal Differences in Invertebrate Functional Feeding Group Relationships (R. Merritt, et al.).
Carolina Bays: Ecology of Aquatic Invertebrates and Perspectives on Conservation (B. Taylor, et al.).
Pitcher Plant Wetlands of the Southeastern United States: Arthropod Associates (D. Folkerts).
WOODLAND PONDS, PEATLANDS, AND MARSHES OF THE NORTH AND NORTHEAST.
Temporary Woodland Ponds in Michigan: Invertebrate Seasonal Patterns and Trophic Relationships (M. Higgins & R. Merritt).
Constructed Marshes in Southeast Pennsylvania: Invertebrate Foodweb Structure (G. Fairchild, et al.).
Canadian Springs: Postglacial Development of the Invertebrate Fauna (D. Williams & N. Williams).
WETLANDS OF THE CENTRAL PRAIRIES AND MISSISSIPPI RIVER BASIN.
Wetlands of the Prairie Pothole Region: Invertebrate Species Composition, Ecology, and Management (N. Euliss, et al.).
Prairie Wetlands of South-Central Minnesota: Effects of Drought on Invertebrate Communities (A. Hershey, et al.).
WETLANDS OF THE WESTERN MOUNTAINS, DESERTS, AND VALLEYS.