02490cam a2200301 a 450000100090000000300040000900500170001300800410003001000170007101500190008801600180010702000280012502000310015303500240018404000670020805000250027508200160030010000280031624500800034426000570042430000830048150400510056450502980061552012020091365000220211565000250213770000260216215802155OSt20150408114013.0090702s2010 mauabf b 001 0 eng  a 2009024415 aGBA9B10672bnb7 a0154213842Uk a0674036077 (alk. paper) a9780674036079 (alk. paper) a(OCoLC)ocn319493043 aDLCcDLCdBTCTAdUKMdC#PdYDXCPdBWXdCDXdSZRdPAYdSNKdDLC00aQH91.8.D44bR49 201000a578.7792221 aRex, Michael A.,d1946-10aDeep-sea biodiversity :bpattern and scale /cMichael A. Rex, Ron J. Etter. aCambridge, Mass. :bHarvard University Press,c2010. axii, 354 p., [16] p. of plates :bill. (some col.), maps (some col.) ;c24 cm. aIncludes bibliographical references and index.0 aSetting the stage: patterns of benthic standing stock -- Local species diversity -- Regional patterns of alpha species diversity -- Oceanwide variation in alpha species diversity and long-term change -- Beta diversity along depth gradients -- Evolutionary processes in the deep sea -- Summary.1 a"Frigid, dark, and energy-deprived, the deep sea was long considered hostile to life. However, new sampling technologies and intense international research efforts in recent decades have revealed a remarkably rich fauna and an astonishing variety of novel habitats. These recent discoveries have changed the way we look at global biodiversity." "In Deep-Sea Biodiversity, Michael Rex and Ron Etter present the first synthesis of patterns and causes of biodiversity in organisms that dwell in the vast sediment ecosystem that blankets the ocean floor. They provide the most comprehensive analysis to date of geographic variation in benthic animal abundance and biomass. The authors document geographic patterns of deep-sea species diversity and integrate potential ecological causes across scales of time and space. They also review the most recent molecular population genetic evidence to describe how and where evolutionary processes have generated the unique deep-sea fauna. Deep-Sea Biodiversity offers a new understanding of marine biodiversity that will be of general interest to ecologists and is crucial to responsible exploitation of natural resources at the deep-sea floor."--BOOK JACKET. 0aDeep-sea biology. 0aMarine biodiversity.1 aEtter, Ron J.,d1955-