Cephalopods: Ecology and Fisheries

By: Peter Boyle and Paul Rodhouse Harback 464 pages May 2005 ISBN: 978-0-632-06048-1

Squid, cuttlefish and octopuses, which form the marine mollusc group the cephalopods, are of great and increasing interest to marine biologists, physiologists, ecologists, environmental biologists and fisheries scientists. Cephalopods: ecology and fisheries is a thorough review of this most important animal group. The first introductory section of the book provides coverage of cephalopod form and function, origin and evolution, Nautilus, and biodiversity and zoogeography. The following section covers life cycles, growth, physiological ecology, reproductive strategies and early life histories. There follows a section on ecology, which provides details of slope and shelf species, oceanic and deep sea species, population ecology, trophic ecology and cephalopods as prey. The final section of the book deals with fisheries and ecological interactions, with chapters on fishing methods and scientific sampling, fisheries resources, fisheries oceanography and assessment and management methods. Chapters include: Preface; Introduction; Cephalopod themes, the life cycle, growth characteristics, physiological ecology, reproductive strategies, egg to recruitment; Cephalopod Ecology, shelf and slope species, oceanic and deep sea species, population, trophic ecology, cephalopods as prey; Fisheries and ecological interactions, fishing methods, major fisheries and catch trends, fisheries oceanography, assessment and management methods; Conclusions. This scientifically comprehensive and beautifully illustrated book is essential reading for marine biologists, zoologists, ecologists and fisheries managers. All libraries in universities and research establishments where biological sciences and fisheries are studied and taught should have multiple copies of this landmark publication on their shelves.