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E-grāmata: Systems Biology of Marine Ecosystems

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319620947
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319620947

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This book describes the latest advances in systems biology in four plant-based marine ecosystems: seaweeds, seagrasses, microalgae, and corals. Marine organisms that inhabit the oceanic environment experience a diverse range of environmental fluctuations, anthropogenic stress, and threats from invasive species and pathogens. System biology integrates physiology, genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics into numerical models and is emerging as an important approach to elucidate the functional adaptations of marine organisms to adverse environmental conditions. This book focuses on how ecophysiology, omics platforms, their integration (a systems biology perspective), and next generation sequencing tools are being used to address the stress response of marine seaweeds, seagrasses, corals, marine microbe diversity, and micro-and macroalgae/corals-bacterial interactions to global climate change and anthropogenic activities. The contents of the book are of special interest to graduate and postgraduate marine biology students and marine biology researchers, particularly those interested in marine ecology, stress physiology of marine macrophytes/corals/phytoplankton, and environmental microbiology. This book would also be of interest to marine engineers engaged in the management and conservation of our valuable marine resources.

Part I
1 Macroalgal Functional Genomics: A Missing Area
3(10)
Vishal Gupta
Mukesh Jain
C.R.K. Reddy
2 Tolerance Pathways to Desiccation Stress in Seaweeds
13(22)
Loretto Contreras-Porcia
Camilo Lopez-Cristoffanini
Andres Meynard
Manoj Kumar
3 Marine Metal Pollution and Effects on Seaweed Species
35(14)
Loretto Contreras-Porcia
Andres Meynard
Camilo Lopez-Cristoffanini
Nicolas Latorre
Manoj Kumar
4 Seaweed Lipidomics in the Era of `Omics' Biology: A Contemporary Perspective
49(50)
Puja Kumari
5 Volatiles in the Aquatic Marine Ecosystem: Ethylene and Related Plant Hormones and Sporulation in Red Seaweeds
99(20)
P. Garcia-Jimenez
R.R. Robaina
Part II
6 Abiotic Stress of Seagrasses: Recent Advances in Transcriptomics, Genomics, and Systems Biology
119(14)
E.E. Malandrakis
T. Danis
A. Iona
A. Exadactylos
7 Photobiology of Seagrasses: A Systems Biology Perspective
133(34)
Pimchanok Buapet
8 Systems Biology and the Seagrass Paradox: Adaptation, Acclimation, and Survival of Marine Angiosperms in a Changing Ocean Climate
167(22)
Richard C. Zimmerman
9 Gas and Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry-Based Metabolic Profiling of Marine Angiosperm Zostera muelleri (Alismatales, Zosteraceae)
189(18)
Unnikrishnan Kuzhiumparambil
Manoj Kumar
Peter Ralph
Part III
10 Marine Microalgae: Systems Biology from `Omics'
207(16)
Justin Ashworth
11 Application of `Omics' Approaches to Microbial Oceanography
223(12)
Deepa R. Varkey
Martina A. Doblin
12 Effects of Ocean Acidification and UV Radiation on Marine Photosynthetic Carbon Fixation
235(16)
Kunshan Gao
Donat-P. Hader
13 Oxidative Stress-Induced Bioprospecting of Microalgae
251(28)
Kaumeel Chokshi
Imran Pancha
Arup Ghosh
Sandhya Mishra
Part IV
14 Bioactive Small Molecules Mediate Microalgal-Bacterial Interactions
279(22)
Leen Labeeuw
Anna R. Bramucci
Rebecca J. Case
15 Exploring the Complexity of Macroalgal-Bacterial Interactions Through Interkingdom Signalling System
301(16)
Ravindra Pal Singh
Ramesh Kothari
Suhelen Egan
16 Role of Bacteria in Coral Ecosystem
317(26)
Neha P. Patel
Sweta B. Kumar
S. Haldar
Index 343
Dr. Manoj Kumar is a research scientist (ARC-DECRA Fellow) in the Climate Change Cluster (C3), University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Australia. He obtained a PhD in Marine Biotechnology at the Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute (CSMCRI-CSIR), Gujarat, India. His major research activities have been focused on the eco-physiology and stress tolerance mechanisms of benthic marine macrophytes (seaweeds and seagrasses) to diverse environmental and anthropogenic perturbations under the scenario of global climate change through omics approaches (proteomics and metabolomics). His research interests have also included: the use of seaweeds in food and fuel; quality seed stock generation of seaweeds using tissue culture; and protoplast isolation techniques. He has also researched the epigenetic regulation of marine and terrestrial plants under environmental stress conditions. Dr. Kumar was a visiting scientist at the Agriculture Research Organization (ARO), Volcani Centre, Israel where he expanded his research activities in the area of phyto-hormone signaling that regulates root and shoot architecture in the Arabidopsis model plant. Currently, he is studying the early signals of seagrass loss using advanced omics approaches, in order to understand eutrophication and light attenuation related phenotypic responses in seagrasses.



Prof. Peter Ralph is the Executive Director of the Climate Change Cluster (C3) at the University of Technology Sydney. He leads a dynamic, multidisciplinary group of researchers dedicated to improving our predictions about the impacts of climate change. Over the past eight years, he has grown this research institute to support over 100 staff and students. He is a member of the Blue Carbon International Scientific Working Group, formed under the auspices of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, United Nations Environmental Program and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission. He is the former leader of the CSIRO Marine and Coastal Carbon Biogeochemistry Cluster, which brought together the expertise of eight Australian universities in Australia's largest coastal blue carbon accounting, mapping and measurement study. He has recently been appointed to the Scientific Advisory Board for CzechGlobe (Global Change Research Institute - Czech Academy of Science).