Harmful Algal Blooms: Environmental Factors and Molecular Mechanisms offers a genomic and ecological perspective on harmful algal blooms, or HABs. The book provides the most updated and comprehensive knowledge crucial for understanding the causes of HABs while also synthesizing foundational knowledge with recent discoveries. Written by an expert in algal molecular ecology, it blends molecular biology, physiology, and ecology to examine how harmful algae thrive on environmental conditions like climate change. After introducing historical ecological models, the book delves into the influencing factors and underlying molecular mechanisms of HABs.
Other sections explore an integrated molecular approach to incorporate energy, nutrients, defenses, and sexual reproduction (ENDs) as a resolution for HAB growth. This is an important resource for researchers and students in marine biology and ecology fields, as well as phycological and environmental studies.
Table of Contents
1. The complexity and challenges to understand the causes of harmful algal blooms
2. Ecological models to constrain the causes of harmful algal blooms
3. Effects of temperature change and molecular mechanisms
4. Effects of ocean acidification and molecular mechanisms
5. Effects of eutrophication and molecular mechanisms
6. Roles of mixotrophy and symbiosis and molecular mechanisms
7. Biotic interactions and molecular mechanisms
8. Sexual reproduction and molecular regulators
9. Algal toxins and biosynthetic pathways
10. Integrative molecular ecological approach to unraveling harmful algal bloom drivers
Glossary