Ian Harrison
American Museum of Natural History
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Featured researches published by Ian Harrison.
Archive | 1999
Ian Harrison; Melanie L. J. Stiassny
Throughout most of human history, freshwater resources have been more than adequate to serve human needs while maintaining the integrity and biological diversity of Earth’s ecosystems. However, an exponentially increasing human population is placing ever greater demands on Earth’s limited supply of fresh waters. Already more than half of all accessible surface fresh water is put to use by humanity with concomitant degradation or loss of habitat such that Earth’s freshwater ecosystems have been altered more profoundly than have terrestrial ecosystems (Allan and Flecker, 1993; Postel et al., 1996; Stiassny, 1996, in press; Pimentai et al., 1997; Vitousek et al., 1997). Some particular examples serve to illustrate the gravity of the situation. In the United States, 98% of an estimated 5.2 million km of streams are sufficiently degraded to be unworthy of federal designation as wild or scenic rivers (Benke, 1990); industrial agriculture around the Aral Sea in the last 30 years has resulted in an approximate halving of the lake’s surface area and depth, and a tripling of its salinity (Mainguet and Letolle, 1997; Pimentai et al., 1997); only 2 of Japan’s 30,000 rivers are neither dammed nor modified in some way (McAllister et al., 1997). Undoubtedly these types of habitat degradation, often coupled with the deleterious effects of the introduction of exotic species (Courtenay and Moyle, 1992), have profound impacts on the resident biota. Although the precise degree of freshwater impoverishment remains to be fully documented, there can be little doubt that the losses are already great.
Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2012
Sébastien Trape; Ian Harrison; Papa Samba Diouf; Jean-Dominique Durand
Liza bandialensis Diouf 1991 is redescribed because previous descriptions have not been in well-distributed publications and have lacked sufficient detail or reference to voucher specimens. The description provided here is based on specimens from the Sine Saloum estuary, Senegal (West Africa), from where the species was originally described. The distinctness of the species is confirmed both by meristic and molecular criteria. L.xa0bandialensis presents a unique combination of characters with a low number of scales in the longitudinal series (32-33), 10.5-12 transverse scale rows, and distinctly yellowish dorsal, anal, and caudal fins. The currently known distribution of L.xa0bandialensis includes coastal waters of Senegal, Gambia and Guinea Bissau. Finally, we provide a morphological identification key for the sixteen species of Mugilidae species occurring along the eastern central Atlantic coast of Africa.
Archive | 2011
Jos Snoeks; Ian Harrison; Melanie L. J. Stiassny
Journal of Fish Biology | 2007
Ian Harrison; M. Nirchio; C. Oliveira; E. Ron; J. Gaviria
Interciencia | 2007
Mauro Nirchio; Claudio Oliveira; Irani Alves Ferreira; Julio E. Pérez; Juan I. Gaviria; Ian Harrison; Anna Rita Rossi; Luciana Sola
A floral and faunal inventory of the Parc national de Marojejy, Madagascar : with reference to elevational variation / | 2000
Melanie L. J. Stiassny; Ian Harrison
Archive | 2016
Ian Harrison; Randall Brummett; Melanie L. J. Stiassny
Archive | 2004
Ian Harrison; Melina Laverty; Eleanor J. Sterling
Journal of Fish Biology | 2013
Ian Harrison; Malcolm Evans; Rosemary Lowe-McConnell; Lynne R. Parenti; Chris Sanford; Lex Snyder; Melanie L. J. Stiassny; Rich Vari
Archive | 2016
Ian Harrison; Randall Brummett; Melanie L. J. Stiassny