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Freshwater fishes of México / Robert Rush Miller ; with the collaboration of W.L. Minckley and Steven Mark Norris ; with maps by Martha Hall Gach

Por: Miller, Robert Rush, 1916-2003 [autor].
Minckley, Wendell Lee, 1935-2001 [autor] | Norris, Steven Mark [autor].
Tipo de material: Libro
 impreso(a) 
 Libro impreso(a) Editor: Chicago, Illinois, United States of America: University of Chicago Press, 2005Descripción: xxv, 490 páginas : ilustraciones (algunas a color), mapas (algunos a color) ; 29 centímetros.Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Sin medio Tipo de portador: VolumenISBN: 0226526046; 9780226526041.Tema(s): Ictiología | Peces de agua dulceDescriptor(es) geográficos: México Clasificación: 597.092972 / M5 Nota de bibliografía: Incluye bibliografía: páginas 423-464 e índice: páginas 467-490 Número de sistema: 43720Recomendación de contenido:
Inglés

Though Mexico is only one-fifth the size of the continental United States, it is home to nearly two-thirds as many freshwater fishes as those that swim the waters of the United States and Canada combined. Mexico's diverse freshwater fauna can be attributed to the country's highly varied physical geography, a wide latitudinal range, the largest river system in middle America, and, ironically, its oceans many marine groups left the brine for the inland springs and never returned to the sea. No one knew these Mexican freshwaters or the fish that inhabit them better than the late world-renowned ichthyologist Robert Rush Miller. A pioneer of the field, Miller undertook his first field excursion more than fifty years ago and, in the decades following, amassed the information necessary to write the first encyclopedia of Mexican inland ichthyology. Providing keys to more than 500 native species accompanied by detailed distribution maps and illustrations "Freshwater Fishes of Mexico" offers a historical overview of the country's ichthyology, as well as syntheses of the unique biogeography of Mexican fishes and their current conservation status. Organized by family, the species accounts are supplemented with color galleries containing photographs of live fishes in their native environments and natural habitats. Exploring ecological, biological, and taxonomic issues, the book also considers the evolutionary history of the ichthyofauna itself and the human history of the scientists who researched it during the last several centuries. The life's work of Robert Rush Miller, the long-awaited "Freshwater Fishes of Mexico" will be welcomed not only by students of Mexican fishes, but by all ichthyologists working in Central and North America. This book will also find an audience among home aquarium hobbyists, fishery managers, conservation biologists, and environmental planners and managers."

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Libros Biblioteca San Cristóbal

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Acervo General (AG)
Acervo General 597.092972 M5 Disponible ECO010020691
Libros Biblioteca Villahermosa

Texto en la configuración de la biblioteca Villahermosa

Acervo General (AG)
Acervo General 597.092972 M5 Disponible ECO050003112

Incluye bibliografía: páginas 423-464 e índice: páginas 467-490

Though Mexico is only one-fifth the size of the continental United States, it is home to nearly two-thirds as many freshwater fishes as those that swim the waters of the United States and Canada combined. Mexico's diverse freshwater fauna can be attributed to the country's highly varied physical geography, a wide latitudinal range, the largest river system in middle America, and, ironically, its oceans many marine groups left the brine for the inland springs and never returned to the sea. No one knew these Mexican freshwaters or the fish that inhabit them better than the late world-renowned ichthyologist Robert Rush Miller. A pioneer of the field, Miller undertook his first field excursion more than fifty years ago and, in the decades following, amassed the information necessary to write the first encyclopedia of Mexican inland ichthyology. Providing keys to more than 500 native species accompanied by detailed distribution maps and illustrations "Freshwater Fishes of Mexico" offers a historical overview of the country's ichthyology, as well as syntheses of the unique biogeography of Mexican fishes and their current conservation status. Organized by family, the species accounts are supplemented with color galleries containing photographs of live fishes in their native environments and natural habitats. Exploring ecological, biological, and taxonomic issues, the book also considers the evolutionary history of the ichthyofauna itself and the human history of the scientists who researched it during the last several centuries. The life's work of Robert Rush Miller, the long-awaited "Freshwater Fishes of Mexico" will be welcomed not only by students of Mexican fishes, but by all ichthyologists working in Central and North America. This book will also find an audience among home aquarium hobbyists, fishery managers, conservation biologists, and environmental planners and managers." eng

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