This Second Edition has been expanded to two volumes, the first of which focuses on marine fish. Volume 1 reviews the important diseases of wild, captive, or cultivated fish species, fish immunology, the effects of disease on populations, and public health aspects of fish diseases. Fishery scientists and managers, marine biologists, marine ecologists, and marine aquaculturists will find this volume indispensable. Principal Diseases of Marine Fish and Shellfish examines: Important diseases of marine fish and shellfish The effects of disease on wild and cultivated populations of fish and shellfish How fish and shellfish resist invasion by potential pathogen The influence of coastal/estuarine pollution on fish and shellfish disease The public health implications of fish and shellfish diseases
Ocean Pollution provides a unique look at the effects of estuarine and coastal pollution on resource species. One of the primary objectives of the book is to provide an accurate assessment of the state of the inshore marine environment and its inhabitants. Coastal habitat degradation is discussed, and principal findings from modeling and other rese
Dr. Carl J. Sindermann, Ph.D., D.Sc. (Hon.), in addition to his long term positions as research laboratory director and research center director, has been a prolifi c writer of technical articles and books in his scientifi c specialties as well as a series of books about scientists – of which this is the sixth volume. Some of his books have won awards and some have not; probably his most important contribution to science itself was his thousand page two volume treatise on Principal Diseases of Marine Fish and Shellfi sh, published by Academic Press in 1990 and supported at that time by a published record of more than 100 of his own technical papers and a rapidly expanding printed literature, world-wide in scope. Along this long publication route he has produced other technical books with such diverse titles as Sea Herring Stocks of the North Atlantic, Disease Control in North American Marine Aquaculture, Ocean Pollution, and Coastal Pollution. Dr. Sindermann, through his many roles in joint foreign science programs, fi ts a designation of an “international scientist.” Beginning with his early cooperative work with Candians of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada on fi sh diseases in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, he went on to provide voluminous data to the FAO-UN International Commission for the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries (ICNAF) in a book titled “Herring Stocks of the Western North Atlantic.” He also participated in activities of the Copenhagen-based International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), serving for a decade as chairman of a working group on Introductions of Non-Indigenous Marine Species. He was also a long-term panel member of the Tokyobased United States-Japan Joint Natural Resources Panels (UJNR), serving for several years as editor of “Proceedings of UJNR.”
In 1996, after more than a decade of researching the effects of over-population and the consequent pollution of the greater metropolitan New York City area, Carl Sindermann published his observations and conclusions in Ocean Pollution: Effects on Living Resources and Humans, a mostly technical document that emphasized the pathological effects of co
This is the 24th book about science and scientists published by Carl J. Sindermann, Ph.D. It describes in some detail many places in the world that he visited in connection with his roles as government science administrator and scientific authority in marine pathology during a long career as a research laboratory and center director with the federal government on the Atlantic Coast of the United States. During that period he occupied various active roles in international scientific organizations such as the European-based International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) and the Tokyo-based United States-Japan Natural Resources Panels (UJNR). His research interests, while naturally concentrating on the Atlantic coast of North America, have been much broader, particularly with periodic oceanic phenomena such as disease outbreaks, which can be of worldwide occurrence. This book describes some of the travels involved in attempting to make the subject of disease in the oceans more understandable and to present the United States research favorably to the world scientific community.
A guide to all the different roles scientists must play-from "concertmaster" to "producer"--to succeed in the high-stakes world of professional science.
Dr. Carl J. Sindermann, Ph.D., D.Sc. (Hon.), in addition to his long term positions as research laboratory director and research center director, has been a prolifi c writer of technical articles and books in his scientifi c specialties as well as a series of books about scientists – of which this is the sixth volume. Some of his books have won awards and some have not; probably his most important contribution to science itself was his thousand page two volume treatise on Principal Diseases of Marine Fish and Shellfi sh, published by Academic Press in 1990 and supported at that time by a published record of more than 100 of his own technical papers and a rapidly expanding printed literature, world-wide in scope. Along this long publication route he has produced other technical books with such diverse titles as Sea Herring Stocks of the North Atlantic, Disease Control in North American Marine Aquaculture, Ocean Pollution, and Coastal Pollution. Dr. Sindermann, through his many roles in joint foreign science programs, fi ts a designation of an “international scientist.” Beginning with his early cooperative work with Candians of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada on fi sh diseases in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, he went on to provide voluminous data to the FAO-UN International Commission for the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries (ICNAF) in a book titled “Herring Stocks of the Western North Atlantic.” He also participated in activities of the Copenhagen-based International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), serving for a decade as chairman of a working group on Introductions of Non-Indigenous Marine Species. He was also a long-term panel member of the Tokyobased United States-Japan Joint Natural Resources Panels (UJNR), serving for several years as editor of “Proceedings of UJNR.”
In this inspiring book of personal insight and sound advice, veteran scientist Carl J. Sindermann gives an insider's look at the competitive world of science and reveals the best strategies for attaining prominence and success. Taking apart the many different roles scientists must play during their careers, Sindermann compares common mistakes scientists make with what the best strategists do-whether they are publishing papers, presenting data, chairing meetings, or coping with government or academic bureaucracy. In the end, he maintains, well-honed interpersonal skills, a savvy eye on one's competitors, and excellent science are the keys to a satisfying and successful career.
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