1: Introduction: the brown trout and quantitative ecology
2: The brown trout, a successful polytypic species
3: Case-study: population dynamics of migratory brown trout in
Black Brows Beck, 1966-1990
4: Growth and energetics of brown trout
5: Case-study: growth and production of migratory brown trout in
Black Brows Beck, 1966-1990
6: Ecological differences between brown trout populations
7: Natural selection and genetic differences between brown
trout
8: Mechanisms responsible for population regulation in young brown
trout
9: General conclusions
References
Author index
Subject index
`Frost and Brown's work "The Trout" has rightly been the touchstone
against which all subsequent publications on the species have been
judged: Elliot has produced a text of equal importance to the
modern trout biologist and at an affordable price!'
FISH
`All fish population ecologists will want to read this book. Its
detail serves to illustrate the principles of population ecology,
bringing alive concepts that in the abstract are hard to grasp and
sometimes tedious. The book will help students, at all levels, to
apply the principles they read about in textbooks, and the
textbooks themselves will soon be drawing on Elliott's summary of
his own research for both inspiration and illustration. Researchers
will
want to use the book as a source of ideas for their own work. These
will all emphasize the excellent service Elliott has done for
fisheries biology by carrying out the research and summarizing it
in this
splendid book.'
Paul J.B. Hart, University of Leicester, Journal of Fish Biology,
Volume 46, Number 1, January 1995
This is a very carefully planned and well-written book. Its aims
and overall structure are clearly outlined at the start and its
conclusions spelled out as seven key points in the concludijng
chapter. Elliott's style of writing is simple and concise ... As a
result, the book provides a detailed and informative but
easily-assimilated review of what must count as one of the key
ecological studies of recent times. Felicity Huntingford,
University of Glasgow, TREE,
Vol. 10, No. 2, February 1995
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