The largest seaweed, giant kelp (Macrocystis) is the fastest growing
and most prolific of all plants found on earth. Growing from the
seafloor and extending along the ocean surface in lush canopies, giant
kelp provides an extensive vertical habitat in a largely two-dimensional
seascape. It is the foundation for one of the most species-rich,
productive, and widely distributed ecological communities in the world.
Schiel and Foster's scholarly review and synthesis take the reader from
Darwin's early observations to contemporary research, providing a
historical perspective for the modern understanding of giant kelp
evolution, biogeography, biology, and physiology.
The authors furnish a comprehensive discussion of kelp species and
forest ecology worldwide, with considerations of human uses and abuses,
management and conservation, and the current and likely future impacts
of global change.
This volume promises to be the definitive treatise and reference on
giant kelp and its forests for many years, and it will appeal to marine
scientists and others who want a better appreciation and understanding
of these wondrous forests of the sea.