The sustainable exploitation of the marine environment depends upon our
capacity to develop systems of management with predictable outcomes.
Unfortunately, marine ecosystems are highly dynamic and this property
could conflict with the objective of sustainable exploitation. This book
investigates the theory that the population and behavioural dynamics of
predators at the upper end of marine food chains can be used to assist
with management. Since these species integrate the dynamics of marine
ecosystems across a wide range of spatial and temporal scales, they
offer new sources of information that can be formally used in setting
management objectives. This book examines the current advances in the
understanding of the ecology of marine predators and will investigate
how information from these species could be used in management.