Abstract
An ecosystem services-led management of Chilika encourages a progression from a siloed approach to conservation of species and habitats to explicit consideration of benefits humans derive from these ecosystems, enabling anticipation of a wide range of consequences that may result from different management regimes, and provide tools for identifying, negotiating, avoiding, and managing potential negative tradeoffs. Wetland management would stand to benefit by explicit recognition of intrinsic, instrumental and relational values of the Ramsar Site and contributions to human well-being at multiple scales and sectors. While the investments into the restoration of Chilika has high economic efficiency, the distributional aspects of benefit sharing need to be addressed through interventions such as reducing fishing effort, increasing value realization through strategies as product differentiation, and enhancing participation of fishers in the higher segments of the value chain. The financing arrangements for wetlands management in place are not linked with the costs of ecosystem services provision, especially the maintenance of critical ecosystem processes and functions. Institutional arrangements for the management of provisioning services and select cultural services (mainly tourism) have emerged over a period of time, however, there is a relative vacuum when it comes to the management of regulating services (such as water regime moderation, nutrient cycling, carbon sequestration and others). Much of management effectiveness is dependent on the extent to which the institutions responsible for managing various sectoral programmes (such as climate change, rural development, water and sanitation, disaster risk reduction) take into account the multiple ecosystem services of Chilika and the implication of development programmes for sustained provision of such services. A research and monitoring framework for measuring and managing ecosystem services of Chilika needs to be based on an understanding of how the multiple services are generated by coupled social-ecological systems, their interactions and interlinkages with human well-being, and how values for ecosystem services feed into stakeholder behaviour and attitudes towards wetlands conservation and wise-use.
This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution.
Buying options
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Learn about institutional subscriptionsReferences
Agrawal A, Benson CS (2011) Common property theory and resource governance institutions: strengthening explanations of multiple outcomes. Environ Conserv 38(2):199–210
Allison EH, Ratner BD, Åsgård B, Willmann R, Pomeroy R, Kurien J (2012) Rights-based fisheries governance: from fishing rights to human rights. Fish Fish 13(1):14–29
Amir M, Paul D, Samal RN (2019) Sources of organic matter in Chilika lagoon, India inferred from stable C and N isotopic compositions of particulates and sediments. J Mar Syst 194:81–90
Balachandran S, Katti T, Manakadan R (2018) Indian bird migration atlas. Oxford University Press, Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai
Barbier EB (2007) Valuing ecosystem services as productive inputs. Econ Policy 22(49):178–229
Barik SK, Muduli PR, Mohanty B, Behera AT, Mallick S, Abhijit D, Samal RN, Rastogi G, Pattnaik AK (2017) Spatio-temporal variability and the impact of Phailin on water quality of Chilika lagoon. Cont Shelf Res 136(February):39–56
Bauer A, Srinivasalu C, Roy AD, Murthy BHCK, Molur S, Pal S, Mohapatra P, Agarwal I, Sondhi S (2014) Barkudia insularis, Madras spotted skink. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
Behera P, Mohapatra M, Adhya TK, Suar M (2018) Structural and metabolic diversity of rhizosphere microbial communities of Phragmites karka in a tropical coastal lagoon. Appl Soil Ecol (December 2017):0–1
Bennett EM, Garry D, Gordon LJ (2009) Understanding relationships among multiple ecosystem services. Ecol Lett 12:1394–1404
Biswas KP (1995) Ecological and fisheries development in wetlands: a case study of Chilika lagoon. Daya Publishing House, Delhi
Boulton AJ, Ekebom J, Gíslason G m (2016) Integrating ecosystem services into conservation strategies for freshwater and marine habitats: a review. Aquat Conserv Mar Freshwat Ecosyst 26(5):963–985
Braat LC, de Groot R (2012) The ecosystem services agenda: bridging the worlds of natural science and economics, conservation and development, and public and private policy. Ecosyst Serv 1(1):4–15
Burkhard B, Petrosillo I, Costanza R (2010) Ecosystem services - bridging ecology, economy and social sciences. Ecol Complex 7(3):257–259. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecocom.2010.07.001
Carpenter SR, Mooney HA, John A, Capistrano D, Defries R, Diaz S, Dietz T, Duraiappah A, Oteng-Yeboah A, Pereira HM, Perrings C, Reid W, Sarukhan J, Scholes RJ, Whyte A (2009) Science for managing ecosystem services: beyond the millennium ecosystem assessment. Proc Natl Acad Sci 106(5):1305–1312
CDA (2005) Estimation of fish, prawn and crab landings in the Chilika lagoon. Bhubaneswar, Odisha
CDA (2017) Chilika Lake: 2016 ecosystem health report card. Bhubaneswar, Odisha
CDA (2019) Chilika Development Authority
Chowdhury P, Behera MR (2015) A study on Regional Sea level variation along the Indian coast. Procedia Engineering 116(1):1078–1084
CIFRI. 2007. Assessment of fish yield potential of Chilika Lake.. Kolkata
CIFRI (2017) Post restoration assessment of the ecology and fisheries diversity of Chilika Lake. Kolkata, West Bengal
Cox DR (1958) The regression analysis of binary sequences. J R Stat Soc 20(2):215–242
D’Lima C, Marsh H, Hamann M, Sinha A, Arthur R (2014) Positive interactions between Irrawaddy dolphins and artisanal fishers in the Chilika lagoon of Eastern India are driven by ecology, socioeconomics, and culture. Ambio 43(5):614–624
Daily GC, Polasky S, Goldstein J, Kareiva PM, Mooney HA, Pejchar L, Ricketts TH, Salzman J, Shallenberger R (2009) Ecosystem services in decision making: time to deliver. Front Ecol Environ 7(1):21–28
Das LK (2018) Social movements– judicial activism Nexus and neoliberal transformation in India: revisiting save Chilika movement. Sociol Bull 67(1):84–102
Dujovny E (2009) The deepest cut: political ecology in the dredging of a New Sea Mouth in Chilika Lake, Orissa, India. Conserv Soc 7(3):192
Duraiappah AK, Asah ST, Brondizio ES, Kosoy N, O’Farrell PJ, Prieur-Richard AH, Subramanian SM, Takeuchi K (2014) Managing the mismatches to provide ecosystem Services for Human well-being: a conceptual framework for understanding the new commons. Curr Opin Environ Sustain 7:94–100
Ernstson H (2013) The social production of ecosystem services: a framework for studying environmental justice and ecological complexity in urbanized landscapes. Landsc Urban Plan 109(1):7–17
Felipe-Lucia MR, Martín-López B, Lavorel S, Berraquero-Díaz L, Escalera-Reyes J, Comín FA (2015) Ecosystem services flows: why stakeholders’ power relationships matter. PLoS One 10(7):1–21
Finlayson CM (2012) Forty years of wetland conservation and wise use. Aquat Conserv Mar Freshwat Ecosyst 22(2):139–143
Finlayson CM, Davidson N, Dave P, Randy Milton G, MacKay H (2011) The Ramsar convention and ecosystem-based approaches to the wise use and sustainable development of wetlands. J Int Wildl Law Policy 14(3–4):176–198
Finlayson C, Max N, Khursheed SK, Pattnaik AK, Trisal CL (2001) RAM no. In: 50 Ramsar advisory mission (RAM) removal of Chilika Lake Ramsar site, India, from the Montreux Record. Switzerland, Gland
Folke C, Pritchard L, Berkes F, Colding J, Svedin U (2007) The problem of fit between ecosystems and institutions: ten years later. Ecol Soc 12(1):30
Galappaththi EK, Nayak PK (2017) Two faces of shrimp aquaculture: commonising vs. decommonising effects of a wicked driver. Marit Stud 16(12):1–19
Ganguly D, Patra S, Muduli PR, Vishnu Vardhan K, Abhilash KR, Robin RS, Subramanian BR (2015) Influence of nutrient input on the trophic state of a tropical brackish water lagoon. J Earth Syst Sci 124(5):1005–1017
Ganguly D, Singh G, Purvaja R, Bhatta R, Paneer Selvam A, Banerjee K, Ramesh R (2018) Valuing the carbon sequestration regulation service by seagrass ecosystems of Palk Bay and Chilika, India. Ocean Coast Manag 159(May):26–33
Geevarghese GA, Akhil B, Magesh G, Krishnan P, Purvaja R, Ramesh R (2018) A comprehensive geospatial assessment of seagrass distribution in India. Ocean Coast Manag 159(January 2018):16–25
Geijzendorffer IR, Roche PK (2013) Can biodiversity monitoring schemes provide indicators for ecosystem services? Ecol Indic 33:148–157
Ghosh AK, Pattnaik AK, Ballatore TJ (2006) Chilika lagoon: restoring ecological balance and livelihoods through re-salinization. Lakes Reserv Res Manag 11(4):239–255
Gonzalez-ollauri A, Mickovski SB (2017) Providing ecosystem services in a challenging environment by dealing with bundles, trade-offs, and synergies. Ecosyst Serv 28:261–263
de Groot RS, Alkemade R, Braat L, Hein L, Willemen L (2010) Challenges in integrating the concept of ecosystem services and values in landscape planning, management and decision making. Ecol Complex 7(3):260–272
Guerry AD, Polasky S, Lubchenco J, Chaplin-Kramer R, Daily GC, Griffin R, Ruckelshaus M, Bateman IJ, Duraiappah A, Elmqvist T, Feldman MW, Folke C, Hoekstra J, Kareiva PM, Keeler BL, Li S, McKenzie E, Ouyang Z, Reyers B, Ricketts TH, Rockström J, Tallis H, Vira B (2015) Natural capital and ecosystem services informing decisions: from promise to practice. Proc Natl Acad Sci 112(24):7348–7355
Ingram JC, Redford KH, Watson JEM (2012) Applying ecosystem services approaches for biodiversity conservation: benefits and challenges. Sapiens 5(1):1–10
Jentoft S (2000) The community: a missing link of fisheries management. Mar Policy 24(1):53–60
JICA and CDA (2009) Technical cooperation project for conservation and wise use of natural resources of the Chilika lagoon through community participation in India
Jones S, Sujansingani KH (1954) Fish and fisheries of the Chilka Lake with statistics of fish catches for the year 1948–1950. Indian J Fish 1(1–2):256–344
Kremen C (2005) Managing ecosystem services: what do we need to know about their ecology? Ecol Lett 8(5):468–479
Kull CA, de Sartre XA, Castro-Larrañaga M (2015) The political ecology of ecosystem services. Geoforum 61:122–134
Kumar R, Pierre H, Randy Milton G, Sellamuttu SS, Buckton ST, Davidson NC, Pattnaik AK, Zavagli M, Baker C (2011) Assessing wetland ecosystem services and poverty interlinkages: a general framework and case study. Hydrol Sci J 56(8):1602–1621
Kumar R, McInnes R, Everard M, Gardner R, Kulindwa KAA, Infante Mata D (2017) Integrating multiple wetland values into decision-making. Ramsar Convention Secretariat, Gland
Kumar R, Pattnaik AK (2012) Chilika – an integrated management planning framework for conservation and wise use. Wetlands International South Asia and Chilika Development Authority, New Delhi
Leach M, Mearns R, Scoones I (1999) Environmental entitlements: dynamics and institutions in community-based natural resource management. World Dev 27(2):225–247
Levin S, Xepapadeas T, Crépin A-S, Norberg J, de Zeeuw A, Folke C, Hughes T, Arrow K, Barrett S, Daily G, Ehrlich P, Kautsky N, Mäler K-G, Polasky S, Troell M, Vincent JR, Walker B (2013) Social-ecological systems as complex adaptive systems: modeling and policy implications. Environ Dev Econ 18(02):111–132
Lima CD, Everingham Y, Diedrich A, Mustika PL, Marsh H, Lima CD, Everingham Y, Diedrich A, Mustika PL (2018) Using multiple indicators to evaluate the sustainability of dolphin-based wildlife tourism in rural India. J Sustain Tour 0(0):1–21
Mahapatro D, Panigrahy R, Panda S, Mishra RK (2016) Malcofaunal diversity of Chilika Lake, Odisha, India. Proc Zool Soc 71(3):272–280
Mäler K-G (1991) Production function approach in developing countries. In: Vincent JR, Crawford EW, Hoehn JP (eds) Valuing environmental benefits in developing countries. Michigan State University, East Lansing, pp 11–32
Mansinha M (1960) Radhanath, the poet of ‘Chilika’. Indian Lit 3(1):20–22
MEA (2005) Ecosystems and human well-being: wetlands and water synthesis. Island Press, Washington, DC
Mishra A (2014) Temperature rise and trend of cyclones over the eastern coastal region of India. J Earth Sci Clim Change 5(9):1–5
Mitra GN, Mahapatra P (1957) Bulletin on the development of Chilika Lake: survey report on the fishing industry. Orissa Government Press, Cuttack
Mohanty B, Muduli PR, Behera AT, Barik SK, Nag SK, Samal RN, Pattnaik AK (2016) Assessment of petroleum hydrocarbon in a tropical brackish water lagoon: Chilika, India. Chem Ecol 32(7):653–658
Mohanty SK, Mishra SS, Khan M, Mohanty RK, Mohapatra A, Pattnaik AK (2015) Ichthyofaunal diversity of Chilika Lake, Odisha, India: an inventory, assessment of biodiversity status and comprehensive systematic checklist (1916–2014). Check List 11(6):1–19
Mohapatra A, Mohanty RK, Mohanty SK, Bhatta KS, Das NR (2007) Fisheries enhancement and biodiversity assessment of fish, prawn and mud crab in Chilika lagoon through hydrological intervention. Wetl Ecol Manag 15(3):229–251
Mondal A, Mujumdar PP (2015) Regional hydrological impacts of climate change: implications for water management in India. Proc Int Assoc Hydrol Sci 366(June 2014):34–43
Naeem S, Chapin FS III, Costanza R, Ehrlich PR, Golley FB, Hooper DU, Lawton JH, Neill RVO, Mooney HA, Sala OE, Symstad AJ, Tilman D (1999) Biodiversity and ecosystem functioning: maintaining natural life support processes, vol 4. Ecological Society of America, Washington, DC
Nanda DK, Rameshwar S, Tomar SK, Dash SK, Jayakumar S, Arora DK, Chaudhary R, Kumar D (2013) Indian Chilika curd – a potential dairy product for geographical indication registration. Indian J Tradit Knowl 12(4):707–713
Nassl M, Löffler J (2015) Ecosystem services in coupled social–ecological systems: closing the cycle of service provision and societal feedback. Ambio 44(8):737–749
Nayak PK (2014) The Chilika lagoon social-ecological system: an historical analysis. Ecol Soc 19(1):1
Nayak PK (2017) Fisher communities in transition: understanding change from a livelihood perspective in Chilika lagoon, India. Marit Stud 16(1):1–32
Nayak PK, Berkes F (2010) Whose marginalisation? Politics around environmental injustices in India’s Chilika lagoon. Local Environ 15(6):553–567
Nayak PK, Berkes F (2011) Commonisation and decommonisation: understanding the processes of change in the Chilika lagoon, India. Conserv Soc 9(2):132
Nelson GC, Bennett E, Berhe AA, Cassman K, DeFries R, Dietz T, Dobermann A, Dobson A, Janetos A, Levy M, Marco D, Nakicenovic N, O’Neill B, Norgaard R, Petschel-Held G, Ojima D, Pingali P, Watson R, Zurek M (2006) Anthropogenic drivers of ecosystem change: an overview. Ecol Soc 11(2):29 [online]
Ormerod SJ (2014) Rebalancing the philosophy of river conservation. Aquat Conserv Mar Freshwat Ecosyst 24(2):147–152
Palm EC, Newman SH, Prosser DJ, Xiao X, Luo Z, Batbayar N, Balachandran S, Takekawa JY (2015) Mapping migratory flyways in Asia using dynamic Brownian bridge movement models. Mov Ecol 3:3
Panda AN, Mishra SR, Ray L, Das S, Rastogi G, Pattanaik AK, Adhya TK, Suar M, Raina V (2018) Taxonomic description and genome sequence of Halobacillus marinus sp. nov., a novel strain isolated from Chilika Lake, India. J Microbiol 56(4):223–230
Panda US, Mahanty MM, Ranga Rao V, Patra S, Mishra P (2015) Hydrodynamics and water quality in Chilika lagoon-A modelling approach. Procedia Engineering 116(1):639–646
Parrott L, Quinn N (2016) A complex systems approach for multiobjective water quality regulation on managed wetland landscapes. Ecosphere 7(6):1–17
Pascual U, Balvanera P, Díaz S, Pataki G, Roth E, Stenseke M, Watson RT, Dessane EB, Islar M, Kelemen E, Maris V, Quaas M, Subramanian SM, Wittmer H, Adlan A, Ahn SE, Al-Hafedh YS, Amankwah E, Asah ST, Berry P, Bilgin A, Breslow SJ, Bullock C, Cáceres D, Daly-Hassen H, Figueroa E, Golden CD, Gómez-Baggethun E, González-Jiménez D, Houdet J, Keune H, Kumar R, Ma K, May PH, Mead A, O’Farrell P, Pandit R, Pengue W, Pichis-Madruga R, Popa F, Preston S, Pacheco-Balanza D, Saarikoski H, Strassburg BB, van den Belt M, Verma M, Wickson F, Yagi N (2017) Valuing nature’s contributions to people: the IPBES approach. Curr Opin Environ Sustain 26:7–16
Pearce D (1998) Cost – benefit analysis and environmental policy. Oxf Rev Econ Policy 14(4):84–100
Potschin-young M, Haines-young R, Görg C, Heink U, Jax K, Schleyer C (2018) Understanding the role of conceptual frameworks: reading the ecosystem service Cascade. Ecosyst Serv 29:428–440
Primmer E, Jokinen P, Blicharska M, Barton DN, Bugter R, Potschin M (2015) Governance of ecosystem services: a framework for empirical analysis. Ecosyst Serv 16:158–166
Pritchard D (2016) Wise Use Concept of the Ramsar Convention. In: Finlayson CM, Everard M, Irvine K, Mcinnes RJ, Middleton BA, van Dam AA, Davidson NC (eds) The wetland book I: structure and function, management and methods. Springer Netherlands, Dordrecht, pp 1–3
Raje D, Mujumdar PP (2010) Reservoir performance under uncertainty in hydrologic impacts of climate change. Adv Water Resour 33(3):312–326
Rao PG (1995) Effect of climate change on streamflows in the Mahanadi River Basin, India. Water Int 20(4):205–212
Rath J, Adhikary SP (2008) Biodiversity assessment of algae in Chilika Lake, East Coast of India. In: Mohanty PK (ed) Monitoring and modelling lakes and coastal environments. Springer, Dordrecht, pp 22–33
Raudsepp-Hearne C, Peterson GD, Bennett EM (2010) Ecosystem service bundles for analyzing tradeoffs in diverse landscapes. Proc Natl Acad Sci 107(11):5242–5247
Raudsepp-hearne C, Peterson GD (2016) Scale and ecosystem services: how do observation, management, and analysis shift with scale — lessons from Québec. Ecol Soc 21(3):16
Ray L, Suar M, Pattnaik AK, Raina V (2013) Streptomyces chilikensis sp. nov., a halophilic streptomycete isolated from brackish water sediment. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 63:2757–2764
Reeves RR, Jefferson TA, Karczmarski L, Laidre K, O’Corry-Crowe G, Rojas-Bracho L, Secchi ER, Slooten E, Smith BD, Wang JY, Zhou K (2008) Orcaella brevirostris. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species e.T15419A4
Reyers B, Biggs R, Cumming GS, Elmqvist T, Hejnowicz AP, Polasky S (2013) Getting the measure of ecosystem services: a social-ecological approach. Front Ecol Environ 11(5):268–273
Ribot JC, Peluso NL (2009) A theory of access. Rural Sociol 68(2):153–181
Ricke K, Drouet L, Caldeira K, Tavoni M (2018) Country-level social cost of carbon. Nat Clim Chang 8(10):895–900
Robards MD, Schoon ML, Meek CL, Engle NL (2011) The importance of social drivers in the resilient provision of ecosystem services. Glob Environ Chang 21(2):522–529
Russi D, Ten Brink P, Farmer A, Badura T (2013) The economics of ecosystems and biodiversity for water and wetlands. Chilika Development Authority, London/Brussels
Samal KC (2002) Shrimp culture in Chilika Lake: case of occupational displacement of fishermen. Econ Polit Wkly 37(18):1714–1718
Satyanarayana CH (1999) Hydrographic and phytoplankton characteristics of Chilka Lake: A brackishwater lagoon, on the east coast of India, Ph.D. thesis. Andhra University, Visakhapatnam, India
Schneider P, Hook SJ (2010) Space observations of inland water bodies show rapid surface warming since 1985. Geophys Res Lett 37(22):1–5
Schoon M, van der Leeuw S (2015) The shift toward social-ecological systems perspectives: insights into the human-nature relationship. Nat Sci Soc 23(2):166–174
Sekhar NU (2004) Fisheries in Chilika Lake: how community access and control impacts their management. J Environ Manag 73(3):257–266
Sekhar NU (2007) Social capital and fisheries management: the case of Chilika Lake in India. Environ Manag 39(4):497–505
Sen A (1984) Rights and capabilities. In: Sen A (ed) Resources, values and development. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, pp 307–324
Singh R, Mishra S, Rajesh C, Dash S, Niranjan S, Kataria R (2017) Chilika- a distinct registered buffalo breed of India. Int J Livest Res 7(9):259–266
Spangenberg JH, von Haaren C, Settele J (2014) The ecosystem service cascade: further developing the metaphor. Integrating societal processes to accommodate social processes and planning, and the case of bioenergy. Ecol Econ 104:22–32
Srichandan S, Kim JY, Bhadury P, Barik SK, Muduli PR, Samal RN, Pattnaik AK, Rastogi G (2015) Spatiotemporal distribution and composition of phytoplankton assemblages in a coastal tropical lagoon: Chilika, India. Environ Monit Assess 187(2):47
Srivastava TN (2002) Local ‘self’ government and the constitution. Econ Polit Wkly 37(30):3190–3198
Steffen W (2009) Interdisciplinary research for managing ecosystem services. Proc Natl Acad Sci 106(5):1301–1302
Tripati S, Patnaik AP (2008) Stone anchors along the coast of Chilika Lake: new light on the maritime activities of Orissa, India. Curr Sci 94(3):386–390
Tripati S, Vora KH (2005) Maritime heritage in and around Chilika Lake, Orissa: geological evidences for its decline. Curr Sci 88(7):1175–1181
UNESCO (2014) Chilika Lake. Tentative List. Retrieved April 16, 2019 https://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/5896/
Unnikrishnan AS, Nidheesh AG, Lengaigne M (2015) Sea-level-rise trends off the Indian coasts during the last two decades. Curr Sci 108(5):966–970
Unnikrishnan AS, Ramesh Kumar MR, Sindhu B (2011) Tropical cyclones in the bay of Bengal and extreme sea-level projections along the East Coast of India in a future climate scenario. Curr Sci 101(3):327–331
Vivek G, Santonu G, Samal RN, Choudhury SB (2019) Monitoring of Chilika Lake mouth dynamics and quantifying rate of shoreline change using 30 m multi-temporal Landsat data. Data Brief 22(December):595–600
Zsuffa I, Van Dam AA, Kaggwa RC, Namaalwa S, Mahieu M, Cools J, Johnston R (2014) Towards decision support-based integrated management planning of papyrus wetlands: a case study from Uganda. Wetl Ecol Manag 22(2):199–213
Acknowledgements
Financial support for conducting the research reported in this paper was received from International Development Research Center under ‘Chilika Climate Change’ project (Grant ID: 106703-001) and GIZ- India under Indo-German Bilateral Cooperation Project-‘Incentives for Sustainable Management of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services’. Satish Kumar and Kalpana Ambastha (Wetlands International South Asia) assisted in statistical modelling.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2020 Springer Nature Switzerland AG
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Kumar, R., Pattnaik, A.K., Finlayson, C.M. (2020). Ecosystem Services: Implications for Managing Chilika. In: Finlayson, C., Rastogi, G., Mishra, D., Pattnaik, A. (eds) Ecology, Conservation, and Restoration of Chilika Lagoon, India. Wetlands: Ecology, Conservation and Management, vol 6. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33424-6_4
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33424-6_4
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-030-33423-9
Online ISBN: 978-3-030-33424-6
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)