E-Book, Englisch, 328 Seiten, E-Book
ISBN: 978-1-4443-0906-5
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
The interdisciplinary nature of biodiversity conservation isreflected throughout the book. Each essay examines the fundamentalprinciples of the topic, the methodologies involved and, crucially,the human dimension. In this way, Key Topics in ConservationBiology embraces the issues from cutting-edge ecologicalscience to policy, environmental economics, governance, ethics, andthe practical issues of implementation.
Key Topics in Conservation Biology will be a valuableresource in universities and colleges, government departments, andconservation agencies. It is aimed particularly at seniorundergraduate and graduate students in conservation biology andwildlife management, and those taking Masters degrees in any fieldrelevant to conservation. Conservation practitioners,policy-makers, and the wider general public eager to understandmore about important environmental issues will also find this bookinvaluable.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface.
List of Contributors.
List of Boxes.
1. The Pathology of Biodiversity Loss: the Practice ofConservation: Chris R. Dickman (University of Sydney), Stuart L.Pimm (Duke University) and Marcel Cardillo (Imperial CollegeLondon).
2. Prioritizing Choices in Conservation: Georgina M. Mace(Zoological Society of London), Hugh P. Possingham (University ofQueensland) and Nigel Leader-Williams (University of Kent).
3. What is Biodiversity Worth? Economics as a Problem and aSolution: David Pearce (deceased), Susanna Hecht (University ofCalifornia at Los Angeles) and Frank Vorhies (ConsultantSustainability Economist).
4. Impacts of Modern Molecular Genetic Techniques onConservation Biology: Eli Geffen (Tel Aviv University), GordonLuikart (University of Montana)and Robin S. Waples (NOAA).
5. The Role of Metapopulations in Conservation: H. ResitAkçakaya (Applied Biomathematics), Gus Mills (University ofPretoria) and C. Patrick Doncaster (University of Southampton).
6. Managing Biodiversity in the Light of Climate Change: CurrentBiological Effects and Future Impacts: Terry L. Root (StanfordUniversity), Diana Liverman (University of Oxford) and Chris Newman(University of Oxford).
7. Technology in Conservation: a Boon but with Small Print:Stephen A. Ellwood (University of Oxford), Rory P. Wilson(University of Wales Swansea) and Alonzo C. Addison (VirtualHeritage Network).
8. Animal Welfare and Conservation: Measuring Stress in theWild: Graeme McLaren (UK Environment Agency), Christian Bonacic(University of Oxford) and Andrew Rowan.
9. Does Modelling have a Role in Conservation?: Mark S. Boyce(University of Alberta), Steve P. Rushton (University of Newcastle)and Tim Lynam (CSIRO).
10. Conservation in the Tropics: Evolving Roles for Governments,International Donors and Non-governement Organizations: Steve Cobb(Environment and Development Group), Joshua Ginsberg (ColumbiaUniversity) and Jorgen Thomsen (Conservation International).
11. Do Parasites Matter? Infectious Diseases and theConservation of Host Populations: Philip Riordan (University ofOxford), Peter Hudson (Penn State University) and Steve Albon(Macaulay Institute).
12. The Nature of the Beast: Using Biological Processes inVertebrate Pest Management: Sandra Baker (University of Oxford),Grant Singleton and Rob Smith (University of Huddersfield).
13. Introduced Species and the Line between BiodiversityConservation and Naturalistic Eugenics: David W. Macdonald(University of Oxford), Carolyn M. King (University of Waikato) andRobert Strachan (Environment Agency Wales).
14. Bushmeat: the Challenge of Balancing Human and WildlifeNeeds in African Moist Tropical Forests: John E. Fa (DurrellWildlife Conservation Trust), Lise Albrechtsen (Food andAgriculture Organization) and David Brown (Overseas DevelopmentInstitute).
15. Does Sport Hunting Benefit Conservation?: Andrew K.Loveridge (University of Oxford), J.C. Reynolds (The GameConservancy Trust) and E.J. Milner-Gulland (Imperial CollegeLondon).
16. Can Farming and Wildlife Coexist?: Ruth E. Feber (Universityof Oxford), Elizabeth J. Asteraki (CAB International) and Les G.Firbank (Centre for Ecology and Hydrology).
17. Living with Wildlife: the Roots of Conflict and theSolutions: Claudio Sillero-Zubiri (University of Oxford), RamanSukumar (Indian Institute of Science) and Adrian Treves (MakerereUniversity).
18. Principles, Practice and Priorities: the Quest forAlignment: David W. Macdonald (University of Oxford), N. MarkCollins (Commonwealth Foundation) and Richard Wrangham (HarvardUniversity).
Index