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Vertebrate Conservation and Biodiversity [electronic resource] / edited by David L. Hawksworth, Alan T. Bull.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2007Descripción: X, 494 p. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781402063206
Trabajos contenidos:
  • SpringerLink (Online service)
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 596 23
Clasificación LoC:
  • QL605-739.8
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: This book brings together a selection of original studies submitted to Biodiversity and Conservation that address the conservation and biodiversity of vertebrates - particularly those in terrestrial habitats. Vertebrates are, along with plants, the best-known and most intensively studied components of biological diversity on Earth. While studies on vertebrates can be expected to provide models for other groups, they can also pose their own particular problems due to their relative mobility as in some migratory birds. In addition, many mammals and fish are also subject to extensive human exploitation for food or sport. The contributions in this volume are drawn from a wide range of countries from Australasia, East Africa, Europe, and North, Central and South America. Collectively they provide a snap-shot of the types of studies and actions being taken in vertebrate conservation topical examples that will make the volume especially valuable for use in conservation biology courses. Reprinted from Biodiversity and Conservation, volume 16:4 (2007)
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Responses of plant and bird communities to prescribed burning in tallgrass prairies -- Population trends and spatial synchrony in peripheral populations of the endangered Lesser grey shrike in response to environmental change -- Monitoring mammals in the Caxiuan National Forest, Brazil First results from the Tropical Ecology, Assessment and Monitoring (TEAM) program -- Grassland versus non-grassland bird abundance and diversity in managed grasslands: local, landscape and regional scale effects -- Biogeographic patterns of the East African coastal forest vertebrate fauna -- Sooty Shearwater (Puffinus griseus) on Guafo Island: the largest seabird colony in the world? -- Mexico in the international reptile skin trade: a case study -- Use of forest fragments by blue-winged macaws (Primolius maracana) within a fragmented landscape -- Commercialization and use of snakes in North and Northeastern Brazil: implications for conservation and management -- Philopatry, dispersal patterns and nest-site reuse in Lesser Grey Shrikes (Lanius minor) -- Conservation biogeography of anurans in Brazilian Cerrado -- Avian responses to tourism in the biogeographically isolated high Crdoba Mountains, Argentina -- Population decline of loggerhead turtles: two potential scenarios for Fethiye beach, Turkey -- Habitat use, roost selection and conservation of bats in Tsingy de Bemaraha National Park, Madagascar -- Territoriality and Survivorship of the Sierra Madre Sparrow in La Cima, MȨxico -- Analysis of the species description process for a little known invertebrate group: the limnoterrestrial tardigrades (Bilateria, Tardigrada) -- Environmental correlates for species richness among amphibians and reptiles in a climate transition area -- Amphibian diversity in East African biodiversity hotspots: altitudinal and latitudinal patterns -- China Subregional Avian Endemism and Biodiversity Conservation -- How resilient are Andean montane forest bird communities to habitat degradation? -- Human and natural impacts on forests along lower Tana river, Kenya: implications towards conservation and management of endemic primate species and their habitat -- Fragmentation causes rarity in common marmosets in the Atlantic forest of northeastern Brazil -- Distribution, abundance, and habitat use of introduced Boa constrictor threatening the native biota of Cozumel Island, Mexico -- Camera-trap studies of maned wolf density in the Cerrado and the Pantanal of Brazil -- Mammal survey at a ranch of the Brazilian Cerrado -- Surveying carnivores at large spatial scales: a comparison of four broad-applied methods -- Habitat and landscape factors associated with neotropical waterbird occurrence and richness in wetland fragments -- Livestock husbandry as a tool for carnivore conservation in Africas community rangelands: a casecontrol study -- Comparison of funding and demand for the conservation of the charismatic koala with those for the critically endangered wombat Lasiorhinus krefftii -- Nest site selection in middle and great spotted woodpeckers Dendrocopos medius & D. major: implications for forest management and conservation -- An Evaluation of the Contribution of Cultivated Allspice (Pimenta Dioca) to Vertebrate Biodiversity Conservation in Nicaragua.

This book brings together a selection of original studies submitted to Biodiversity and Conservation that address the conservation and biodiversity of vertebrates - particularly those in terrestrial habitats. Vertebrates are, along with plants, the best-known and most intensively studied components of biological diversity on Earth. While studies on vertebrates can be expected to provide models for other groups, they can also pose their own particular problems due to their relative mobility as in some migratory birds. In addition, many mammals and fish are also subject to extensive human exploitation for food or sport. The contributions in this volume are drawn from a wide range of countries from Australasia, East Africa, Europe, and North, Central and South America. Collectively they provide a snap-shot of the types of studies and actions being taken in vertebrate conservation topical examples that will make the volume especially valuable for use in conservation biology courses. Reprinted from Biodiversity and Conservation, volume 16:4 (2007)

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