Landscape Ecology and Resource Management: Linking Theory with PracticeJohn A. Bissonette, Ilse Storch Island Press, 2003 - 463 páginas Landscape Ecology and Resource Management bridges the gap between the science of landscape ecology and on-the-ground land and resource management, relating the theory and empirical research within landscape ecology to the practical needs of resource managers. It offers both a conceptual foundation of applicable and operational theory and case-study examples that address ways in which political, economic, and social factors influence the use of landscape ecology and other data-based science around the world.Contributors focus on links between theory and practice, between small-scale and large-scale, and between humans and nature. Specific linkages examined include:landscape patterns and biological realitytop-down effects and organismsthe indicator species concept and conservation effortsthe concept of fitness landscapes and the behavior and distribution of animalsbody mass patterns and wildlife conservationChapters feature examples of interactions between people and landscapes in boreal, central, and Mediterranean Europe; northern Australia; and Eastern Africa; along with case studies from central Europe, North America, and South America that show how theory and application can be linked in a variety of situations with varying management constraints.Landscape Ecology and Resource Management is the first book of its kind to focus on the linkages between the theory of landscape ecology and the practice of resource management, and will play an important role both in advancing landscape ecology as a science and in incorporating its ideas into management efforts. |
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Página 109
... Bears We have modeled habitat as a fitness surface and used it to infer much about the ecology of black bears living in the Pisgah Bear Sanctuary ( 35 ° 17 ′ N , 82 ° 47 ′ W ) in the mountains of western North Carolina . Before ...
... Bears We have modeled habitat as a fitness surface and used it to infer much about the ecology of black bears living in the Pisgah Bear Sanctuary ( 35 ° 17 ′ N , 82 ° 47 ′ W ) in the mountains of western North Carolina . Before ...
Página 110
... bears with a high degree of detail and confidence . Another advantage to studying bears and their habitat is that black bears are predominantly vegetarian , and their diet varies pre- dictably across seasons in the southern Appalachians ...
... bears with a high degree of detail and confidence . Another advantage to studying bears and their habitat is that black bears are predominantly vegetarian , and their diet varies pre- dictably across seasons in the southern Appalachians ...
Página 112
... bear . It was not derived inductively from correlations between bear locations and arbitrary habitat types , it models first principle relationships between bears and components of their habitat that should be directly related to ...
... bear . It was not derived inductively from correlations between bear locations and arbitrary habitat types , it models first principle relationships between bears and components of their habitat that should be directly related to ...
Índice
Conceptual and Quantitative Linkages | 11 |
Linking Landscape Patterns to Biological Reality | 33 |
Linking TopDown Effects to Organisms | 55 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Landscape Ecology and Resource Management: Linking Theory with Practice John A. Bissonette,Ilse Storch Visualização de excertos - 2003 |
Landscape Ecology and Resource Management: Linking Theory with Practice John A. Bissonette,Ilse Storch Pré-visualização indisponível - 2002 |
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