Large Carnivores and the Conservation of Biodiversity

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Justina Ray, Kent H. Redford, Robert Steneck, Joel Berger
Island Press, 09/04/2013 - 526 páginas

Large Carnivores and the Conservation of Biodiversity brings together more than thirty leading scientists and conservation practitioners to consider a key question in environmental conservation: Is the conservation of large carnivores in ecosystems that evolved with their presence equivalent to the conservation of biological diversity within those systems? Building their discussions from empirical, long-term data sets, contributors including James A. Estes, David S. Maehr, Tim McClanahan, Andrès J. Novaro, John Terborgh, and Rosie Woodroffe explore a variety of issues surrounding the link between predation and biodiversity: What is the evidence for or against the link? Is it stronger in marine systems? What are the implications for conservation strategies?

Large Carnivores and the Conservation of Biodiversity is the first detailed, broad-scale examination of the empirical evidence regarding the role of large carnivores in biodiversity conservation in both marine and terrestrial ecosystems. It contributes to a much more precise and global understanding of when, where, and whether protecting and restoring top predators will directly contribute to the conservation of biodiversity. Everyone concerned with ecology, biodiversity, or large carnivores will find this volume a unique and thought-provoking analysis and synthesis.

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Índice

Introduction How to Value Large Carnivorous Animals
1
Setting the Stage
7
The Scientific Context for Understanding the Role of Predation
57
From Largely Intact to HumanDominated Systems Insight on the Role of Predation Derived from LongTerm Studies
177
Achieving Conservation and Management Goals through Focus on Large Carnivorous Animals
289
References
429
List of Contributors
509
Index
512
Direitos de autor

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Página 5 - ... would take the tiger, he was concealed by the forest. After a long time, the forest was rendered foul by the residence of the tiger, and it began to be estranged from him. The tiger, thereupon, quitted the forest, and men having found out that it was no longer guarded, came in numbers and cut down the wood, and robbed the leaves, so that, in a short time, the forest was destroyed, and became a bare place. The tiger, leaving the forest, was seen, and although he attempted to hide himself in clefts...
Página 474 - Effects of nutrients versus herbivores on reef algae: a new method for manipulating nutrients on coral reefs.
Página 430 - SJ (1998). Ungulate effects on the functional species composition of plant communities: herbivore selectivity and plant tolerance.
Página 458 - Oswood. 1991. Effects of moose browsing on decomposition rates of birch leaf litter in a subarctic stream.

Acerca do autor (2013)

JUSTINA C. RAY is director of the Wildlife Conservation Society Canada. KENT H. REDFORD is vice president for international programs at the Wildlife Conservation Society. ROBERT S. STENECK is professor at the University of Maine's School of Marine Sciences at the Darling Marine Center, Walpole, Maine. JOEL BERGER is senior scientist for the Wildlife Conservation Society.

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