Principles of conservation biology:
Gespeichert in:
Vorheriger Titel: | Meffe, Gary K. Principles of conservation biology |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Sunderland, Mass.
Sinauer
2006
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Ausgabe: | 3. ed., rev. ed. of Principles of conservation biology |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 793 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0878935185 9780878935185 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | PRINCIPLES OF BIOLOGY THIRD EDITION MARTHA J. GROOM UNIVERSITY OF
WASHINGTON BOTHELL AND SEATTLE GARY K. MEFFE DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE
ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA C. RONALD CARROLL
DIRECTOR FOR SCIENCE IN THE RIVER BASIN SCIENCE AND POLICY CENTER
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA SINAUER ASSOCIATES, INC. * PUBLISHERS SUNDERLAND,
MASSACHUSETTS U.S.A. CONTENTS UNIT I CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS FOR
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY 1 CHAPTER 1 1 WHAT IS CONSERVATION BIOLOGY? 3 GARY
K. MEFFE, C. RONALD CARROLL, AND MARTHA }. GROOM EXPANDING HUMAN DEMANDS
ON EARTH 3 RESPONDING TO GLOBAL CHANGE: THE FIELD OF CONSERVATION
BIOLOGY 6 A BRIEF HISTORY OF CONSERVATION BIOLOGY 7 ESSAY 1.1 A
PERSPECTIVE ON THE ROLE OF ACADEMIA IN CONSERVATION BIOLOGY 8
CONSERVATION IN THE UNITED STATES 10 MODERN CONSERVATION BIOLOGY: A
SYNTHESIS 12 ESSAY 1.2 WORKING WITH U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES IN
BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION 13 GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
15 ESSAY 1.3 THE ROLE OF SCIENCE IN DEFINING CONSERVATION PRIORITIES FOR
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS (NGOS) 16 SOME POSTULATES OF CONSERVATION
BIOLOGY 19 PERVASIVE ASPECTS OF CONSERVATION BIOLOGY EFFORTS 20 A
DISCIPLINE RESPONDING TO AN IMMENSE CRISIS 20 A MULTIDISCIPLINARY
SCIENCE 20 ESSAY 1.4 A PRIVATE LANDOWNER S PERSPECTIVE: CONSERVATION
BIOLOGY AND THE RURAL LANDOWNER 21 AN INEXACT SCIENCE 22 A VALUE-LADEN
SCIENCE 23 BOX 1.1 WINGSPREAD STATEMENT ON THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE
24 A SCIENCE WITH AN EVOLUTIONARY TIME SCALE 24 A SCIENCE OF ETERNAL
VIGILANCE 24 A FINAL WORD 24 SUMMARY 25 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 25
CHAPTER 2 GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY: PATTERNS AND PROCESSES 27 GORDON H.
ORIANS AND MARTHA }. GROOM WHAT IS BIODIVERSITY AND WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?
27 ESSAY 2.1 HIERARCHICAL INDICATORS FOR MONITORING CHANGES IN
BIODIVERSITY 28 COMPONENTS OF BIODIVERSITY 30 GENETIC DIVERSITY 30
POPULATION-LEVEL DIVERSITY 30 HUMAN CULTURAL DIVERSITY 31 DIVERSITY OF
SPECIES 31 ESSAY 2.2 THE IMPORTANCE OF INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS 32
HOW MANY SPECIES ARE THERE? 33 DIVERSITY OF HIGHER TAXA 34 DIVERSITY OF
BIOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES 36 ECOSYSTEM AND BIOME DIVERSITY, AND THE WORLD S
ECOREGIONS 37 SPECIES RICHNESS OVER GEOLOGICAL TIME 39 RATES OF SPECIES
FORMATION 40 RATES OF EXTINCTION 41 CURRENT PATTERNS OF SPECIES RICHNESS
41 PATTERNS OF ENDEMISM 43 BOX 2.1 THE IMPORTANCE OF ^-DIVERSITY 44
LATITUDINAL GRADIENTS IN SPECIES RICHNESS 47 SPECIES RICHNESS-ENERGY
RELATIONSHIPS 48 DISTURBANCE AND SPECIES RICHNESS 51 INTERACTIONS
BETWEEN LOCAL AND REGIONAL SPECIES RICHNESS 52 THE IMPORTANCE OF
BIODIVERSITY 53 BOX 2.2 THE ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT OF CROP POLLINATION
SERVICES 54 VIII CONTENTS THE FUTURE OF BIODIVERSITY STUDIES 55 ESSAY
2.3 RAPID INVENTORIES FOR CONSERVATION 56 SUMMARY 60 QUESTIONS FOR
DISCUSSION 61 CHAPTER 3 THREATS TO BIODIVERSITY 63 MARTHA }. GROOM
CHAPTER 4 CONSERVATION VALUES AND ETHICS 111 /. BAIRD CALLICOTT MAJOR
THREATS TO BIODIVERSITY AND THEIR INTERACTION 64 ESSAY 3.1 KILLER WHALES
AS SENTINELS OF GLOBAL POLLUTION 66 ESSAY 3.2 INFECTIOUS DISEASE AND THE
CONSERVATION OF BIODIVERSITY 67 ANTHROPOGENIC EXTINCTIONS AND THEIR
COMMUNITY AND ECOSYSTEM IMPACTS 70 INDIRECT IMPACTS OF EXTINCTIONS ON
ANIMAL AND PLANT COMMUNITIES 72 BOX 3.1 CASCADE EFFECTS RESULTING FROM
LOSS OF A CRITICAL SPECIES OR TAXON, OR FROM SPECIES INTRODUCTIONS 73
CURRENT PATTERNS OF GLOBAL ENDANGERMENT 74 GLOBALLY THREATENED SPECIES
75 BOX 3.2 THE IUCN RED LIST SYSTEM 76 GLOBALLY THREATENED PROCESSES 78
ESSAY 3.3 AN ENDANGERED BIOLOGICAL PHENOMENON 79 WHERE ARE SPECIES MOST
AT RISK WORLDWIDE? 81 ENDANGERED SPECIES IN THE UNITED STATES 81
THREATENED SPECIES IN OTHER COUNTRIES 83 BOX 3.3 HAVE WE SET IN MOTION
THE SIXTH MASS EXTINCTION EVENT? 85 WHAT TYPES OF SPECIES ARE MOST
VULNERABLE TO EXTINCTION? 86 SPECIES VULNERABILITY DUE TO SPECIALIZATION
86 VULNERABILITY OF RARE SPECIES 87 BAD LUCK : EXTRINSIC CAUSES OF
EXTINCTION DUE TO HUMAN ACTIVITIES 88 ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CONTEXTS OF
ENDANGERMENT 89 RESPONSES TO THE BIODIVERSITY CRISIS 89 CASE STUDY 3.1
ENIGMATIC DECLINES AND DISAPPEARANCES OF AMPHIBIAN POPULATIONS 93 CASE
STUDY 3.2 HOPE FOR A HOTSPOT 99 CASE STUDY 3.3 KEY INTERNATIONAL AND
U.S. LAWS GOVERNING MANAGEMENT AND CONSERVATION OF BIODIVERSITY 104
SUMMARY 108 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 109 THE VALUE OF BIODIVERSITY 111
INSTRUMENTAL VALUE 111 INTRINSIC VALUE 113 MONETIZING THE VALUE OF
BIODIVERSITY 115 ESSAY 4.1 OUR DUTIES TO ENDANGERED SPECIES 116
CONSERVATION ETHICS 119 ANTHROPOCENTRISM 119 THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN
STEWARDSHIP CONSERVATION ETHIC 120 TRADITIONAL NON-WESTERN ENVIRONMENTAL
ETHICS 121 BIOCENTRISM 124 ESSAY 4.2 MONKS, TEMPLES, AND TREES: THE
SPIRIT OF DIVERSITY 125 ECOCENTRISM 127 ESSAY 4.3 THE IMPORTANCE OF
VALUE SYSTEMS IN MANAGEMENT: CONSIDERATIONS IN DESERT FISH MANAGEMENT
130 CASE STUDY 4.1 CYPRESS FOREST CONSERVATION ON TAIWAN: A QUESTION OF
VALUE 131 SUMMARY 134 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 135 CHAPTER 5 ECOLOGICAL
ECONOMICS AND NATURE CONSERVATION 137 GARETH EDWARDS-JONES WHY DO WE
NEED ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS? 137 ESSAY 5.1 STEADY-STATE ECONOMICS 139
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS AND ITS APPLICATION TO CONSERVATION 140 ESSAY 5.2
VALUATION OF ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS 141 PROJECT DEFINITION 142
CLASSIFICATION OF IMPACTS 143 CONVERSION INTO MONETARY TERMS 143 WHAT
KIND OF VALUES DOES BIODIVERSITY HAVE? 144 CONVERTING BIODIVERSITY S
VALUE INTO MONETARY TERMS 146 CONVENTIONAL MARKET APPROACHES 146
IMPLICIT MARKET TECHNIQUES 147 , HYPOTHETICAL MARKET 147 EXAMPLES OF
MONETARY VALUES PLACED ON BIODIVERSITY 148 CONTENTS IX BOX 5.1
ESTIMATING THE TOTAL ECONOMIC VALUE OF SINHARAJA RAIN FOREST, SRI LANKA
149 CONTROVERSY SURROUNDING THE USE OF CVM 150 PROJECT ASSESSMENT IN CBA
151 ESSAY 5.3 A NON-ECONOMIC VIEW OF THE VALUE OF BIODIVERSITY 152 NET
PRESENT VALUE (NPV) 155 BOX 5.2 DISCOUNTING 156 SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS 157
OBJECTIONS TO CBA 157 HOW CAN WE BEST USE CBA IN CONSERVATION? 158
ALTERNATIVE DECISION-MAKING METHODS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT 159
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT 159 RISK ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT 159
ADDING NONSUBSTITUTABILITY TO CBA 161 CASE STUDY 5.1 THE COSTS OF
BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION: THE CASE OF UGANDA 162 CASE STUDY 5.2 COSTS
AND BENEFITS OF RESTORATION OF POST-INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPES 166 SUMMARY
168 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 169 UNIT II FOCUS ON PRIMARY THREATS TO
BIODIVERSITY 171 CHAPTER 6 HABITAT DEGRADATION AND LOSS 173 MARTHA ].
GROOM AND CARLY H. VYNNE WHAT CONSTITUTES HABITAT DEGRADATION AND WHEN
IS HABITAT LOST ? 174 PATTERNS OF HABITAT TRANSFORMATION ON LAND AND IN
THE SEA 176 FOREST SYSTEMS AND DEFORESTATION PATTERNS 177 LOSS OF AND
DAMAGE TO GRASSLAND, SAVANNA, AND SHRUBLAND HABITATS 179 DEGRADATION OF
FRESHWATER SYSTEMS 180 DEGRADATION OF MARINE ECOSYSTEMS 181 HUMAN
ACTIVITIES THAT CAUSE HABITAT DEGRADATION 182 AGRICULTURE 184 EXTRACTIVE
ACTIVITIES 185 ESSAY 6.1 SCRAPING BOTTOM: THE IMPACT OF FISHING ON
SEAFLOOR HABITATS 186 URBANIZATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT 187
WAR AND VIOLENT CONFLICT 188 POLLUTION AS A FORM OF HABITAT DEGRADATION
188 LIGHT POLLUTION 188 AIR POLLUTION AND ACID RAIN 189 ESSAY 6.2 FOREST
OZONE INJURY: HOW PHYSIOLOGY AND CLIMATE PLAY A ROLE 190 SOLID WASTE AND
PLASTICS 191 CHEMICAL POLLUTION 192 HABITAT DEGRADATION DUE TO EXCESSIVE
NITROGEN INPUTS 193 EUTROPHICATION 194 ESSAY 6.3 ENDOCRINE DISRUPTING
CONTAMINANTS, CONSERVATION, AND THE FUTURE 195 PROTECTING WHAT S LEFT:
APPROACHES TO GLOBAL HABITAT CONSERVATION 197 BIODIVERSITY HOTSPOTS 197
THE GLOBAL 200 ECOREGIONS 198 CRISIS ECOREGIONS 199 WILDERNESS
PROTECTION 200 OTHER HABITAT CONSERVATION PRIORITY-SETTING APPROACHES
200 CONSERVATION OF HABITATS: THE HOW 201 ESSAY 6.4 DEBT-FOR-NATU RE
SWAPS 203 CASE STUDY 6.1 THE IMPORTANCE OF LAND USE HISTORY TO
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY 204 CASE STUDY 6.2 PROMOTING WILDLIFE CONSERVATION
IN AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPES 208 SUMMARY 211 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 212
CHAPTER 7 HABITAT FRAGMENTATION 213 REED NOSS, BLAIR CSUTI, AND MARTHA
}. GROOM ESSAY 7.1 HABITAT SHREDDING 214 FRAGMENTATION AND
HETEROGENEITY 216 ESSAY 7.2 MOSAICS AND PATCH DYNAMICS 218 THE
FRAGMENTATION PROCESS 219 BOX 7.1 QUANTIFYING LANDSCAPE PATTERN AND
FRAGMENTATION 220 BIOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF FRAGMENTATION 223 INITIAL
EXCLUSION 223 CROWDING EFFECT 223 INSULARIZATION AND AREA EFFECTS 223
CONTENTS ISOLATION 226 EDGE EFFECTS 228 MATRIX EFFECTS 230 THE SPECIAL
PROBLEM OF ROADS 230 SPECIES INVASIONS 232 EFFECTS ON ECOLOGICAL
PROCESSES 232 NESTED SPECIES DISTRIBUTION PATTERNS 234 SPECIES
VULNERABLE TO FRAGMENTATION 235 FRAGMENTATION VERSUS HABITAT LOSS, AND
REGIONAL DIFFERENCES 235 BOX 7.2 SPECIES VULNERABLE TO FRAGMENTATION 236
THE PROBLEM OF CLIMATE CHANGE 239 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 239
CASE STUDY 7.1 SUBDIVIDING THE WEST 241 CASE STUDY 7.2 THE FRAGMENTATION
OF AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS AND THE ALTERATION OF HYDROLOGIC CONNECTIVITY:
NEGLECTED DIMENSIONS OF CONSERVATION ECOLOGY 243 CASE STUDY 7.3
DISSECTING NATURE: THE ISLANDS OF LAGOGURI 246 SUMMARY 250 QUESTIONS FOR
DISCUSSION 251 DISCOUNTING 272 COMPARISON OF METHODS FOR CALCULATING
SUSTAINABLE YIELDS 272 SURPLUS PRODUCTION 272 YIELD PER RECRUIT 273 FULL
DEMOGRAPHY 273 ADJUSTMENTS BASED ON RECENT RESULTS 274 DEMOGRAPHIC RULES
OF THUMB 274 BOX 8.1 ADJUSTMENTS OF QUOTAS FOR THE MARTEN (MARTES
AMERICANA) ACCORDING TO PREVIOUS RESULTS 275 SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL
COMPARISONS 276 SUSTAINABLE USE MEETS BIODIVERSITY 276 CASE STUDY 8.1
OVEREXPLOITATION OF HIGHLY VULNERABLE SPECIES: RATIONAL MANAGEMENT AND
RESTORATION OF SHARKS 278 CASE STUDY 8.2 THE BUSHMEAT CRISIS: APPROACHES
FOR CONSERVATION 280 CASE STUDY 8.3 MANAGING NATURAL TROPICAL FORESTS
FOR TIMBER: EXPERIENCES, CHALLENGES, AND OPPORTUNITIES 283 SUMMARY 290
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 291 CHAPTER 8 OVEREXPLOITATION 253 JOHN D.
REYNOLDS AND CARLOS A. PERES HISTORY OF, AND MOTIVATIONS FOR,
EXPLOITATION 253 IMPACTS OF EXPLOITATION ON TARGET SPECIES 254 TROPICAL
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS 255 ESSAY 8.1 EAST AFRICAN BLACKWOOD EXPLOITATION
256 TEMPERATE TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS 258 AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS 260 IMPACTS
OF EXPLOITATION ON NONTARGET SPECIES AND ECOSYSTEMS 262 TROPICAL
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS 262 TEMPERATE ECOSYSTEMS 263 AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
264 BIOLOGICAL THEORY OF SUSTAINABLE EXPLOITATION 265 STABILITY OF
EXPLOITATION 267 CONSTANT QUOTA EXPLOITATION 267 PROPORTIONAL (CONSTANT
EFFORT) EXPLOITATION 268 THRESHOLD EXPLOITATION 268 BIOECONOMICS 269
OPEN ACCESS AND THE TRAGEDY OF THE COMMONS 269 ESSAY 8.2 USING ECONOMIC
ANALYSIS TO BOLSTER CONSERVATION EFFORTS: MARINE AQUARIA AND CORAL REEFS
270 CHAPTER 9 SPECIES INVASIONS 293 MARJORIE WONHAM WHAT ARE THE
CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES? 294 WHAT ARE THE
IMPACTS OF INVASIONS? 295 POPULATION AND COMMUNITY IMPACTS 295 ESSAY 9.1
MAINTAINING AN OPEN MIND ON NONNATIVE SPECIES 296 MORPHOLOGICAL AND
BEHAVIORAL IMPACTS 302 GENETIC AND EVOLUTIONARY IMPACTS 302 ECOSYSTEM
IMPACTS 303 MEASURING INVADER IMPACTS 304 BOX 9.1 UNDERSTANDING THE
IMPACTS OF NONNATIVE SPECIES 305 WHAT FACTORS DETERMINE WHETHER A
NONNATIVE SPECIES BECOMES INVASIVE? 306 PROPAGULE PRESSURE 307 ESSAY 9.2
GLOBAL EXCHANGE 308 INVADING SPECIES CHARACTERISTICS 309 INVADED
COMMUNITY CHARACTERISTICS 311 ; HOW ARE SPECIES INTRODUCED? 314
UNINTENTIONAL PATHWAYS 314 INTENTIONAL PATHWAYS 316 CONTENTS XI HOW DO
WE MANAGE SPECIES INVASIONS? 316 INVASION CONTROL 316 SPECIES-BASED
CONTROL 316 BOX 9.2 USING MODELS TO IMPROVE CONTROL OF INTRODUCED
RABBITS IN AUSTRALIA? 318 INVASION PREVENTION 318 CASE STUDY 9.1
INVADERS IN AN INVASIBLE LAND: THE CASE OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BEAVER
(CASTOR CANADEN- SIS) IN THE TIERRA DEL FUEGO-CAPE HORN REGION OF SOUTH
AMERICA 321 CASE STUDY 9.2 TRACKING AQUATIC INVASIVE SPECIES 323 CASE
STUDY 9.3 WHEN A BEAUTY TURNS BEAST 325 CASE STUDY 9.4 BIOLOGICAL
CONTROL AS A CONSERVATION TOOL 327 SUMMARY 330 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
319 CHAPTER 10 BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE 333 CAMILLE PARMESAN
AND JOHN MATTHEWS THE NATURE OF CLIMATE CHANGE 334 CLIMATE CHANGE
THROUGH THE AGES 334 HUMAN ENHANCEMENT OF THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT 336
MECHANISMS REGULATING THE GLOBAL ENERGY BUDGET 337 CURRENT AND FUTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE 338 TEMPERATURE AND PRECIPITATION CHANGES 338 OCEANS:
CHANGE IN SEA LEVEL AND CIRCULATION 340 PREDICTED BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS 342
RESPONSES TO EXTREME WEATHER 342 OBSERVED BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF CLIMATE
CHANGE 344 DETECTION AND ATTRIBUTION 344 EVOLUTIONARY AND MORPHOLOGICAL
CHANGES 344 PHENOLOGICAL SHIFTS 345 ABUNDANCE CHANGES AND COMMUNITY
REASSEMBLY 346 RANGE SHIFTS 348 SEA LEVEL RISE 349 DIRECT EFFECTS OF
CARBON DIOXIDE 350 ECOSYSTEM PROCESS CHANGES 350 THE GLOBAL PICTURE: A
SYNTHESIS OF BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS 351 CONSERVATION IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE
CHANGE 352 EXTINCTIONS 352 RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE BY RESOURCE
MANAGERS 354 CLIMATE CHANGE AND CONSERVATION POLICY 355 RESPONSES TO
CLIMATE CHANGE AT NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL LEVELS 356 THE ROLE OF
GOVERNMENT IN CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY 356 MAJOR THEMES IN CLIMATE CHANGE
NEGOTIATIONS 356 THE FUTURE OF CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY 359 CASE STUDY 10.1
CHALLENGES TO PREDICTING INDIRECT EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE 360 CASE
STUDY 10.2 CLIMATE CHANGE, EXTINCTION, AND THE UNCERTAIN FUTURE OF A
NEOTROPICAL CLOUD FOREST COMMUNITY 364 CASE STUDY 10.3 ADAPTING COASTAL
LOWLANDS TO RISING SEAS 366 CASE STUDY 10.4 CLIMATE CHANGE AND COASTAL
MIGRANT BIRDS 370 SUMMARY 373 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 374 CHAPTER 11
CONSERVATION GENETICS: THE USE AND IMPORTANCE OF GENETIC INFORMATION 375
KIM T. SCRIBNER, GARY K. MEFFE, AND MARTHA J. GROOM GENETIC VARIATION:
WHAT IS IT AND WHY IS IT IMPORTANT? 377 VARIATION WITHIN INDIVIDUALS 377
BOX 11.1 MEASURES OF GENETIC DIVERSITY 378 VARIATION AMONG INDIVIDUALS
380 VARIATION AMONG POPULATIONS 381 VARIATION AT THE LEVEL OF
METAPOPULATIONS 383 WHY IS GENETIC DIVERSITY IMPORTANT? 384 FORCES THAT
AFFECT GENETIC VARIATION WITHIN POPULATIONS 385 THE GENETICALLY
EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZE (N E ) 385 ESSAY 11.1 COADAPTATION , LOCAL
ADAPTATION, AND OUTBREEDING DEPRESSION 385 MUTATION 387 GENETIC DRIFT
387 BOX 11.2 ESTIMATION OF EFFECTIVE POPULATION SIZE 388 GENE FLOW 390
INBREEDING DEPRESSION 391 OUTBREEDING DEPRESSION 392 NATURAL SELECTION
393 USING CONSERVATION GENETICS TO INFORM MANAGEMENT 394 TIME SCALES OF
CONCERN 394 IDENTIFYING AND PRIORITIZING GROUPS FOR CONSERVATION 394
ESSAY 11.2 A ROSE IS A ROSE IS A ROSE 396 , BOX 11.3 CALCULATION OF
F-STATISTICS 397 GENETIC INFORMATION AND DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF
BREEDING STRATEGIES 401 XII CONTENTS USE OF PEDIGREES 401 ESTIMATION OF
DEGREE OF RELATEDNESS WITHOUT KNOWLEDGE OF PEDIGREE RELATIONSHIPS 401
ANALYSES OF PARENTAGE AND SYSTEMS OF MATING 401 FORENSICS AND SPECIES OR
POPULATION IDENTIFICATION 402 INDIVIDUAL IDENTIFICATION AND ESTIMATION
OF POPULATION SIZE 402 UNDERSTANDING EFFECTS OF POPULATION EXPLOITATION
ON LEVELS OF GENETIC DIVERSITY 402 LIMITATIONS OF USING GENETICS IN
CONSERVATION PLANNING 403 CASE STUDY 11.1 GENETICS AND DEMOGRAPHY OF
GRIZZLY BEAR POPULATIONS 404 CASE STUDY 11.2 USING GENETIC ANALYSES TO
GUIDE MANAGEMENT OF PACIFIC SALMONIDS 407 CASE STUDY 11.3 SCAT: SINGING
THE WILDLIFE CONSERVATION BLUES 411 SUMMARY 414 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
415 UNIT III APPROACHES TO SOLVING CONSERVATION PROBLEMS 417 CHAPTER 12
SPECIES AND LANDSCAPE APPROACHES TO CONSERVATION 419 JOHN B. DUNNING
JR., MARTHA J. GROOM, AND H. RONALD PULLIAM POPULATIONS AND HOW THEY
CHANGE 420 MECHANISMS OF POPULATION REGULATION 421 SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF
VERY SMALL POPULATIONS 423 SOURCE-SINK CONCEPTS AND THEIR APPLICATION TO
CONSERVATION 424 METAPOPULATION CONCEPTS, THRESHOLD RESPONSES, AND
CONSERVATION 427 ESSAY 12.1 METAPOPULATIONS, EXTINCTION THRESHOLDS, AND
CONSERVATION 429 MODELING APPROACHES FOR PREDICTION AND CONSERVATION
PLANNING 432 POPULATION VIABILITY ANALYSIS 432 THE VALUE OF HIERARCHICAL
ANALYSIS FOR UNDERSTANDING POPULATION CHANGE 432 ESSAY 12.2 POPULATION
VIABILITY ANALYSIS AND CONSERVATION DECISION MAKING 433 ESSAY 12.3
ECOLOGICALLY FUNCTIONAL POPULATIONS 435 LANDSCAPE MODELS FOR
CONSERVATION 440 SPATIALLY EXPLICIT POPULATION MODELS 442 CHALLENGES AND
OPPORTUNITIES OF CONSERVATION AT THE LANDSCAPE SCALE 444 ESSAY 12.4
LANDSCAPE-LEVEL CONSERVATION FOR THE SEA 447 CASE STUDY 12.1 ASSESSING
EXTINCTION RISK IN NEOTROPICAL MIGRATORY SONGBIRDS: THE NEED FOR
LANDSCAPE-BASED DEMOGRAPHIC MODELS 449 CASE STUDY 12.2 LANDSCAPE
CONSERVATION IN THE GREATER MADIDI LANDSCAPE, BOLIVIA: PLANNING FOR
WILDLIFE ACROSS DIFFERENT SCALES AND JURISDICTIONS 453 CASE STUDY 12.3
PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER: PRESERVING CRANES AND THEIR HABITATS AROUND
THE WORLD 459 SUMMARY 464 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 465 CHAPTER 13
ECOSYSTEM APPROACHES TO CONSERVATION: RESPONSES TO A COMPLEX WORLD 467
GARY K. MEFFE, MARTHA J. GROOM, AND C. RONALD CARROLL KEY ELEMENTS OF AN
ECOSYSTEM APPROACH 468 EXAMPLES OF ECOSYSTEM APPROACHES 469 ECOSYSTEM
MANAGEMENT 471 USING ECOSYSTEM APPROACHES TO MEET THE GOALS OF THE
CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY 472 BIOPHYSICAL ECOSYSTEMS AS
APPROPRIATE MANAGEMENT UNITS 473 ESSAY 13.1 MARINE ECOSYSTEM-BASED
MANAGEMENT: TRANSFORMING U.S. OCEAN POLICY 476 UNDERSTANDING ECOSYSTEM
DYNAMICS AND RESILIENCE 480 ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT: PREPARING FOR CHANGE IN
CONSERVATION PRACTICE 481 ANALYTIC APPROACHES USED IN ADAPTIVE
MANAGEMENT 483 SHOULD ECOSYSTEM APPROACHES MIMIC NATURAL PROCESSES? 484
THE CRITICAL ROLE OF PARTICIPATORY DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES 485 BOX
13.1 USING FIRE AS A NATURAL PROCESS IN ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT 486 BOX
13.2 NATURAL COMMUNITY CONSERVATION PLANNING 488 CONTENTS XIII FUTURE
DIRECTIONS IN ECOSYSTEM-BASED CONSERVATION 489 INCORPORATING SOCIAL AND
CULTURAL CONTEXTS 534 CASE STUDY 13.1 ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT ON PEOPLE S
LAND IN THE UNITED STATES 489 CASE STUDY 13.2 CORAL BLEACHING: MANAGING
FOR RESILIENCE IN A CHANGING WORLD 493 CASE STUDY 13.3 LARGE-SCALE
ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT: THE CHESAPEAKE BAY 498 CASE STUDY 13.4 THE
EVERGLADES: TRIALS IN ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT 502 SUMMARY 507 QUESTIONS FOR
DISCUSSION 507 CASE STUDY 14.1 CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT OF A EUROPEAN
NATURAL AREA: DONANA NATIONAL PARK, SPAIN 536 CASE STUDY 14.2 THE
CALIFORNIA CHANNEL ISLANDS MARINE RESERVES: SCIENTISTS INFORMING POLICY
AND MANAGEMENT 544 CASE STUDY 143 RECONCILING THEORY AND PRACTICE IN
DESIGNING A REGIONAL RESERVE SYSTEM 548 SUMMARY 551 QUESTIONS FOR
DISCUSSION 551 CHAPTER 15 PROTECTED AREAS: GOALS, LIMITATIONS, AND
DESIGN 509 HUGH P. POSSINGHAM, KERRIE A. WILSON, SANDY J. ANDELMAN, AND
CARLY H. VYNNE THE CURRENT STATE OF PROTECTED AREAS 510 TYPES OF
PROTECTED AREAS 511 BOX 14.1 CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY 511
STRICT NATURE RESERVES AND WILDERNESS AREAS (CATEGORY I) 512 NATIONAL
PARKS (CATEGORY II) 512 NATURAL MONUMENTS (CATEGORY III) 513
HABITAT/SPECIES MANAGEMENT AREA (CATEGORY IV) 513 PROTECTED
LANDSCAPE/SEASCAPE (CATEGORY V) 513 MANAGED RESOURCE PROTECTED AREA
(CATEGORY VI) 513 BIOSPHERE RESERVES, RAMSAR WETLANDS, AND WORLD
HERITAGE SITES 513 STRICT PROTECTION VERSUS MULTIPLE USE 514 MANAGEMENT
EFFECTIVENESS OF PROTECTED AREAS 515 ESSAY 14.1 CONSTANT VIGILANCE:
MAINTAINING A FISH PRESERVE IN THE ARID SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES 516
THE NEED FOR RESERVE SYSTEMS 517 ESSAY 14.2 GAP ANALYSIS: A SPATIAL TOOL
FOR CONSER- VATION BIOLOGY 518 APPROACHES TO PLANNING RESERVE SYSTEMS
521 SYSTEMATIC CONSERVATION PLANNING 522 THE USE OF SURROGATES FOR
RESERVE SYSTEM PLANNING 524 TOOLS FOR SYSTEMATIC CONSERVATION PLANNING
526 SOX 14.2 FORMULATION OF THE CONSERVATION PLAN- NING PROBLEM FOR
DESIGNING RESERVE SYSTEMS 527 DESIGNING A RESERVE SYSTEM FOR THE CAPE
FLORISTIC REGION OF SOUTH AFRICA 529 CONFRONTING THREATS IN PROTECTED
AREAS 531 CONSERVATION OBJECTIVES AND PERSISTENCE 533 DYNAMICS AND
UNCERTAINTY 533 COMPLEX ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS 534 RESTORATION OF
DAMAGED ECOSYSTEMS AND ENDANGERED POPULATIONS 553 PEGGY L. FIEDLER AND
MARTHA J. GROOM ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION 553 ROLE OF RESTORATION ECOLOGY
IN CONSERVATION 555 STEPS IN DESIGNING AND IMPLEMENTING ECOLOGICAL
RESTORATIONS 556 ESSAY 15.1 THE HARPY EAGLE CONSERVATION PROGRAM:
RESEARCH, CONSERVATION, AND COMMUNITY- BASED EDUCATION TO SAVE THE
NATIONAL BIRD OF PANAMA 559 ESSAY 15.2 ACHIEVING SUCCESS IN MINE
RECLAMATION: AN EXAMPLE FROM SEMIARID LANDS IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA 560
RESTORATION CHALLENGES 562 ANIMAL REINTRODUCTION 565 RESTORATION IN
MARINE ENVIRONMENTS 566 BOX 15.1 GENETIC CONSIDERATIONS IN
REINTRODUCTION 567 ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS THAT DRIVE RESTORATION
PRACTICE 568 REGULATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES 568 INTERNATIONAL
REGULATIONS 570 BOX 15.2 OTHER PERTINENT U.S. LEGISLATION REQUIRING
RESTORATION ACTIVITIES 570 CONCLUDING THOUGHTS 571 CASE STUDY 15.1
RESTORING THE NATION S WETLANDS: WHY, WHERE, AND HOW? 571 CASE STUDY
15.2 TEMPERATE RIVERINE ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION: THE NORTH CREEK
FLOODPLAIN 574 CASE STUDY 15.3 FROM KENYA TO COSTA RICA: SOLUTIONS FOR
RESTORING TROPICAL FORESTS 578 CASE STUDY 15.4 RESTORATION OF AN
ENDANGERED SPECIES: THE BLACK-FOOTED FERRET 581 CASE STUDY 15.5 IN THE
EYE OF THE HURRICANE: EFFORTS TO SAVE THE PUERTO RICAN PARROT 586
SUMMARY 589 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 589 XIV CONTENTS CHAPTER 16
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 591 C. RONALD CARROLL AND MARTHA J. GROOM WHAT
IS SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT? 591 SUSTAINABLE GROWTH IS NOT EQUIVALENT
TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 592 HOW ARE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
PROJECTS STRUCTURED? 593 HOW SUCCESSFUL ARE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
PROJECTS AT CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY? 594 HOW CAN WE BEST PROMOTE
SUSTAINABILITY? 597 CASE STUDY 16.1 ECOTOURISM AND BIODIVERSITY
CONSERVATION 599 CASE STUDY 16.2 THE CHOCO-ANDEAN CORRIDOR: SUSTAINING
LIVELIHOODS AND PROTECTING BIODIVERSITY 605 CASE STUDY 16.3
CERTIFICATION AND THE COLLINS-ALMANOR FOREST 610 CASE STUDY 16.4
COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT AND FOOD SECURITY: LESSONS FROM ZIMBABWE S
COMMUNAL MANAGEMENT PROGRAMME FOR INDIGENOUS RESOURCES (CAMPFIRE) 613
CASE STUDY 16.5 SEA TURTLE CONSERVATION AND THE YOLNGU PEOPLE OF NORTH
EAST ARNHEM LAND, AUSTRALIA 616 SUMMARY 622 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 623
CHAPTER 17 THE INTEGRATION OF CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND POLICY: THE
PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE MEETS THE USE OF KNOWLEDGE 625 DEBORAH M. BROSNAN
AND MARTHA J. GROOM THE NEED FOR TRANSLATIONAL SCIENTISTS AT THE
INTERFACE OF SCIENCE AND POLICY 626 THE INTERFACE BETWEEN THE PURSUIT
AND USE OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE IN CONSERVATION 627 POLICY-RELEVANT
SCIENCE IS DIFFERENT FROM ECOLOGICALLY RELEVANT SCIENCE 627 POLICY
INVOLVES A DIVERSITY OFPROFESSIONS 628 KNOWING OTHERS CONCERNS,
CONSTRAINTS, AND OPPORTUNITIES 628 CONSTRAINTS AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR
CONSERVATIONISTS 628 NECESSARY ROLES AS EXPERTS AND ADVOCATES FOR
SCIENCE 629 CONSERVATION SCIENCE CAN INFLUENCE CONSERVATION POLICY
DECISION 629 SCIENTISTS ARE NOT VALUE FREE 629 POLICYMAKERS AND THE
PUBLIC RESPOND TO SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION DIFFERENTLY 629 WHAT IS
CONSERVATION POLICY? 630 WHO MAKES CONSERVATION POLICY? BREAKING THE
SCIENCE-POLICY BARRIER 631 THE BEST AVAILABLE SCIENCE: QUALITY AND
QUANTITY OF SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION FOR CONSERVATION DECISIONS 633
SCIENTIFIC UNCERTAINTY AND RISKS 634 ESSAY 17.1 CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND
POLICY IN THE REAL WORLD: THE HEADWATERS AGREEMENT 635 DEALING WITH
UNCERTAINTY AND RISK THROUGH ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT 637 ESSAY 17.2
COLLABORATING FOR CONSERVATION: USING DECISION ANALYSIS TO MANGE FACTS
AND VALUES IN CONSERVATION DISPUTES 638 ESSAY 17.3 A POLICY PORTFOLIO
APPROACH TO BIODIVERSITY PROTECTION ON PRIVATE LANDS 641 BEING A
CONSERVATION SCIENTIST IN THE REAL WORLD 643 WORKING WITH THE POLICY
PROCESS 643 CONTRIBUTING TO CONSERVATION POLICY AS A CONSERVATION
SCIENTIST 644 CASE STUDY 17.1 SHOULD THE SOUTHERN RESIDENT POPULATION OF
ORCAS BE LISTED AS THREATENED OR ENDANGERED?: A SCIENTIFIC, LEGAL, OR
POLICY DECISION? 645 CASE STUDY 17.2 ELEPHANT CONSERVATION IN SRI LANKA:
INTEGRATING SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION TO GUIDE POLICY 649 CASE STUDY 17.3
MANAGEMENT OF SPOTTED OWLS: THE INTEGRATION OF SCIENCE, POLICY,
POLITICS, AND LITIGATION 652 SUMMARY 658 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 659
CHAPTER 18 MEETING CONSERVATION CHALLENGES IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
661 MARTHA J. GROOM, C. RONALD CARROLL, AND GARY K. MEFFE COUNTERING THE
IMPACTS ON BIODIVERSITY FROM POVERTY IN MANY COUNTRIES AND
OVER-CONSUMPTION IN A FEW COUNTRIES 661 WORKING WITH UNCERTAINTY IN
ECOLOGICAL, SOCIAL, ECONOMIC, AND POLITICAL SYSTEMS 664 INDICATORS
NEEDED TO DESCRIBE TRENDS AND GUIDE POLICY 664 ESSAY 18.1 CONSERVATION
BIOLOGY IN THE TWENTY- FIRST CENTURY 665 RESEARCH APPROACHES NEEDED TO
INFORM DECISION- MAKING 667 ESSAY 18.2 INDICATORS: IT MATTERS WHAT WE
MEASURE 669 CONTENTS XV HOW DO WE OVERCOME UNCERTAINTIES THAT HINDER
DECISION- MAKING? 671 RESPONDING TO INTENSIFICATION OF THREATS 672 ARE
CONSERVATION EFFORTS SUCCEEDING AND HOW CAN WE IMPROVE? 673 ENHANCING
CONSERVATION UNDER THE U.S. ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT 674 LIMITED
IMPLEMENTATION AND FUNDING OF CONSERVATION PROGRAMS GLOBALLY 675 WILL WE
MEET THE 2010 GOALS OF THE CONVENTION FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY? 676
IMPROVING ASSESSMENT OF CONSERVATION EFFORTS 676 BOX 18.1 PROSPECTS FOR
ACHIEVING THE 2010 GOALS OF THE CONVENTION FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY 677
INFLUENCING PEOPLE S HABITS: REDUCING DESTRUCTIVE IMPACTS 679 MAKING
SUSTAINABLE CHOICES MORE ATTRACTIVE 680 ESSAY 18.3 THE IMPORTANCE OF
PUBLIC EDUCATION FOR BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION 681 ENCOURAGING
CONSERVATION THROUGH INCENTIVES 683 FOSTERING SUSTAINABLE USE 684 ESSAY
18.4 COUNTRYSIDE BIOGEOGRAPHY 685 OUR DECISIONS WILL DETERMINE THE FATE
OF BIODIVERSITY 687 CASE STUDY 18.1 THE NATURE CONSERVANCY S APPROACH TO
MEASURING BIODIVERSITY STATUS AND THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CONSERVATION
STRATEGIES 688 CASE STUDY 18.2 SUSTAINABLE URBANIZATION AND BIODIVERSITY
694 SUMMARY 698 QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION 699 GLOSSARY 701 BIBLIOGRAPHY
711 INDEX 761
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Groom, Martha J. Meffe, Gary K. Carroll, Carl Ronald |
author_facet | Groom, Martha J. Meffe, Gary K. Carroll, Carl Ronald |
author_role | aut aut aut |
author_sort | Groom, Martha J. |
author_variant | m j g mj mjg g k m gk gkm c r c cr crc |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV020824841 |
callnumber-first | Q - Science |
callnumber-label | QH75 |
callnumber-raw | QH75 |
callnumber-search | QH75 |
callnumber-sort | QH 275 |
callnumber-subject | QH - Natural History and Biology |
classification_rvk | RB 10486 WK 9000 |
classification_tum | UMW 120 BIO 146 BIO 130 UMW 101 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)70686894 (DE-599)BVBBV020824841 |
dewey-full | 333.95/16 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 333 - Economics of land and energy |
dewey-raw | 333.95/16 |
dewey-search | 333.95/16 |
dewey-sort | 3333.95 216 |
dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Biologie Wirtschaftswissenschaften Umwelt Geographie |
edition | 3. ed., rev. ed. of Principles of conservation biology |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV020824841 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:20:05Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0878935185 9780878935185 |
language | English |
lccn | 2005016894 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-013830141 |
oclc_num | 70686894 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-703 DE-Eb1 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-703 DE-Eb1 DE-11 |
physical | XIX, 793 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2006 |
publishDateSearch | 2006 |
publishDateSort | 2006 |
publisher | Sinauer |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Groom, Martha J. Verfasser aut Principles of conservation biology Martha J. Groom ; Gary K. Meffe ; C. Ronald Carroll 3. ed., rev. ed. of Principles of conservation biology Gary K. Meffe. 2nd. ed. 1997 Sunderland, Mass. Sinauer 2006 XIX, 793 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Biodiversidade larpcal Conservação biológica larpcal Conservation biology Erhaltung (DE-588)4250664-5 gnd rswk-swf Artenschutz (DE-588)4112598-8 gnd rswk-swf Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 gnd rswk-swf Demökologie (DE-588)4149059-9 gnd rswk-swf Biologie (DE-588)4006851-1 gnd rswk-swf Naturschutz (DE-588)4115348-0 gnd rswk-swf Artenreichtum (DE-588)4131912-6 gnd rswk-swf Biologie (DE-588)4006851-1 s Naturschutz (DE-588)4115348-0 s Demökologie (DE-588)4149059-9 s DE-604 Artenreichtum (DE-588)4131912-6 s Erhaltung (DE-588)4250664-5 s Artenschutz (DE-588)4112598-8 s Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 s Meffe, Gary K. Verfasser aut Carroll, Carl Ronald Verfasser aut Vorangegangen ist Meffe, Gary K. Principles of conservation biology (DE-604)BV012124967 HEBIS Datenaustausch Mainz application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013830141&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Groom, Martha J. Meffe, Gary K. Carroll, Carl Ronald Principles of conservation biology Biodiversidade larpcal Conservação biológica larpcal Conservation biology Erhaltung (DE-588)4250664-5 gnd Artenschutz (DE-588)4112598-8 gnd Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 gnd Demökologie (DE-588)4149059-9 gnd Biologie (DE-588)4006851-1 gnd Naturschutz (DE-588)4115348-0 gnd Artenreichtum (DE-588)4131912-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4250664-5 (DE-588)4112598-8 (DE-588)4601495-0 (DE-588)4149059-9 (DE-588)4006851-1 (DE-588)4115348-0 (DE-588)4131912-6 |
title | Principles of conservation biology |
title_auth | Principles of conservation biology |
title_exact_search | Principles of conservation biology |
title_full | Principles of conservation biology Martha J. Groom ; Gary K. Meffe ; C. Ronald Carroll |
title_fullStr | Principles of conservation biology Martha J. Groom ; Gary K. Meffe ; C. Ronald Carroll |
title_full_unstemmed | Principles of conservation biology Martha J. Groom ; Gary K. Meffe ; C. Ronald Carroll |
title_old | Meffe, Gary K. Principles of conservation biology |
title_short | Principles of conservation biology |
title_sort | principles of conservation biology |
topic | Biodiversidade larpcal Conservação biológica larpcal Conservation biology Erhaltung (DE-588)4250664-5 gnd Artenschutz (DE-588)4112598-8 gnd Biodiversität (DE-588)4601495-0 gnd Demökologie (DE-588)4149059-9 gnd Biologie (DE-588)4006851-1 gnd Naturschutz (DE-588)4115348-0 gnd Artenreichtum (DE-588)4131912-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Biodiversidade Conservação biológica Conservation biology Erhaltung Artenschutz Biodiversität Demökologie Biologie Naturschutz Artenreichtum |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013830141&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT groommarthaj principlesofconservationbiology AT meffegaryk principlesofconservationbiology AT carrollcarlronald principlesofconservationbiology |