Wildlife and Landscape Ecology, 1997
Effects of Pattern and Scale

Coordinator: Bissonette John A.

Language: English

158.24 €

Subject to availability at the publisher.

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410 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback
While the research and management of wildlife has traditionally emphasised studies at smaller scales, it is now acknowledged that larger, landscape-level patterns strongly influence demographic processes in wild animal species. This book is the first to provide the conceptual basis for learning how larger scale patterns and processes can influence the biology and management of wildlife species. It is divided into three sections: Underlying Concepts, Landscape Metrics and Applications and Large Scale Management.
Section 1 Underlying Concepts.- 1 Scale-Sensitive Ecological Properties: Historical Context, Current Meaning.- 2 Applications of Fractal Geometry in Wildlife Biology.- 3 Taming Chaos in the Wild: A Model-Free Technique for Wildlife Population Control.- 4 Patch Dynamics: The Transformation of Landscape Structureand Function.- 5 Disturbance and Diversity in a Landscape Context.- 6 Populations in a Landscape Context: Sources, Sinks, and Metapopulations.- 7 Hierarchy Theory: A Guide to System Structure for Wildlife Biologists.- Section 2 Landscape Metrics.- 8 Neutral Models: Useful Tools for Understanding Landscape Patterns.- 9 Understanding Measures of Landscape Pattern.- Section 3 Applications and Large-Scale Management.- 10 The Role of Moose in Landscape Process: Effects of Biogeography, Population Dynamics, and Predation.- 11 A Spatial View of Population Dynamics.- 12 The Importance of Scale in Habitat Conservation for an Endangered Species: The Capercaillie in Central Europe.- 13 Landscape Heterogeneity and Ungulate Dynamics:What Spatial Scales Are Inportant?.- 14 The Influence of Landscape Scale on the Management of Desert Bighorn Sheep.- 15 The Influence of Spatial Scale and Scale-Sensitive Propertiesin Habitat Selection by American Marten.- 16 Adaptive Policy Design: Thinking at Larger Spatial Scales.

Deals with the issues that wildlife biologists and managers confront every day

First book that outlines principles of ecology specifically for wildlife managers

Impressive list of contributors