Wildlife-habitat relationships : concepts and applications Michael L. Morrison, Bruce G. Marcot and R. William Mannan
Tipo de material:
Libro
impreso(a)
Idioma: Inglés Detalles de publicación: Madison, Wisconsin The University of Wisconsin Press 1998Edición: Second editionDescripción: xxii, 435 páginas mapas 24 centímetrosISBN: - 0299156400
- 9780299156404
- 591.5 M6
| Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Código de barras | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Libros | Biblioteca San Cristóbal Acervo General (AG) | Acervo General | 591.5 M6 | Disponible | ECO010000499 |
Incluye bibliografía e índice: páginas 411-435
Figures, Tables, and Boxes.. Preface..Format for the second Edition and Acknowledgments.. Part I Concepts of wildlife-habitat relationships.. 1. The study of habitat: a historical and philosophical perspective.. 2. The evolutionary perspective.. 3. The habitat, niche, and population perspectives.. Part II The measurement of wildlife-habitat relationships.. 4. The experimental approach in wildlife science.. 5. Measuring wildlife habitat: what to measure and how to measure it.. 6. Measuring wildlife habitat : when to measure and how to analyze.. 7. Measuring behavior.. 8. Habitats through space and time: heterogeneity and disturbance.. 9. Wildlife in landscapes : populations and patches.. 10. Modeling wildlife-habitat relationships.. Part III The management of wildlife habitat.. 11. Managing habitat for animals in an evolutionary and ecosystem context.. 12. The future: new initiatives and advancing education.. Author Index.. Subject Index
"Anyone working with wildlife must be concerned with its habitat-its identification, measurement, and analysis. Wildlife-Habitat Relationships goes beyond introductory wildlife biology texts and specialized studies of single species to provide a broad but advanced understanding of habitat relationships applicable to all terrestrial species. It also includes coverage of spatial analysis, landscape ecology, animal populations and their quantification, behavioral studies, and resources available to the wildlife professional. Completely updated with the latest research results and literature, this Second Edition provides new sections on: • vegetation ecology and its role in animal distribution and habitat use; • factors driving animal population dynamics; • approaches to study design and experimental methodologies; • ecosystem management and other new initiatives in habitat management; • reviews research and concepts of habitat corridors, fragmentation, and connectivity, for maintaining metapopulations and population viability; • the advancement of wildlife education. This edition also offers greatly expanded coverage of the growing field of landscape ecology, including new chapters on habitat heterogeneity and responses of wildlife and on habitat isolation, dynamics, and monitoring. Behavioral ecology and habitat measurement are covered in greater depth, as well." Inglés