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Quantitative Conservation of Vertebrates

Erschienen am 16.01.2009, 1. Auflage 2009
Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781405182287
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 352 S.
Einband: kartoniertes Buch

Beschreibung

InhaltsangabePreface. Acknowledgments. Companion website and CD-ROM. 1. Introduction: The role of science in conservation. Part 1. Basic concepts in scientific investigations for conservation. 2. Using models in conservation biology. 3. Models of population dynamics. 4. Applying population models to conservation. 5. Basics of study design and analysis. Part 2. Conservation studies and monitoring programs. 6. General principles of estimation. 7. Occupancy (presence-absence) analysis. 8. Sample counts for abundance estimation. 9. Distance sampling for estimating density and abundance. 10. Capturemarkrecapture studies for estimating abundance and density. 11. Estimation of survival from radiotelemetry, nesting success studies, and age distributions. 12. Markrecapture for estimating survival, recruitment, abundance, and movement rates. 13. Analysis of habitat. 14. Estimation of species richness and other community parameters. Part 3. Integrating modeling and monitoring for conservation. 15. Elements of conservation decision making. 16. Accounting for uncertainty in conservation decisions. 17. Learning and adaptive management. 18. Case study: decision modeling and adaptive management for declining grassland birds in the southeastern USA. 19. Summary and recommendations. Literature cited. Glossary. Appendix A. Statistical and modeling programs available on the worldwide web. Appendix B. Other internet resources. Appendix C. Modeling and statistical notation. Appendix D. Key to abundance and parameter estimation. Index

Autorenportrait

Dr Michael J. Conroy has nearly 30 years of experience in developing sampling approaches, statistical estimation methods, and modeling for a wide variety of natural resource management problems. He is the author of numerous publications in applied quantitative approaches, and is coauthor on the widely acclaimed volume by Williams et al. (2002). He is currently Adjunct Professor of Wildlife Ecology and Management at the University of Georgia, and Assistant Unit Leader of the Georgia Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. He is literate in Spanish and has taught short courses on quantitative methods in the US, Spain, India, Ecuador, Costa Rica, and Argentina. Dr John P. Carroll has been researching conservation issues relative to the Galliformes for more than 20 years. He is Chair of the World Pheasant Association/BirdLife/IUCN Species Survival Commission Partridge, Quail, and Francolin Specialist Group. He is author of numerous publications on the biology and conservation of Galliformes and the effects of agricultural practices on wildlife. He is currently Professor of Wildlife Ecology and Management in the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia. He has taught short courses on field research methods and techniques in Malaysia, Nepal, and India.

Leseprobe

Leseprobe

Inhalt

Preface. Acknowledgments. Companion website and CD-ROM. 1. Introduction: The role of science in conservation. Part 1. Basic concepts in scientific investigations for conservation. 2. Using models in conservation biology. 3. Models of population dynamics. 4. Applying population models to conservation. 5. Basics of study design and analysis. Part 2. Conservation studies and monitoring programs. 6. General principles of estimation. 7. Occupancy (presence-absence) analysis. 8. Sample counts for abundance estimation. 9. Distance sampling for estimating density and abundance. 10. Capture-mark-recapture studies for estimating abundance and density. 11. Estimation of survival from radiotelemetry, nesting success studies, and age distributions. 12. Mark-recapture for estimating survival, recruitment, abundance, and movement rates. 13. Analysis of habitat. 14. Estimation of species richness and other community parameters. Part 3. Integrating modeling and monitoring for conservation. 15. Elements of conservation decision making. 16. Accounting for uncertainty in conservation decisions. 17. Learning and adaptive management. 18. Case study: decision modeling and adaptive management for declining grassland birds in the southeastern USA. 19. Summary and recommendations. Literature cited. Glossary. Appendix A. Statistical and modeling programs available on the worldwide web. Appendix B. Other internet resources. Appendix C. Modeling and statistical notation. Appendix D. Key to abundance and parameter estimation. Index