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Restoring Diversity Donald A. Falk

Restoring Diversity By Donald A. Falk

Restoring Diversity by Donald A. Falk


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Condition - Very Good
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Summary

The reintroduction of rare and endangered species to their natural habitats is becoming an increasingly important tool in ecosystem management. This book seeks to unify concepts in the field of restoration, and fill significant technical and policy gaps.

Restoring Diversity Summary

Restoring Diversity: Strategies for Reintroduction of Endangered Plants by Donald A. Falk

The reintroduction of rare and endangered species to their natural habitats is becoming an increasingly important tool in ecosystem management. This book seeks to unify concepts in the field of restoration, and fill significant technical and policy gaps.

About Donald A. Falk

Edward O. Guerrant, Jr. is Conservation Director at the Berry Botanic Garden in Portland, Oregon. Richard B. Primack is professor of biology at Boston University. He is currently investigating the impact of climate change on the flowering and leafing out times of plants; the spring arrival of birds and the flight times of insects in Massachusetts, Japan, and South Korea; and the potential for ecological mismatches among species caused by climate change. The main geographical focus is Concord, Massachusetts, due to the availability of extensive phenological records kept by Henry David Thoreau and later naturalists. He is using Concord as a living laboratory to determine the effects of climate change species, and land use changes on the population dynamics of native and non-native species. He is also comparing results from Concord with long-term changes at Acadia National Park in Maine. An expanding interest is the variation among species in leafing out times and leaf senescence times, and the physiological control of these processes. An ongoing activity involves producing conservation biology textbooks and working with co-authors to produce textbooks in other languages. In addition, Primack serves as Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Biological Conservation. Reed Noss is the Davis-Shine Endowed Professor at the University of Florida. Noss is focused on systematic conservation planning at regional to continental scales. He has designed and directed such studies in Florida, the Pacific Northwest, California, the Rocky Mountains, and several regions of Canada, and has been an advisor to similar projects throughout North America and parts of Latin America and Europe. This work seeks to identify areas requiring protection from development and to devise management policies, approaches, and techniques that will maintain the biodiversity and ecological values of these areas and entire landscapes over time. Noss has helped to pioneer methods of integrating population viability analysis into reserve selection algorithms. He currently focuses on fire ecology, forest and grassland restoration and management, the Florida Grasshopper Sparrow and its dry prairie habitat, Florida Scrub-Jays, and the Florida Panther. An emerging theme is the responses of species (especially vertebrates) and ecological processes to environmental conditions along urban-wildland gradients. Road ecology (e.g., responses of wildlife to roads and the design of wildlife crossings and barriers to minimize impacts) and movement ecology (e.g., corridors and connectivity) figure prominently in this research theme.

Additional information

GOR009917537
9781559632973
1559632976
Restoring Diversity: Strategies for Reintroduction of Endangered Plants by Donald A. Falk
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Island Press
1996-06-01
400
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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