Integrating Landscape Ecology into Natural Resource Management
£85.99
Part of Cambridge Studies in Landscape Ecology
- Editors:
- Jianguo Liu, Michigan State University
- William W. Taylor, Michigan State University
- Date Published: August 2002
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521784337
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The rapidly increasing global population has dramatically increased the demands for natural resources and has caused significant changes in quantity and quality of natural resources. To achieve sustainable resource management, it is essential to obtain insightful guidance from emerging disciplines such as landscape ecology. This text addresses the links between landscape ecology and natural resource management. These links are discussed in the context of various landscape types, a diverse set of resources and a wide range of management issues. A large number of landscape ecology concepts, principles and methods are introduced. Critical reviews of past management practices and a number of case studies are presented. This text provides many guidelines for managing natural resources from a landscape perspective and offers useful suggestions for landscape ecologists to carry out research relevant to natural resource management. In addition, it will be an ideal supplemental text for graduate and advanced undergraduate ecology courses.
Read more- Written, and rigorously reviewed, by many of the world's leading landscape ecologists and natural resource managers
- Contains numerous case studies and insightful guidelines for landscape ecologists and natural resource managers
Customer reviews
17th Oct 2024 by UName-131207
This is good and knowledgeable product. Trough this can be enhance knowledge about landscape and ecology
Review was not posted due to profanity
×Product details
- Date Published: August 2002
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521784337
- length: 520 pages
- dimensions: 245 x 169 x 30 mm
- weight: 0.812kg
- contains: 4 b/w illus. 16 colour illus. 21 tables
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Foreward Eugene P. Odum
Preface Jianguo Liu and William W. Taylor
Acknowledgements
Part I. Introduction and Concepts:
1. Coupling landscape ecology with natural resource management: paradigm shifts and new approaches Jianguo Liu and William W. Taylor
Part II. Landscape Structure and Multi-scale Management:
2. Integrating landscape structure and scale into natural resource management John A. Wiens, Beatrice Van Horne and Barry R. Noon
3. Focal patch landscape studies for wildlife management: optimising sampling effort across scales Julie M. Brennan, Darren J. Bender, Thomas A. Contreras and Lenore Fahrig
4. Managing for small patch in human-dominated landscapes: cultural factors and corn belt agriculture Robert C. Corry and Joan Iverson Nassauer
5. A landscape approach to managing the biota of streams Charles F. Rabeni and Scott P. Sowa
6. Linking ecological and social scales for natural resource management Kristiina A. Vogt, Morgan Grove, Heidi Asbjornsen, Keely B. Maxwell, Daniel J. Vogt, Ragnhildur Sigurdardóttir, Bruce C. Larson, Leo Schibli and Michael Dove
Part III. Landscape Function and Cross-boundary Management:
7. Assessing the ecological consequences of forest policies in a multi-ownership province in Oregon Thomas A. Spies, Gordon Reeves, Kelly Burnett, William McComb, K. Norman Johnson, Gordon Grant, Janet Ohman, Steve Garman and Pete Bettinger
8. Incorporating the effects of habitat edges into landscape models: effective area models for cross-boundary management Thomas D. Sisk and Nick M. Haddad
9. Aquatic-terrestrial linkages and implications for landscape management Rebecca L. Schneider, Edward L. Mills and Daniel C. Josephson
Part IV. Landscape Change and Adaptive Management:
10. A landscape transition matrix approach for landscape management Virginia H. Dale, Desmond T. Fortes and Tom L. Ashwood
11. Tactical monitoring of landscapes Dean L. Urban
12. Landscape change: patterns, effects and implications for adaptive management of wildlife resources Daniel T. Rutledge, Christopher A. Lepczyk and Jianguo Liu
13. Landscape ecology in highly managed regions: the benefits of collaboration between management and researchers John B. Dunning Jr.
Part V. Landscape Integrity and Integrated Management:
14. Putting multiple use and sustained yield into a landscape context Thomas R. Crow
15. Integrating landscape ecology into fisheries management: a rationale and practical considerations W. W. Taylor, D. B. Hayes, C. P. Ferreri, K. D. Lynch, K. R. Newman and E. F. Roseman
16. Applications of advanced technologies in studying and managing grassland landscape integrity Greg A. Hoch, Brent L. Brock and John M. Briggs
17. An integrated approach to landscape science and management Richard J. Hobbs and Robert Lambeck
Part VI. Syntheses and Perspectives:
18. Bridging the gap between landscape ecology and natural resource management Monica G. Turner, Thomas R. Crow, Jianguo Liu, Dale Rabe, Charles F. Rabeni, Patricia A. Soranno, William W. Taylor, Kristiina A. Vogt and John A. Wiens
19. Landscape ecology of the future: a regional interface of ecology and socioeconomics Eugene P. Odum
20. Epilogue Richard T. T. Forman
Index.-
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