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Setting Conservation Targets for Managed Forest Landscapes: 16 (Conservation Biology, Series Number 16)

Setting Conservation Targets for Managed Forest Landscapes: 16 (Conservation Biology, Series Number 16)

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Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 2/19/2009
EAN 9780521700726, ISBN10: 0521700728

Paperback, 426 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2 cm
Language: English

Forests host a disproportionate share of the world's biodiversity. They are increasingly being seen as a refuge for genetic diversity, native species, natural structures, and ecological processes. Yet, intensive forestry threatens their value for biodiversity. The authors present concepts, approaches and case studies illustrating how biodiversity conservation can be integrated into forest management planning. They address ecological patterns and processes taking place at the scale of landscapes, or forest mosaics. This book is intended for students and researchers in conservation biology and natural resource management, as well as forest land managers and policy makers. It presents examples from many forest regions and a variety of organisms. With contributions from researchers that are familiar with forest management and forest managers working in partnership with researchers, this book provides insight and concrete tools to help shape the future of forest landscapes worldwide.

1. A plea for quantitative targets in biodiversity conservation Marc-André Villard and Bengt Gunnar Jonsson
2. Setting conservation targets
past and present approaches Bengt Gunnar Jonsson and Marc-André Villard
3. Designing studies to develop conservation targets
a review of the challenges Marc-André Villard
4. Testing the efficiency of global-scale conservation planning using data on Andean amphibians Don Church, Claude Gascon, Megan Van Fossen, Grisel Velasquez and Luis A. Solorzano
5. Selecting biodiversity indiators to set conservation targets
species, structures, or processes? Sven G. Nilsson
6. Selecting species to be used as tools in the development of forest conservation targets Jean-Michel Roberge and Per Angelstam
7. Bridging ecosystem and multiple-species approaches for setting conservation targets in managed boreal landscapes Pierre Drapeau, Alain Leduc and Yves Bergeron
8. Thresholds, incidence functions and species-specific cues
responses of woodland birds to landscape structure in south eastern Australia Andrew F. Bennett and James Q. Radford
9. Landscape thresholds in species occurrence as quantitative targets in forest management
generality in space and time? Matthew G. Betts and Marc-André Villard
10. The temporal and spatial challenges of target setting for dynamic habitats
the case of dead wood and saproxylic species in boreal forests Bengt Gunnar Jonsson and Thomas Ranius
11. Opportunities and constraints of using understorey plants to set forest restoration and conservation priorities Olivier Honnay, Bruno Hérault and Beatrijs Bossuyt
12. Setting conservation targets for freshwater ecosystems in forested catchments John S. Richardson and Ross M. Thompson
13. Setting quantitative targets for recovery of threatened species Doug P. Armstrong and Heiko U. Wittmer
14. Allocation of conservation efforts over the landscape
the TRIAD approach David A. Maclean, Robert S. Seymour, Michael K. Montigny and Christian Messier
15. Forest landscape modelling as a tool to develop conservation targets Emin Zeki Baskent
16. Setting targets
trade-offs between ecology and economy Mikko Mönkkonen, Artti Juutinen and Eija Hurme
17. Setting implementing, and monitoring targets as a basis for adaptive management
a Canadian forestry case study Elston Dzus, Brigette Grover, Simon Dyer, Dave Cheyne, Don Pope and Jim Schieck
18. Putting conservation target science to work Marc-André Villard and Bengt Gunnar Jonsson.