>
Wildlife Population Growth Rates

Wildlife Population Growth Rates

  • £3.59
  • Save £59



Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 8/7/2003
EAN 9780521533478, ISBN10: 0521533473

Paperback, 370 pages, 23.1 x 15.2 x 2 cm
Language: English

What determines where a species lives? And what determines its abundance? This book takes a fresh approach to some of the classic questions in ecology. Despite great progress in the twentieth century much more remains to be done before we can provide full answers to these questions. The methods described and deployed in this book point the way forward. The core message of the book is that the key insights come from understanding what determines population growth rate, and that application of this approach will make ecology a more predictive science. Topics covered include population regulation, density-dependence, the ecological niche, resource and interference competition, habitat fragmentation and the ecological effects of environmental stress, together with applications to conservation biology, wildlife management, human demography and ecotoxicology. After a substantial introduction by the editors the book brings together contributions from leading scientists from Australia, New Zealand, North America, Europe and the U.K.

Introduction R. M. Sibly, J. Hone and T. H. Clutton-Brock
1. Population growth rate and its determinants
an overview R. M. Sibly and J. Hone
2. Demographic, mechanistic and density-dependent determinants of population growth rate
a case study in an avian predator J. Hone and R. Sibly
3. Estimating density dependence in time series of age-structured populations R. Lande, S. Engen and B.-E. Sæther
4. Pattern of variation in avian population growth B.-E. Sæther and S. Engen
5. Determinants of human population growth W. Lutz and R. Quaing
6. Two complementary paradigms for analyzing population dynamics C. J. Krebs
7. Complex numerical responses to top-down and bottom-up processes in vertebrate populations A. R. E. Sinclair and C. J. Krebs
8. The numerical response
rate of increase and food limitation in herbivores and predators P. Bayliss and D. Choquenot
9. Populations in variable environments
the effect of variability in a species' primary resource S. A. Davis, R. P. Pech and E. A. Catchpole
10. Trophic interactions and population growth rates
describing patterns and identifying mechanisms P. J. Hudson, A. P. Dobson, I. M. Cattadori, D. Newborn, D. T. Haydon, D. J. Shaw, T. Benton and B. Grenfell
11. Behavioural models of population growth rates
implications for conservation and prediction W. J. Sutherland and K. Norris
12. Comparative ungulate dynamics
the devil is in the detail T. H. Cluttton-Brock and T. Coulson
13. Population growth rate as a basis for ecological risk assessment of toxic chemicals V. Forbes and P. Calow;14. Population growth rates
issues and an application H. C. J. Godfray and M. Rees
Index.