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Books > Earth & environment > The environment > Applied ecology
During the first decade of the twenty-first century, the United
States increasingly has relaxed its regulatory posture in the face
of critical challenges to public health and the environment. This
is true for regulation of recycling of end-of-life products,
including autos and electronic components; potentially hazardous
chemicals; and health claims on food labels. Coincidentally, the
European Union has gravitated toward more restrictive regulation in
these very same areas. How might we explain these diverging
regulatory trajectories of the world's two largest market economies
in an era of rising public awareness of dangers to the public and
the planet? The explanation derives not from cultural differences
in willingness to tolerate risk, but rather from distinctive
regulatory tradeoffs--between environment and competitiveness in
the United States and environment, competitiveness, and integration
in the EU.
Molecular approaches have opened new windows on a host of
ecological and evolutionary disciplines, ranging from population
genetics and behavioral ecology to conservation biology and
systematics. Molecular Markers, Natural History and Evolution
summarizes the multi-faceted discoveries about organisms in nature
that have stemmed from analyses of genetic markers provided by
polymorphic proteins and DNAs. The first part of the book
introduces rationales for the use of molecular markers, provides a
history of molecular phylogenetics, and describes a wide variety of
laboratory methods and interpretative tools in the field. The
second and major portion of the book provides a cornucopia of
biological applications for molecular markers, organized along a
scale from micro-evolutionary topics (such as forensics, parentage,
kinship, population structure, and intra-specific phylogeny) to
macro-evolutionary themes (including species relationships and the
deeper phylogenetic structure in the tree of life). Unlike most
prior books in molecular evolution, the focus is on organismal
natural history and evolution, with the macromolecules being the
means rather than the ends of scientific inquiry. Written as an
intellectual stimulus for the advanced undergraduate, graduate
student, or the practicing biologist desiring a wellspring of
research ideas at the interface of molecular and organismal
biology, this book presents material in a manner that is both
technically straightforward, yet rich with concepts and with
empirical examples from the world of nature.
This book was conceived to mark the Silver Jubilee of the British
Butterfly Conservation Society. Interest in the conservation of
butterflies has increased so rapidly that it is difficult to relate
to the situation 25 years ago. Butterflies were on the decline in
Britain, Europe and elsewhere but we lacked data on the extent of
the decline and the underlying reasons, leaving us unable to
implement effective conservation measures. An early recognition of
the plight of British butterflies and moths led to the foundation
of the society by a small group of conservationists in 1968. Today
the society has over 10000 members, owns a number of reserves and
sponsors research, conservation and monitoring activities at the
local and national level. As part of the Silver Jubilee
celebrations an international symposium was held at Keele
University in September 1993 entitled 'Ecology and Conservation of
Butterflies'. This symposium clearly showed how much important work
has been done in recent years and also gave me the impression that
the subject had reached a watershed. This was not because the
decline of butterflies has stopped or even slowed down, far from
it, the threat to our butterflies continues to increase from
habitat destruction and intensification of land use. The watershed
is in our understanding of the relationship between butterflies and
their habitat.
Lakes and costal wetlands play a vital role in global ecosystems.
They provide a habitat for a wide variety of flora and fauna and
help to maintain the life cycle of many species. Lakes and coastal
wetlands all over the world are ideal places for human habitation,
fisheries, industries, shipping and recreation. Habitat
environments of lakes and coastal wetlands are deteriorating due to
their exploitative use and improper management. As rapid
development and population growth continue in coastal areas,
environmental degradation and over-exploitation, the biodiversity
and the productivity of these unique ecosystems could be
threatened. Lakes and coastal wetlands are transitional areas
between dry terrestrial and permanent aquatic ecosystems and are
recognised as highly productive. Their importance in socio-economic
frontiers has been increasingly felt. Over 200 rivers and lakes in
the world are shared by two or more countries. This envisages their
international importance. Various efforts are currently underway to
develop technologies and systems for successful management of lakes
and coastal wetlands both at national and international levels.
However, conflicting interests in the use of their resources have
led to further worsening of the problems facing lakes and coastal
wetlands. Therefore, an earnest attempt has been made in the
present book to find ways for restoration, conservation and
management of lakes and coastal wetlands.
The volume focuses on the ecological functioning of rivers, which
has received less attention than functioning of lakes and
reservoirs. The selected papers cover a large range of topics
relating to aquatic communities, eutrophication, nutrient dynamics
and organic pollution, erosion and sediment transport, and fate of
micropollutants at the basin scale. Integrated approaches developed
in order to study the ecological functioning of fluvial systems
perturbed by human activity are presented. This functioning is
analysed from the point of view of fundamental research, but
insights into system management are not neglected. This book will
be of interest to researchers in the field of aquatic ecology,
river system functioning, and water surface pollution, to
postgraduate students, to the institutions involved in water
resource management, and to the drinking water and waste water
treatment industries. It draws information from many large river
systems in the world.
The Link between Company Environmental & Financial Performance,
first published in 1998, is a detailed investigation into the
effects of environmental performance - resource efficiency,
regulatory compliance, new product and service opportunities - on
corporate financial performance. This report makes essential
reading for company management, investors and other stakeholders.
It demonstrates the quantitative links between environmental and
financial performance for the UK's best and worst environmental
performers across a range of business sectors. It shows that there
is no financial penalty for being environmentally proactive, and
confirms US findings that good environmental performance improves a
company's financial performance.
The Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India, consist of 572 islands with
a land area of 8,249 km2. Their topography is hilly and undulating,
with elevations up to 732 m on the Andaman and up to 568 m on the
Nicobar Islands. They are known for their rich biodiversity and a
very high degree of endemicity in all taxa, especially in plants,
reptiles, fishes and corals. Their habitats include bays,
mangroves, moist deciduous forests and evergreen forests.
Comprising 20 chapters each written by an expert or professional in
his/her particular field this book offers new insights into the
fascinating faunal communities of these islands and provides the
fundamentals for their conservation and environmental management.
Proceedings of a Workshop held at Stevenage, May 25-26, 1982
The Nature and Dynamics of Forest-Savanna Boundaries addresses many
themes and links with a great number of the interest groups
concerned with current ecological and environmental research in the
humid tropics. It should form part of the reading of all concerned
with the fate of tropical forest and savanna regions of the world.
Insect Chemical Ecology provides a comprehensive view of how
natural selection acts upon interacting organisms and how
particular physical and biological properties of chemical compounds
act as constraints upon which natural selection may act. Individual
chapters raise specific questions as to the nature of these
interactions. The first part contains reviews on antagonistic and
mutualistic chemical interactions, the raw materials' of chemical
evolution, the economics of offensive and defensive chemicals, and
neurobiology. The second part discusses particular problems such as
the evolution of resistance, insect pollination, learning,
pheromones, sequestration of semiochemicals, the role of
microorganisms, sex attractants, the evolution of host races and
biotypes, and the role of semiochemicals and the evolution of
sociality of insects. The last chapter discusses the role of
chemical-based pest management programs in an ecological and
evolutionary framework.
During the summer of 1987, a series of discussions I was held at
the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (nASA) in
Laxenburg, Austria, to plan a study of global vegetation change.
The work was aimed at promoting the Interna tional
Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP), sponsored by the
International Council of Scientific Unions (lCSU), of which nASA is
a member. Our study was designed to provide initial guidance in the
choice of approaches, data sets and objectives for constructing
global models of the terrestrial biosphere. We hoped to provide
substantive and concrete assistance in formulating the working
plans of IGBP by involving program planners in the development and
application of models which were assembled from available data sets
and modeling ap proaches. Recent acceptance of the "nASA model" as
the starting point for endeavors of the Global Change and
Terrestrial Ecosystems Core Project of the IGBP suggests we were
successful in that aim. The objective was implemented by our
initiation of a mathematical model of global vegetation, including
agriculture, as defined by the forces which control and change
vegetation. The model was to illustrate the geographical
consequences to vegetation structure and functioning of changing
climate and land use, based on plant responses to environmental
variables. The completed model was also expected to be useful for
examining international environmental policy responses to global
change, as well as for studying the validity of IIASA's
experimental approaches to environmental policy development.
From their largely descriptive beginnings about a half century ago,
studies on the ecology of small mammals have mushroomed in number,
scope, content and complexity. Yet strangely, or perhaps not so
strangely if one considers the extent and complexity of ecological
interactions, the main problems for which the early workers sought
answers still defy complete analysis, and basic hypotheses remain
untested if not even untestable. The same holds true for so many
branches of animal ecology that it seems to be the complexity of
the concepts that frustrates efforts rather than the subject
species. Like all branches of science, small mammal ecology has
been subject to a series of fashionable approaches, one following
another as tech nology penetrates previously impregnable regions.
Doubtless the future development of our science will be punctuated
by wave upon wave of new endeavour in whole fields that are perhaps
even yet unidentified. Answers to the complex questions which
ecologists ask do not come easily. Increasingly though, they arise
in direct proportion to the efforts expended upon their
elucidation. Many studies have achieved such a high level of
elegance, in terms of manpower and apparatus, that there is a
feeling that questions asked when such resources are unavailable
are not worth asking. Nothing could be further from the truth. Many
a complex model has failed fully to explain the phenomenon for
which it was construc ted because of a lack of basic field data on
the species' natural h story."
From the world-famous expert on chimpanzees - the powerfully
compelling sequel to the international bestseller IN THE SHADOW OF
MAN: 'An instant animal classic' Time Equipped with little more
than a notebook, binoculars, and her fascination with wildlife,
Jane braved a realm of unknowns to give the world a remarkable
window into humankind's closest living relatives. On the shores of
Lake Tanganyika, Gombe is a community where the principal residents
are chimpanzees. Through Goodall's eyes we watch as the younger
chimpanzees vie for power, and how the leaders must deal with this
challenge. We learn how one mother successfully rears her children,
whilst another appears to doom her offspring to failure. All life
is here - glorious births and heart-breaking deaths, moments of
brutality, alongside the most tender displays of affection. In
THROUGH A WINDOW, as Jane Goodall reveals the story of this
intimately intertwined community, we are shown the parallels with
human emotions laid bare. Indeed, in the mirror of chimpanzee life,
we see ourselves reflected.
International concern in scientific, industrial, and governmental
communi ties over traces of xenobiotics in foods and in both
abiotic and biotic envi ronments has justified the present
triumvirate of specialized publications in and this field:
comprehensive reviews, rapidly published research papers progress
reports, and archival documentations. These three international
publications are integrated and scheduled to provide the coherency
essential for nonduplicative and current progress in a field as
dynamic and complex as environmental contamination and toxicology.
This series is reserved ex clusively for the diversified literature
on "toxic" chemicals in our food, our feeds, our homes,
recreational and working surroundings, our domestic animals, our
wildlife and ourselves. Tremendous efforts worldwide have been
mobilized to evaluate the nature, presence, magnitude, fate, and
toxi cology of the chemicals loosed upon the earth. Among the
sequelae of this broad new emphasis is an undeniable need for an
articulated set of authoritative publications, where one can find
the latest important world literature produced by these emerging
areas of science together with docu mentation of pertinent
ancillary legislation. Research directors and legislative or
administrative advisers do not have the time to scan the escalating
number of technical publications that may contain articles
important to current responsibility. Rather, these individu als
need the background provided by detailed reviews and the assurance
that the latest information is made available to them, all with
minimal literature searching.
With the rapidly growing importance of sustainability and corporate
responsibility in a globalised world, management schools are
increasingly integrating long-term economic, environmental and
social issues into their teaching and research. Climate change,
poverty, labour standards and human rights are among the many
topics that future decision-makers will need to face in their
careers. Business education needs to reflect this new reality and
provide a broadened understanding of value creation in order to
create economic capital while developing social and preserving
natural capital. Case studies can be important tools for creating
learning processes on different levels - students are forced to
struggle with exactly the kinds of decisions and dilemmas managers
confront every day. In this reflection of reality, the values and
goals of the student are systematically challenged. This can be
especially valuable in the context of sustainability management -
organisations are now continually forced to value the different
aspects of sustainability and their interrelations: How do social
issues impact the economic bottom line? How can an environmentally
sound strategy create a positive impact on employee motivation and
thus have measurable impact on economic performance? What comes
first and why? This third collection of oikos case studies is based
on the winning cases from the 2010 to 2013 annual case competition.
So what makes an excellent case in sustainability management? These
cases have been highly praised because they provide excellent
learning opportunities, tell engaging stories, deal with recent
situations, include quotations from key actors, are
thought-provoking and controversial, require decision-making and
provide clear take-aways. These cases are clustered in three
different sections: "Large Corporations and Corporate
Sustainability Dilemmas", "Managing Stakeholder Relations" and
"Sustainability as a Source of Differentiation Strategies". Case
Studies in Sustainability Management will be an essential purchase
for educators and is likely to be a widely used as a course
textbook at all levels of management education. Online Teaching
Notes to accompany each chapter are available on request with the
purchase of the book.
The Sunday Times Bestseller A new, fully updated narrative edition
of David Attenborough's seminal biography of our world, The Living
Planet. Nowhere on our planet is devoid of life. Plants and animals
thrive or survive within every extreme of climate and habitat that
it offers. Single species, and often whole communities adapt to
make the most of ice cap and tundra, forest and plain, desert,
ocean and volcano. These adaptations can be truly extraordinary:
fish that walk or lay eggs on leaves in mid-air; snakes that fly;
flightless birds that graze like deer; and bears that grow hair on
the soles of their feet. In The Living Planet, David Attenborough's
searching eye, unfailing curiosity and infectious enthusiasm
explain and illuminate the intricate lives of the these colonies,
from the lonely heights of the Himalayas to the wild creatures that
have established themselves in the most recent of environments, the
city. By the end of this book it is difficult to say which is the
more astonishing - the ingenuity with which individual species
contrive a living, or the complexity of their interdependence on
each other and on the habitations provided by our planet. In this
new edition, the author, with the help of zoologist Matthew Cobb,
has added all the most up-to-date discoveries of ecology and
biology, as well as a full-colour 64-page photography section. He
also addresses the urgent issues facing our living planet: climate
change, pollution and mass extinction of species.
One of the main outcomes of the eleven meetings of the Working
Party was the recognition of the importance of interdisciplinary
studies linking regional geochemistry with plant, animal and human
health. The effects of major element deficiencies or excesses on
plant health are well known; this is not the case for trace
elements. In fact, rapid and reliable analytical methods for
determining trace element abundances have only recently become
available, and it is to be expected that important new information
on trace element levels will be forthcoming. This, however, is only
part of the problem because other factors such as element
speciation, uptake and transmission may be more significant than
total concentration. The pathways of elements from crops to animals
are relatively well defined, but the aetiology of diseases
attributable to elemental inadequacies or excesses is generally
quite complex. Nevertheless, there is good evidence for diseases in
livestock in the British Isles induced by deficiencies of Cu, Se
and Co and Mo excess. On a world scale there is also convincing
data on the effect of Na, P and I deficiencies and F excess on
animal health. What is generally lacking, however, is adequate
interaction between geochemists and biochemists, veterinary
scientists and other concerned with animal health. Interpretation
of geochemical data is complex as are connections between elemental
abundances and the health of animals.
The main subject of the Workshop was the new developments about the
cost effective treatment techniques for better removal efftciencies
and dis cussion of policies for pollution control. Although
effluent water quality requirements differ from one country to
another, their application will be an efficient mean for water
pollution control. Specific promotion should be provided for
polluters to meet the effluent water quality requirements. Results
of pilot scale studies demonstrate the applicability of and ad
vantages of sequenching batch reactor technology for pretreatment
of in dustrial wastewaters Fixed film biological reactors offer the
possibility to enrich slow growing specialized microorganisms by
developing biofilms on support materials. Physical chemical
processes are used for the treatment of unusual and difficult
industrial wastewaters and membrane technologies for the con
centration and recovery of raw materials and by-products, in
industries where the conventional treatment technologies are
inappropriate or uneco nomic Physical chemical processes give
higher efficiencies when polymers are applied but the composition
of these long chain chemicals is an im portant consideration; Most
developing countries suffer from severe environmental problems and
shortage of energy and resources. These countries urgently need
simple, inexpensive and integrated environmental protection system,
which combine wastewater treatment with recovery and reuse.
Anaerobic treatment offer many advantages in this respect. Because
recovery of substances from wastes serves twofold purpose of recyle
and pollution control, it must be applied where possible."
The book presents an integration of existing ecosystem theories in
such a comprehensive way as to enable a full ecological and
theoretical pattern to be presented. It shows that ecosystems and
their reactions may be understood, provided that all basic systems
ecology is applied to different aspects of the properties of
ecosystems. Since the publication of the previous two editions of
this book, ongoing research and discussions on an international
scale have greatly clarified and enhanced this pattern. This
progress is presented as Chapter 16 in this new, third edition. It
is shown that the integrated ecosystem theory presented can be
applied to explain various ecological observations and rules.
Audience: Researchers and decision makers whose work involves the
study of ecosystems and ecology. This book is also recommended for
use in graduate courses.
Advances in Agronomy, Volume 176, the latest release in this
leading reference on agronomy, contains a variety of updates and
highlights new advances in the field. Each chapter is written by an
international board of authors.
Advances in Marine Biology, Volume 92 highlights new advances in
the field, with this new volume presenting interesting chapters on
topics including A Review of Coral Reef Rehabilitation Efforts in
the Coral Triangle. Each chapter in this series is written by an
international board of authors.
Applied Hierarchical Modeling in Ecology: Analysis of Distribution,
Abundance and Species Richness in R and BUGS, Volume Two: Dynamic
and Advanced Models provides a synthesis of the state-of-the-art in
hierarchical models for plant and animal distribution, also
focusing on the complex and more advanced models currently
available. The book explains all procedures in the context of
hierarchical models that represent a unified approach to ecological
research, thus taking the reader from design, through data
collection, and into analyses using a very powerful way of
synthesizing data.
Biological diversity is important for ecosystem function and
services, which in turn is essential for human well-being. Under
the Convention on Biological Diversity, international efforts have
been made to achieve a significant reduction in the current rate of
biodiversity loss. The loss continues, however. The Asia-Pacific
region includes both developing countries with high biodiversity
and developed countries with sophisticated data collection and
analyses, but only limited information about the status quo of
biodiversity in this region has been available. Many Asia-Pacific
countries have rapidly grown their economies and social
infrastructures, causing a loss of biodiversity and requiring an
urgent mandate to achieve a balance between development and
conservation in the region. In December 2009, scientists
successfully organized the Asia-Pacific Biodiversity Observation
Network in the region, to establish a network for research and
monitoring of ecosystems and biodiversity and to build a
cooperative framework. The present volume is the first collection
of information on biodiversity in the Asia-Pacific and represents a
quantum step forward in science that optimizes the synergy between
development and biodiversity conservation.
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