0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (2)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments

Effective Ecological Monitoring (Hardcover): David Lindenmayer, Gene E. Likens Effective Ecological Monitoring (Hardcover)
David Lindenmayer, Gene E. Likens
R4,216 Discovery Miles 42 160 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Ecologists and managers of natural resources readily acknowledge the importance of long-term studies and monitoring for improved understanding and management of complex environmental systems. Long-term data are crucially important for providing baselines for evaluating environmental change. They are also fundamental for detecting and evaluating changes in ecosystem structure and function, and for evaluating response to disturbances such as climate change or pollution. Countless scientific articles, books, management plans and other documents have been written about the need to conduct long-term studies and monitoring. However, although there have undoubtedly been some highly successful long-term ecological studies and monitoring programs, there is a history of poorly planned and unfocused efforts that are either ineffective or fail completely. In this book, the authors outline some of the key pitfalls and deficiencies in ecological monitoring programs and long-term studies. They then describe some the features of monitoring programs and long-term studies that are essential to make them viable, using case studies such as those of Rothamsted (UK) and the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (USA). Based upon their collective experience spanning 70 years in establishing long-term studies and natural resource monitoring programs, the authors propose a new approach, which they call Adaptive Monitoring, to resolve some of these problems underlying poorly planned and unfocused monitoring programs.

Effective Ecological Monitoring (Paperback): David Lindenmayer, Gene E. Likens Effective Ecological Monitoring (Paperback)
David Lindenmayer, Gene E. Likens
R1,232 Discovery Miles 12 320 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Ecologists and managers of natural resources readily acknowledge the importance of long-term studies and monitoring for improved understanding and management of complex environmental systems. Long-term data are crucially important for providing baselines for evaluating environmental change. They are also fundamental for detecting and evaluating changes in ecosystem structure and function, and for evaluating response to disturbances such as climate change or pollution. Countless scientific articles, books, management plans and other documents have been written about the need to conduct long-term studies and monitoring. However, although there have undoubtedly been some highly successful long-term ecological studies and monitoring programs, there is a history of poorly planned and unfocused efforts that are either ineffective or fail completely. In this book, the authors outline some of the key pitfalls and deficiencies in ecological monitoring programs and long-term studies. They then describe some the features of monitoring programs and long-term studies that are essential to make them viable, using case studies such as those of Rothamsted (UK) and the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study (USA). Based upon their collective experience spanning 70 years in establishing long-term studies and natural resource monitoring programs, the authors propose a new approach, which they call Adaptive Monitoring, to resolve some of these problems underlying poorly planned and unfocused monitoring programs.

Land Use Intensification - Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity, and Ecological Processes (Paperback, New): David Lindenmayer,... Land Use Intensification - Effects on Agriculture, Biodiversity, and Ecological Processes (Paperback, New)
David Lindenmayer, Saul Cunningham, Andrew Young
R1,437 R1,297 Discovery Miles 12 970 Save R140 (10%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

By 2050, the global population of humans is predicted to increase by 35%. Approximately 70% more food may be required, and this will take place against a backdrop of 15-40% land degradation. This book examines land use intensification and biodiversity conservation and its impacts. It also discusses whether suites of species, and/or functional groups of taxa will either benefit or suffer from land use intensification and whether it is possible to make robust predictions of biotic responses across landscapes, regions, and continents.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Ethical Consumerism and Comparative…
Ebtihaj Ahmad Al-A'ali, Meryem Masmoudi Hardcover R4,331 Discovery Miles 43 310
Consumer Casualties - Exploring the…
J. Wan Hardcover R3,231 Discovery Miles 32 310
The Experience Society - Consumer…
Steven Miles Hardcover R1,996 Discovery Miles 19 960
Better Choices - Ensuring South Africa's…
Greg Mills, Mcebisi Jonas, … Paperback R350 R317 Discovery Miles 3 170
Buy Your First Home - South Africa's…
Zamantungwa Khumalo Paperback R290 R259 Discovery Miles 2 590
Horse Trading in the Age of Cars - Men…
Steven M Gelber Hardcover R1,509 Discovery Miles 15 090
Children and Consumer Culture in…
Lisa Jacobson Hardcover R1,798 Discovery Miles 17 980
Leisure and Consumption - Common…
R Stebbins Hardcover R1,393 Discovery Miles 13 930
The New Economics of Sustainable…
G. Seyfang Hardcover R2,651 Discovery Miles 26 510
Strategies for the Digital Customer…
Wided Batat Hardcover R3,412 Discovery Miles 34 120

 

Partners