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Previously viewed as a relatively small group of errant travellers
rooted in counter-cultural ideas, backpackers have now become a
powerful tourist sector of predominantly young travellers, planning
and preparing their own trips, and looking for direct cultural
contact, novelty and spontaneity all around the globe. The
Backpacker Tourist: A contemporary perspective explores the
increasing number of people traveling around the world as
backpackers and analyses the great diversification of this
demographic and their varied experiences while traveling. Martins
and Costa highlight the conflicting interpretations in the
literature on backpackers and the comparative reflexion between
Western and the growing number of Eastern backpackers, particularly
relating to their travel motivations and the way they experience
destinations. The Backpacker Tourist presents new perspectives to
researchers of Tourism Studies and the Sociology of Travel, but
also to those who looking for a synthetical, contemporary and
critical analysis of contemporary backpacker tourists.
In this follow-up to Islands and Snakes, this book contains 15
chapters describing diversity and conservation of snakes on
islands, with foci on selected island systems not previously
summarized. Attendant topics include biogeography, plasticity and
evolutionary responses to insular conditions, invasive species,
importance and collapse of trophic systems, threats to insular
snake populations, and strategies of conservation to save them.
Chapters include descriptions of snake faunas on larger islands
such as Borneo and New Guinea; reproductive biology of insular
snakes; phenotypic evolution; physiology and growth patterns
related to diet and environment; patterns of endemism; taxonomy of
snake radiations; and history of invasions by snakes on islands.
The final chapter presents a discussion of prospects and overview
of conservation of snakes on islands. Chapters are contributed by
international authorities on respective island-and-snake systems.
The latter include some islands or archipelagos that are young, or
of high importance, or support snake populations that were
previously not well known. The content includes colourful
photographs, informative illustrations, and in some cases synthesis
of new data relevant to the importance of islands for understanding
the ecological underpinnings and genesis of biodiversity. Each
chapter is appropriately referenced with citations to scientific
literature, and where useful, footnotes, tables and graphic
information supporting the narrative of the respective subject
matter. The overall presentation is intended to provide readers
with an enhanced appreciation for islands and the spectacular
snakes that might live there.
Islands and Snakes contains 13 chapters describing ecological
systems with foci on snakes and their ecological roles on islands
around the world. Each chapter is written by one or more authors
who is an authority on that particular system. Summaries of
research on the various islands are written in a narrative manner
that includes science as well as personal insights in easily
understood language. These varied vignettes of science feature
islands around the world, and in all cases, fantastic species of
snakes and their roles in the community of insular organisms in
which they occur. Both challenges and opportunities associated with
island life are discussed, as well as the unique attributes of
snakes and their conservation as unique and important parts of
nature. Chapters include colorful photographs and illustrations,
and collectively they convey information on topics that include
ecology, behavior, biogeography, physiology, adaptation, and
evolutionary biology. An introductory chapter presents a review and
perspective on the historical importance of island ecology and how
snakes have contributed to our understanding of evolution and
adaptation. The other chapters focus on snakes inhabiting islands
associated with Asia, Australia, South America, North America, the
Caribbean, and Europe. The final chapter features the unique "table
top islands" or tepuis of South America as examples of ecological
islands where elements of biota have become isolated by geographic
features of landscape similarly to oceanic islands.
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