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European Whales, Dolphins, and Porpoises: Marine Mammal
Conservation in Practice presents an intimate view of the workings
of international conservation agreements to protect marine mammals,
detailing achievements over the last 25 years, identifying
weaknesses and making recommendations that governments, scientists,
marine stakeholders and the public can take to improve conservation
efforts. The book is written by an experienced marine mammal
scientist and award-winning conservationist, providing a unique
synthesis on their status, distribution and ecology. In addition,
it presents information on various conservation threats, including
fisheries by catch, contaminants, noise disturbance, plastic
ingestion and climate change. This comprehensive resource will
appeal to marine mammal conservationists and researchers, as well
as environmental and wildlife practitioners at all levels.
The field of marine mammal science has made enormous strides in the
last ten years of the 20th century, as well as attracting a large
amount of interest, due no doubt to the public appeal of whales,
dolphins, and seals, which are never out of media attention. The
purpose of this book is to review key topics through chapters on
the major disciplines from invited authorities around the world.
Subjects covered include evolution and genetics, life histories,
ecology, physiology, behaviour, medicine (diseases, parasitology),
survey methodology, and all the main conservation issues
(pollution, fisheries interactions, and sound disturbance). The
book has an ecological and conservation emphasis since these are
subject areas calling for the most attention in the modern world,
but other areas such as evolution, physiology, and medicine are
also given in-depth treatment. The book is written at the level of
the undergraduate or above, although its style should appeal to
anyone with a serious interest in marine mammal science.
Interest in marine mammals has increased dramatically in the last
few decades, as evidenced by the number of books, scientific
papers, and conferences devoted to these animals. Nowadays, a
conference on marine mammals can attract between one and two
thousand scientists from around the world. This upsurge of interest
has resulted in a body of knowledge which, in many cases, has
identified major conservation problems facing particular species.
At the same time, this knowledge and the associated activities of
environmental organisations have served to introduce marine mammals
to a receptive public, to the extent that they are now perceived by
many as the living icons of biodiversity conservation. Much of the
impetus for the current interest in marine mammal conservation
comes from "Save the Whale" campaigns started in the 1960s by
environmental groups around the world, in response to declining
whale populations after over-exploitation by humans. This public
pressure led to an international moratorium on whaling recommended
in 1972 by the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment
in Stockholm, Sweden, and eventually adopted by the International
Whaling Commission ten years later. This moratorium largely holds
sway to this day, and further protective measures have included the
delimitation of extensive areas of the Indian Ocean (1979) and
Southern Ocean (1994) as whale sanctuaries.
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