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With few exceptions, insects are perceived in industrialized
countries as undesirable pests. In reality, relatively few insects
interfere with us or our resources. Most have benign or positive
effects on ecosystem services, and many represent useful resources
in non-industrialized countries. Challenging traditional
perceptions of the value of insects, Insects and Sustainability of
Ecosystem Services explores the ways insects affect the ecosystem
services we depend upon. It also fosters an appreciation for the
amazing diversity, adaptive ability, and natural roles of insects.
The book discusses how the ways in which we manage insects will
determine an ecosystem's capacity to continue to supply services.
It reviews aspects of insect physiology, behavior, and ecology that
affect their interactions with other ecosystem components and
ecosystem services, emphasizing critical effects of insects on the
sustainability of ecosystem processes and services. The author
examines the integration of insect ecology with self-regulatory
aspects of ecosystems that control primary production, energy and
nutrient fluxes, and global climate-functions that underlie the
sustainability of ecosystem services. Clearly, we need
environmental policies that meet needs for pest control where
warranted, but do not undermine the important contributions of
insects to sustaining ecosystem processes and services. With
in-depth coverage of the multiple, often compensatory, effects of
insects on various resources or ecosystem services and on the
consequences of control tactics for those resources or services,
Insects and Sustainability of Ecosystem Services recommends changes
in perspectives and policies regarding insects that will contribute
to sustainability of ecosystem services.
Recommended in CHOICE, February 2021 Insects are all around us,
outweighing humanity by 17 times. Many are nuisances; they compete
with us for food and carry some of our most devastating diseases.
Many common pests have been transported worldwide by humans. Yet,
some recent reports suggest dramatic declines in some important
groups, such as pollinators and detritivores. Should we care? Yes,
we should. Without insect pollinators we'd lose 35% of our global
food production; without detritivores, we would be buried in
un-decayed refuse. Insects are also critical sources for
nutritional, medical and industrial products. A world without
insects would seem a very different and unpleasant place. So why do
insects inspire such fear and loathing? This concise, full-color
text challenges many entrenched perceptions about insect effects on
our lives. Beginning with a summary of insect biology and ecology
that affect their interactions with other organisms, it goes on to
describe the various positive and negative ways in which insects
and humans interact. The final chapters describe factors that
affect insect abundance and approaches to managing insects that
balance their impacts. The first textbook to cater directly to
those studying Insect and Society or Insect Ecology modules, this
book will also be fascinating reading for anyone interested in
learning how insects affect human affairs and in applying more
sustainable approaches to "managing" insects. This includes K-12
teachers, undergraduate students, amateur entomologists,
conservation practitioners, environmentalists, as well as natural
resource managers, land use planners and environmental policy
makers.
With few exceptions, insects are perceived in industrialized
countries as undesirable pests. In reality, relatively few insects
interfere with us or our resources. Most have benign or positive
effects on ecosystem services, and many represent useful resources
in non-industrialized countries. Challenging traditional
perceptions of the value of insects, Insects and Sustainability of
Ecosystem Services explores the ways insects affect the ecosystem
services we depend upon. It also fosters an appreciation for the
amazing diversity, adaptive ability, and natural roles of insects.
The book discusses how the ways in which we manage insects will
determine an ecosystem's capacity to continue to supply services.
It reviews aspects of insect physiology, behavior, and ecology that
affect their interactions with other ecosystem components and
ecosystem services, emphasizing critical effects of insects on the
sustainability of ecosystem processes and services. The author
examines the integration of insect ecology with self-regulatory
aspects of ecosystems that control primary production, energy and
nutrient fluxes, and global climate-functions that underlie the
sustainability of ecosystem services. Clearly, we need
environmental policies that meet needs for pest control where
warranted, but do not undermine the important contributions of
insects to sustaining ecosystem processes and services. With
in-depth coverage of the multiple, often compensatory, effects of
insects on various resources or ecosystem services and on the
consequences of control tactics for those resources or services,
Insects and Sustainability of Ecosystem Services recommends changes
in perspectives and policies regarding insects that will contribute
to sustainability of ecosystem services.
Recommended in CHOICE, February 2021 Insects are all around us,
outweighing humanity by 17 times. Many are nuisances; they compete
with us for food and carry some of our most devastating diseases.
Many common pests have been transported worldwide by humans. Yet,
some recent reports suggest dramatic declines in some important
groups, such as pollinators and detritivores. Should we care? Yes,
we should. Without insect pollinators we'd lose 35% of our global
food production; without detritivores, we would be buried in
un-decayed refuse. Insects are also critical sources for
nutritional, medical and industrial products. A world without
insects would seem a very different and unpleasant place. So why do
insects inspire such fear and loathing? This concise, full-color
text challenges many entrenched perceptions about insect effects on
our lives. Beginning with a summary of insect biology and ecology
that affect their interactions with other organisms, it goes on to
describe the various positive and negative ways in which insects
and humans interact. The final chapters describe factors that
affect insect abundance and approaches to managing insects that
balance their impacts. The first textbook to cater directly to
those studying Insect and Society or Insect Ecology modules, this
book will also be fascinating reading for anyone interested in
learning how insects affect human affairs and in applying more
sustainable approaches to "managing" insects. This includes K-12
teachers, undergraduate students, amateur entomologists,
conservation practitioners, environmentalists, as well as natural
resource managers, land use planners and environmental policy
makers.
Insect Ecology: An Ecosystem Approach, Fifth Edition provides the
most updated and comprehensive knowledge of the diversity of insect
responses to environmental changes and their effects on ecosystem
properties and services. Written by an expert in the field, this
book addresses ways in which insect morphology, physiology and
behavior tailor their adaptation to particular environmental
conditions, how those adaptations affect their responses to
environmental changes, and how their responses affect ecosystem
properties and the ecosystem services on which humans depend for
survival. This edition also addresses recent reports of global
declines in insect abundance and how these declines could affect
human interests. Insect Ecology: An Ecosystem Approach, Fifth
Edition is an important resource for researchers, entomologists,
ecologists, pest managers and conservationists who want to
understand insect ecology and to manage insects in ways that
sustain the delivery of ecosystem services. Graduate and advanced
undergraduate students may also find this as a useful resource for
entomology and specifically insect ecology courses.
Insect Ecology: An Ecosystem Approach, Fourth Edition, follows a
hierarchical organization that begins with relatively
easy-to-understand chapters on adaptive responses of insect
populations to various environmental changes, disturbances, and
anthropogenic activities, how insects find food and habitat
resources, and how insects allocate available energy and nutrients.
Chapters build on fundamental information to show how insect
populations respond to changing environmental conditions, including
spatial and temporal distribution of food and habitat. The next
section integrates populations of interacting species within
communities and how these interactions determine structure of
communities over time and space. Other works in insect ecology stop
there, essentially limiting presentation of insect ecology to
evolutionary responses of insects to their environment, including
the activities of other species. The unique aspect of this book is
its four chapters on ecosystem structure and function, and how
herbivores, pollinators, seed predators, and detritivores drive
ecosystem dynamics and contribute to ecosystem stability.
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