Home About Contact Blog Subscribe
Backlist Bargains 2010
Advanced Search
Shopping
Catalogues
Wildlife Equipment

 Bat Detectors
 Nest Boxes

Wildlife DVDs
Special Offers
Distribution

 Trade Catalogue

Library Services
Help

 Print an Order Form
 Email Us

Browse by Subject
Browse by Geozone
Contact:

Tel: +44 (0)1803 865913
Fax: +44 (0)1803 865280

email: customer.services
@nhbs.co.uk


2-3 Wills Road, Totnes, Devon TQ9 5XN, UK

Title information

Ecology of Fragmented Landscapes


Sharon K Collinge and Richard T T Forman
340 pages, figs, tabs.
Johns Hopkins University Press
 
Hardcover | 2009 | £36.50 | approx. $60/€43

#178343 | ISBN-13: 9780801891380
Ask airline passengers what they see as they gaze out the window,
and they will describe a fragmented landscape: a patchwork of desert, farmlands, and developed neighborhoods. Once-contiguous forests are now subdivided; tallgrass prairies that extended for thousands of miles are now crisscrossed by highways and byways. Whether the result of naturally occurring environmental changes or the product of seemingly unchecked human development, fractured lands significantly impact the planet's biological diversity.

In this book Sharon K. Collinge defines fragmentation, explains its various causes, and suggests ways that we can put our lands back together. Researchers have been studying the ecological effects of dismantling nature for decades. In this book, Collinge evaluates this body of research, expertly synthesizing all that is known about the ecology of fragmented landscapes. Expanding on the traditional coverage of this topic, Collinge also discusses disease ecology, restoration, conservation, and planning. A worthy successor to Richard T. T. Forman's classic "Land Mosaics".
 
 
Other titles in related subjects:
 
Other titles from the same publisher

  
related organisations include:

British Ecological Society
Ecological Society of Australia
International Society for Ecology
The Ecologist Magazine
If you are involved in a scientific, conservation or environmental organisation and would like to be listed, please see our NHBS-Xchange information page.