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Academic & Professional Books  Conservation & Biodiversity  Conservation Biology

Risk Assessment in Conservation Biology

By: M Burgman, S Ferson and H Akcakaya
328 pages, Illus, figs, tabs
Publisher: Chapman & Hall
Risk Assessment in Conservation Biology
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  • Risk Assessment in Conservation Biology ISBN: 9780412350306 Hardback Jan 1993 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1 week
    £179.99
    #16974
Price: £179.99
About this book Contents Customer reviews Related titles

About this book

A cohesive guide to the available mathematical modelling methods that can be used in population viability analysis. It is therefore extremely valuable to both the practitioner of conservation biology and theoretical population biologists. The models used are stochastic models for demographic risk assessment, particularly those dealing with unstructured population models, area-based models and structured, projection-matrix models.

Contents

Part 1 A framework for risk assessment: probabilistic framework; causes of extinction. Part 2 White rhinoceros on Ndumu Reserve: formulating a birth and death model; parameters and initial conditions; the deterministic prediction; adding demographic stochasticity; introducing a population ceiling; removing constant numbers; environmental variation; risk assessment. Part 3 Useful methods when data are scarce: the exponential model for population growth; density dependence, the logistic equation and magpie geese; other forms of density dependence; model for suburban shrews; more about unstructured models. Part 4 Structured populations: age structure; the Leslie matrix; stage structure; simulating variability; correlation and autocorrelation; migration and dispersal; density dependence. Part 5 Spatial structure and metapopulation dynamics: components of spatial structure; occupancy models; a population dynamic model. Part 6 Conservation genetics: consequences of the loss of genetic diversity; drift, risk and genetic diversity; the effects of inbreeding on population dynamics; a stochastic model for "Banksia Cuneata"; the genetics of metapopulations. Part 7 Extensions of risk assessment: the scarcity of data; species viability analysis; implementation. Appendices: random number generators; algorithms for random numbers; random events; more about sensitivity analysis.

Customer Reviews

By: M Burgman, S Ferson and H Akcakaya
328 pages, Illus, figs, tabs
Publisher: Chapman & Hall
Media reviews
'...a book written by biologists for biologists...the accounts of the procedures are consistently well balanced and clear, with relevant biology.' Biodiversity and Conservation '[This] book will be found invaluable not only by conservation biologists, but by a much wider audience interested in the modeling of real populations... I found the chapters on unstructured and age-structured models particularly enlightening, as they follow a clear path from theory to techniques to case studies... This book is accessible to an unusually broad audience. Required is only 'some familiarity with statistics, linear algebra and programming, or at least a lack of fear of these subjects' (right on!). Yet the biologically well-informed discussion of model selection and estimation, and of the limits of model interpretation, should make this book at least as useful to theoreticians in search of applicability as to empirical workers wishing to learn modeling. Plain language and clear examples prevail, yet the tone is never patronizing nor the message oversimplified.' Trends in Ecology and Evolution '...Well written and well organized. It provides a basic framework for those interested in population modeling, starting from simple models and gradually increasing their complexity; and shows how these models can be used to assess the risk of extinction of animal or plant populations... [It is] an excellent introduction to the use of mathematical models in conservation biology and risk assessment.' Natural Resource Modeling '...the author's style is clear and engaging...this imporatant book will appeal to a far wider audience than its title suggest, and could be profitably read bya wide range of ecologists and conservation biologists.' The Quarterly Review of Biology
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