Insect Diversity Conservation
It addresses the threats insect populations face and explores ways insects and their habitats are prioritised, mapped, monitored and conserved.
Michael J. Samways (Author)
9780521789479, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 20 January 2005
356 pages
24.7 x 17.4 x 2.6 cm, 0.72 kg
'Samways is a true expert with a comprehensive, even encyclopaedic, knowledge of the emotional literature,and an impressive publication record in insect conservation. All insect conservation scientists should buy this book,…the wealth of science in such short space is impressive.' Oryx
This groundbreaking book is a contemporary global synthesis of the rapidly developing and important field of insect conservation biology. Insects play important roles in terrestrial ecological processes and in maintaining the world as we know it. They present particular conservation challenges, especially as a quarter face extinction within the next few decades. This textbook addresses the ethical foundation of insect conservation, and asks why should we concern ourselves with conservation of a butterfly, beetle or bug? The success of insects and their diversity, which have survived glaciers, is now facing a more formidable obstacle: the meteoric impact of humans. After addressing threats, from invasive alien plants to climate change, the book explores ways insects and their habitats are prioritised, mapped, monitored and conserved. Landscape and species approaches are considered. This book is for undergraduates, postgraduates, researchers and managers in conservation biology or entomology, and the wider biological and environmental sciences.
PrefacePart I. The Need for Insect Diversity Conservation: 1. Ethical foundation for insect conservation2. The special case of insects in conservation biology3. Insects and the conservation of ecosystem processesPart II. Insects and the Changing World: 4. Degradation and fragmentation of ecosystems5. Responses by insects to the changing land mosaic6. Threats from invasive aliens, biological control, and genetic engineering7. Global climate change and synergistic impactsPart III. Conserving and Managing Insect Diversity: 8. Methods, approaches, and prioritization criteria9. Mapping, inventorying, and monitoring10. Managing for insect diversity11. Restoration of insect diversity12. Conventions and social issues in insect diversity conservationReferencesIndex.
Subject Areas: Conservation of the environment [RNK], Insects [entomology PSVT7]