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Books in Animal ecology

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Primate Adaptation and Evolution

  • 4th Edition
  • January 20, 2025
  • John Fleagle + 2 more
  • English
  • Hardback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 1 5 8 0 9 - 8
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 1 5 8 1 0 - 4
Primate Adaptation and Evolution, Fourth Edition provides key features of extant families and references to more detailed texts. The book sets the scene and creates space for a thorough updating of exciting developments in primate paleontology and a reconstruction through early hominid species of our own human origins. This updated version covers recent developments in primate paleontology, the latest taxonomy, and includes new visuals, including helpful illustrations and evolutionary trees. It is an ideal text for undergraduate and post-graduate students studying the evolution and functional ecology of primates and early fossil hominids.The book retains its grounding in the extant primate groups as the best way to understand the fossil trail and evolution of these modern forms. However, this coverage is now more streamlined, referring to the many new and excellent books on living primate ecology and adaptation - a field that has burgeoned since this book's first publication.

The Ecology of Large Mammals in Central Yellowstone

  • 1st Edition
  • Volume 3
  • July 1, 2008
  • Robert A. Garrott + 2 more
  • English
  • Hardback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 3 7 4 1 7 4 - 5
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 9 2 1 0 5 - 1
This book is an authoritative work on the ecology of some of America’s most iconic large mammals in a natural environment - and of the interplay between climate, landscape, and animals in the interior of the world’s first and most famous national park.Central Yellowstone includes the range of one of the largest migratory populations of bison in North America as well as a unique elk herd that remains in the park year round. These populations live in a varied landscape with seasonal and often extreme patterns of climate and food abundance. The reintroduction of wolves into the park a decade ago resulted in scientific and public controversy about the effect of large predators on their prey, a debate closely examined in the book. Introductory chapters describe the geography, geology and vegetation of the ecosystem. The elk and bison are then introduced and their population ecology described both pre- and post– wolf introduction, enabling valuable insights into the demographic and behavioral consequences for their ungulate prey. Subsequent chapters describe the wildlife-human interactions and show how scientific research can inform the debate and policy issues surrounding winter recreation in Yellowstone. The book closes with a discussion of how this ecological knowledge can be used to educate the public, both about Yellowstone itself and about science, ecology and the environment in general. Yellowstone National Park exemplifies some of the currently most hotly debated and high-profile ecological, wildlife management, and environmental policy issues and this book will have broad appeal not only to academic ecologists, but also to natural resource students, managers, biologists, policy makers, administrators and the general public.

Tracking Animal Migration with Stable Isotopes

  • 1st Edition
  • Volume 2
  • April 9, 2008
  • Keith A. Hobson + 1 more
  • English
  • Hardback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 3 7 3 8 6 7 - 7
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 5 5 9 2 6 - 1
Tracking Animal Migration with Stable Isotopes provides a consolidated overview of the current knowledge of stable isotopes in terrestrial migration research questions. It offers ecologists and conservation biologists provide a practical handbook for those considering using stable isotopes in their migration research.

Bird Census Techniques

  • 2nd Edition
  • August 10, 2000
  • Colin J. Bibby + 3 more
  • English
  • Hardback
    9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 0 9 5 8 3 1 - 3
In this book there are entire chapters devoted to the most widely used bird counting techniques, and attempts to amalgamate other counting methodologies into major groups were made. Examples of the use of methods are provided wherever possible and the relative value of various approaches for answering specific questions is also addressed.

The Ecology of Social Behavior

  • 1st Edition
  • May 28, 1988
  • Bozzano G Luisa
  • English
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 1 3 7 8 5 - 0
The chapters in this book discuss and summarize the ecological factors affecting and effecting the formation of animal social groups and thereby address one of the central issues confronting researchers and students in sociobiology. The objectives are to review what is known about the impact of ecological factors in the formation and maintenance of social groups. Numerous examples have been drawn from a variety of phyla.

Habitat Selection in Birds

  • 1st Edition
  • July 9, 1987
  • Martin L. Cody
  • English
  • eBook
    9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 9 1 7 3 5 - 1
The present book is divided into several parts. An introductory chapter serves to make the reader aware of the diversity of the subject of habitat selection in birds. Many if the various aspects of habitat selection introduced in the first chapter are developed in subsequent chapters, and thus it serves to some extent as an overview of the subject and as a "lead-in" to subsequent work.