Description

Book Synopsis
Written by an author with longstanding experience in the ecology of insects and birds and with a stellar academic record in molecular life sciences, this is a welcome challenge to the widely held beliefs in conventional environmental policies. Werner Kunz convincingly explains why maintaining high biodiversity in Europe depends heavily on the existence of open space and sparse ground vegetation that is neither used for intensive modern agriculture, nor eliminated by reforestation. He questions the commonly propagated opinion that nature conservation is equivalent to species protection - and shows that technical habitat design can rescue endangered species.
A must-have for environmental agencies, policy makers, ecologists and all who are witnessing the current loss of species in Central Europe.


Table of Contents
Preface

Aims of the book
What is nature?
What is nature protection?
Mythos wood
Ideological burden of the idea of nature conservation
The prime objective of National parks in Central Europe is not rescue of endangered species
Threats to biodiversity in Europe differ from threats in other continents.
What makes Neozoa so special?
Regional Red lists of endangered species mainly aim at cultural heritage protection, not species protection.
Dramatic decrease of Central European bird and butterfly species during the last decades.
Conservation biology is not the same as species conservation.
Protection of the environment is not the same as species protection.
Military training grounds, industrial and urban areas as last refuges of endangered species.
Man as antagonist of nature.
Land sparing vs. land sharing (separation of areas for species from areas for agriculture)
Active manipulation of habitats as a solution against species extinction.
Winter feeding of birds and nesting boxes as interference factors of ecological equivalence
Golden Plover, Godwit and Great Bustard: examples of European breeding birds on manipulated habitats.
Who kills more birds: Mediterranean hunters or cats?
The importance of population genetics for species protection

List of species
Glossary

Species Conservation in Managed Habitats: The Myth of a Pristine Nature

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    A Hardback by Werner Kunz

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      View other formats and editions of Species Conservation in Managed Habitats: The Myth of a Pristine Nature by Werner Kunz

      Publisher: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH
      Publication Date: 22/06/2016
      ISBN13: 9783527338450, 978-3527338450
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Written by an author with longstanding experience in the ecology of insects and birds and with a stellar academic record in molecular life sciences, this is a welcome challenge to the widely held beliefs in conventional environmental policies. Werner Kunz convincingly explains why maintaining high biodiversity in Europe depends heavily on the existence of open space and sparse ground vegetation that is neither used for intensive modern agriculture, nor eliminated by reforestation. He questions the commonly propagated opinion that nature conservation is equivalent to species protection - and shows that technical habitat design can rescue endangered species.
      A must-have for environmental agencies, policy makers, ecologists and all who are witnessing the current loss of species in Central Europe.


      Table of Contents
      Preface

      Aims of the book
      What is nature?
      What is nature protection?
      Mythos wood
      Ideological burden of the idea of nature conservation
      The prime objective of National parks in Central Europe is not rescue of endangered species
      Threats to biodiversity in Europe differ from threats in other continents.
      What makes Neozoa so special?
      Regional Red lists of endangered species mainly aim at cultural heritage protection, not species protection.
      Dramatic decrease of Central European bird and butterfly species during the last decades.
      Conservation biology is not the same as species conservation.
      Protection of the environment is not the same as species protection.
      Military training grounds, industrial and urban areas as last refuges of endangered species.
      Man as antagonist of nature.
      Land sparing vs. land sharing (separation of areas for species from areas for agriculture)
      Active manipulation of habitats as a solution against species extinction.
      Winter feeding of birds and nesting boxes as interference factors of ecological equivalence
      Golden Plover, Godwit and Great Bustard: examples of European breeding birds on manipulated habitats.
      Who kills more birds: Mediterranean hunters or cats?
      The importance of population genetics for species protection

      List of species
      Glossary

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