Description

Book Synopsis

With large-scale, global declines in many species of plants and animals and other disruptions such as climate change and urbanization, we must learn how humans and other species can coexist with one another. In a case study of urban biodiversity, Erik Kiviat and Kristi MacDonald present two decades of data and assessment of the habitats and biota of the New Jersey Meadowlands. Urban Biodiversity: The Natural History of New Jersey Meadowlands documents the mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, butterflies, bees, dragonflies, seed plants, mosses, and lichens of the Meadowlands region and the patterns of their occurrence. The work records the natural history of an urban-industrial region, helping decision makers foster the biodiversity that thrives in cities and giving planners tools to reduce the biological degradation that occurs with urbanization.



Trade Review

“It is a pleasure to read this book that documents the great variety of wonderful plants and animals that now call the Meadowlands home."

-- Judith Weis, Rutgers University

“This book presents a critically important case study of how biodiversity can be studied, monitored, and managed in our increasingly urban world. Kiviat and McDonald bring to vivid life the habitats and creatures that have survived, and some that have even thrived, in the New Jersey Meadowlands, amidst interstates, suburbs, factories, and malls—and all of the associated environmental damage that comes with them.

This will be a critical reference for scientists and land managers interested in the Meadowlands but also an inspiring resource for anyone with an interest in the natural history of urban areas. The sheer scope of the biodiversity identified here is itself a paean to the extraordinary skills of natural historians in the field."

-- Felicia Keesing, Bard College

“Kiviat and MacDonald patiently lead us through the complexities of what is, in ecological terms, the center of the New York City region, the estuarine heart of the region. Just as the Meadowlands are a still too-secret defense against the devastating impact of climate change, so Urban Biodiversity is a vital tool in a battle that unchecked development threatens to win each and every day.”

-- Robert Sullivan, author of The Meadowlands, A Whale Hunt, and My American Revolution,

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

List of Figures

List of Tables

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Environmental Setting of the Meadowlands

Chapter 2: Habitats: Marshes, Ponds, and Channels

Chapter 3: Uplands and Forested Wetlands

Chapter 4: Seed Plants

Chapter 5: Cryptogams

Chapter 6: Mammals

Chapter 7: Birds

Chapter 8: Reptiles and Amphibians

Chapter 9: Fishes of the Meadowlands and Adjacent Waters

Robert E. Schmidt

Chapter 10: Invertebrates

Conclusion

Appendix 1. List of Seed Plants of the Meadowlands

Appendix 2. List of Birds of the Meadowlands

References

Urban Biodiversity

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    £107.10

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    RRP £119.00 – you save £11.90 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Erik Kiviat, Kristi MacDonald, Robert E. Schmidt

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Urban Biodiversity by Erik Kiviat

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/15/2022 12:06:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498599917, 978-1498599917
      ISBN10: 1498599915

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      With large-scale, global declines in many species of plants and animals and other disruptions such as climate change and urbanization, we must learn how humans and other species can coexist with one another. In a case study of urban biodiversity, Erik Kiviat and Kristi MacDonald present two decades of data and assessment of the habitats and biota of the New Jersey Meadowlands. Urban Biodiversity: The Natural History of New Jersey Meadowlands documents the mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, butterflies, bees, dragonflies, seed plants, mosses, and lichens of the Meadowlands region and the patterns of their occurrence. The work records the natural history of an urban-industrial region, helping decision makers foster the biodiversity that thrives in cities and giving planners tools to reduce the biological degradation that occurs with urbanization.



      Trade Review

      “It is a pleasure to read this book that documents the great variety of wonderful plants and animals that now call the Meadowlands home."

      -- Judith Weis, Rutgers University

      “This book presents a critically important case study of how biodiversity can be studied, monitored, and managed in our increasingly urban world. Kiviat and McDonald bring to vivid life the habitats and creatures that have survived, and some that have even thrived, in the New Jersey Meadowlands, amidst interstates, suburbs, factories, and malls—and all of the associated environmental damage that comes with them.

      This will be a critical reference for scientists and land managers interested in the Meadowlands but also an inspiring resource for anyone with an interest in the natural history of urban areas. The sheer scope of the biodiversity identified here is itself a paean to the extraordinary skills of natural historians in the field."

      -- Felicia Keesing, Bard College

      “Kiviat and MacDonald patiently lead us through the complexities of what is, in ecological terms, the center of the New York City region, the estuarine heart of the region. Just as the Meadowlands are a still too-secret defense against the devastating impact of climate change, so Urban Biodiversity is a vital tool in a battle that unchecked development threatens to win each and every day.”

      -- Robert Sullivan, author of The Meadowlands, A Whale Hunt, and My American Revolution,

      Table of Contents

      Table of Contents

      List of Figures

      List of Tables

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      Chapter 1: The Environmental Setting of the Meadowlands

      Chapter 2: Habitats: Marshes, Ponds, and Channels

      Chapter 3: Uplands and Forested Wetlands

      Chapter 4: Seed Plants

      Chapter 5: Cryptogams

      Chapter 6: Mammals

      Chapter 7: Birds

      Chapter 8: Reptiles and Amphibians

      Chapter 9: Fishes of the Meadowlands and Adjacent Waters

      Robert E. Schmidt

      Chapter 10: Invertebrates

      Conclusion

      Appendix 1. List of Seed Plants of the Meadowlands

      Appendix 2. List of Birds of the Meadowlands

      References

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