Description

Book Synopsis
With emphasis on practical application and quantitative skill development, this book weaves together these disparate elements in a single coherent textbook for senior undergraduate and graduate students. It reviews analytical techniques, explaining the mathematical and statistical principles behind them.

Trade Review

�I recommend the book unreservedly to wildlife managers, park rangers, biological resource managers, and those working in ecotourism.� (Tahrcountry, 10 August 2014)

"This book offers an integrated vision on [rapidly evolving wildlife management] in a comprehensive, experience driven, coherent overview. It is structured in two parts, of which the first one provides an overview of the key ecological concepts on which this field of applied ecology is based...The second section deals with wildlife conservation and management...

Books that target their subject [this] specifically and in-depth are rare. All over the publication general subjects in ecology are most convincingly tailored to wildlife management. It provides applicable information on new (sometimes developing) methods. It illustrates the theory with a wealth of graphs, figures, and examples from the literature. This third edition entails new chapters on climate changes, wildlife response to rapidly changing conditions, habitat selection, and corridors in increasingly fragmented landscapes...

A glossary and an impressive 36-page reference list enhance the documentary and didactical value of this book, which is excellent for senior undergraduates and graduate students in ecology, biology, and environment sciences. However, it is equally valuable for professional wildlife managers, park rangers, and those working in ecotourism. The book has a most useful accompanying website where additional resources, power points and PDFs of all tables can be found.

The whole atmosphere of the book combines academic diligence with wildlife management practice...

A great book of applied ecology in a most useful sector of increasing specialisation and professionalism." (International Journal of Environment and Pollution, 2016, http://www.inderscience.com/editorials/f164312115298710.pdf)



Table of Contents

Preface xi

1 Introduction: goals and decisions 1

1.1 How to use this book 1

1.2 What is wildlife conservation and management? 2

1.3 Goals of management 3

1.4 Hierarchies of decision 6

1.5 Policy goals 7

1.6 Feasible options 7

1.7 Summary 8

Part 1 Wildlife ecology 9

2 Food and nutrition 11


2.1 Introduction 11

2.2 Constituents of food 11

2.3 Variation in food supply 14

2.4 Measurement of food supply 17

2.5 Basal metabolic rate and food requirement 20

2.6 Morphology of herbivore digestion 23

2.7 Food passage rate and food requirement 26

2.8 Body size and diet selection 27

2.9 Indices of body condition 28

2.10 Summary 33

3 Home range and habitat use 35

3.1 Introduction 35

3.2 Estimating home range size and utilization frequency 36

3.3 Estimating habitat availability and use 38

3.4 Selective habitat use 40

3.5 Using resource selection functions to predict population response 42

3.6 Sources of variation in habitat use 42

3.7 Movement within the home range 45

3.8 Movement among home ranges 48

3.9 Summary 51

4 Dispersal, dispersion, and distribution 53

4.1 Introduction 53

4.2 Dispersal 53

4.3 Dispersion 55

4.4 Distribution 56

4.5 Distribution, abundance, and range collapse 61

4.6 Species reintroductions or invasions 62

4.7 Summary 67

5 Population growth and regulation 69

5.1 Introduction 69

5.2 Rate of increase 69

5.3 Geometric or exponential population growth 73

5.4 Stability of populations 73

5.5 The theory of population limitation and regulation 76

5.6 Evidence for regulation 81

5.7 Applications of regulation 85

5.8 Logistic model of population regulation 86

5.9 Stability, cycles, and chaos 88

5.10 Intraspecific competition 90

5.11 Interactions of food, predators, and disease 93

5.12 Summary 93

6 Competition and facilitation between species 95

6.1 Introduction 95

6.2 Theoretical aspects of interspecific competition 96

6.3 Experimental demonstrations of competition 98

6.4 The concept of the niche 103

6.5 The competitive exclusion principle 106

6.6 Resource partitioning and habitat selection 106

6.7 Competition in variable environments 113

6.8 Apparent competition 113

6.9 Facilitation 114

6.10 Applied aspects of competition 119

6.11 Summary 122

7 Predation 123

7.1 Introduction 123

7.2 Predation and management 123

7.3 Definitions 123

7.4 The effect of predators on prey density 124

7.5 The behavior of predators 125

7.6 Numerical response of predators to prey density 129

7.7 The total response 130

7.8 Behavior of the prey 136

7.9 Summary 138

8 Parasites and pathogens 139

8.1 Introduction and definitions 139

8.2 Effects of parasites 139

8.3 The basic parameters of epidemiology 140

8.4 Determinants of spread 143

8.5 Endemic pathogens 144

8.6 Endemic pathogens: synergistic interactions with food and predators 144

8.7 Epizootic diseases 146

8.8 Emerging infectious diseases of wildlife 147

8.9 Parasites and the regulation of host populations 150

8.10 Parasites and host communities 151

8.11 Parasites and conservation 152

8.12 Parasites and control of pests 155

8.13 Summary 156

9 Consumer–resource dynamics 157

9.1 Introduction 157

9.2 Quality and quantity of a resource 157

9.3 Kinds of resource 157

9.4 Consumer–resource dynamics: general theory 158

9.5 Kangaroos and their food plants in semi-arid Australian savannas 161

9.6 Wolf–moose–woody plant dynamics in the boreal forest 167

9.7 Other population cycles 172

9.8 Summary 175

10 The ecology of behavior 177

10.1 Introduction 17710.2 Diet selection 177

10.3 Optimal patch or habitat use 183

10.4 Risk-sensitive habitat use 186

10.5 Social behavior and foraging 187

10.6 Summary 190

11 Climate change and wildlife 191

11.1 Introduction 191

11.2 Evidence for climate change 191

11.3 Wildlife responses to climate change 192

11.4 Mechanisms of response to climate change 196

11.5 Complex ecosystem responses to climate change 199

11.6 Summary 201

Part 2 Wildlife conservation and management 203

12 Counting animals 205

12.1 Introduction 205

12.2 Total counts 205

12.3 Sampled counts: the logic 207

12.4 Sampled counts: methods and arithmetic 212

12.5 Indirect estimates of population size 220

12.6 Indices 227

12.7 Harvest-based population estimates 228

12.8 Summary 231

13 Age and stage structure 233

13.1 Introduction 233

13.2 Demographic rates 233

13.3 Direct estimation of life table parameters 235

13.4 Indirect estimation of life table parameters 236

13.5 Relationships among parameters 238

13.6 Age-specific population models 239

13.7 Elasticity of matrix models 242

13.8 Stage-specific models 243

13.9 Elasticity of the loggerhead turtle model 245

13.10 Short-term changes in structured populations 246

13.11 Environmental stochasticity and age-structured populations 246

13.12 Summary 249

14 Experimental management 251

14.1 Introduction 251

14.2 Differentiating success from failure 251

14.3 Technical judgments can be tested 252

14.4 The nature of the evidence 255

14.5 Experimental and survey design 257

14.6 Some standard analyses 262

14.7 Summary 271

15 Model evaluation and adaptive management 273

15.1 Introduction 273

15.2 Fitting models to data and estimation of parameters 274

15.3 Measuring the likelihood of the observed data 276

15.4 Evaluating the likelihood of alternate models using AIC 278

15.5 Adaptive management 281

15.6 Summary 284

16 Population viability analysis 285

16.1 Introduction 285

16.2 Environmental stochasticity 285

16.3 PVA based on the exponential growth model 286

16.4 PVA based on the diffusion model 287

16.5 PVA based on logistic growth 290

16.6 Demographic stochasticity 291

16.7 Estimating both environmental and demographic stochasticity 294

16.8 PVA based on demographic and environmental stochasticity 296

16.9 Strengths and weaknesses of PVA 296

16.10 Extinction caused by environmental change 298

16.11 Extinction threat due to introduction of exotic predators or competitors 298

16.12 Extinction threat due to unsustainable harvesting 300

16.13 Extinction threat due to habitat loss 302

16.14 Summary 302

17 Conservation in practice 305

17.1 Introduction 305

17.2 How populations go extinct 305

17.3 How to prevent extinction 315

17.4 Rescue and recovery of near-extinctions 316

17.5 Conservation in National Parks and reserves 317

17.6 Community conservation outside National Parks and reserves 322

17.7 International conservation 323

17.8 Summary 324

18 Wildlife harvesting 325

18.1 Introduction 325

18.2 Fixed-quota harvesting strategy 325

18.3 Fixed-proportion harvesting strategy 329

18.4 Harvesting in practice: dynamic variation in quotas or effort 332

18.5 No-harvest reserves 334

18.6 Age- or sex-biased harvesting 335

18.7 Commercial harvesting 340

18.8 Bioeconomics 340

18.9 Game cropping and the discount rate 344

18.10 Summary 346

19 Wildlife control 347

19.1 Introduction 347

19.2 Definitions 347

19.3 Effects of control 348

19.4 Objectives of control 348

19.5 Determining whether control is appropriate 349

19.6 Methods of control 350

19.7 Summary 356

20 Evolution and conservation genetics 357

20.1 Introduction 357

20.2 Maintenance of genetic variation 358

20.3 Natural selection 359

20.4 Natural selection and life history tradeoffs 361

20.5 Natural selection due to hunting 363

20.6 Natural selection due to fishing 365

20.7 Selection due to environmental change 367

20.8 Ecological dynamics due to evolutionary changes 372

20.9 Heterozygosity 374

20.10 Genetic drift and mutation 375

20.11 Inbreeding depression 376

20.12 How much genetic variation is needed? 377

20.13 Effective population size 378

20.14 Effect of sex ratio 379

20.15 How small is too small? 380

20.16 Summary 380

21 Habitat loss and metapopulation dynamics 381

21.1 Introduction 381

21.2 Habitat loss and fragmentation 381

21.3 Ecological effects of habitat loss 384

21.4 Metapopulation dynamics 386

21.5 Territorial metapopulations 389

21.6 Mainland–island metapopulations 390

21.7 Source–sink metapopulations 391

21.8 Metacommunity dynamics of competitors 392

21.9 Metacommunity dynamics of predators and prey 393

21.10 Corridors 394

21.11 Summary 398

22 Ecosystem management and conservation 399

22.1 Introduction 399

22.2 Definitions 400

22.3 Gradients of communities 400

22.4 Niches 400

22.5 Food webs and intertrophic interactions 400

22.6 Community features and management consequences 402

22.7 Multiple states 404

22.8 Regulation of top-down and bottom-up processes 405

22.9 Ecosystem consequences of bottom-up processes 407

22.10 Ecosystem disturbance and heterogeneity 408

22.11 Ecosystem management at multiple scales 410

22.12 Biodiversity 411

22.13 Island biogeography and dynamic processes of diversity 413

22.14 Ecosystem function 415

22.15 Summary 417

Appendices 419

Glossary 423

References 435

Index 489

Wildlife Ecology Conservation and Management

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 30 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by John M. Fryxell, Anthony R. E. Sinclair, Graeme Caughley

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Wildlife Ecology Conservation and Management by John M. Fryxell

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 08/08/2014
      ISBN13: 9781118291061, 978-1118291061
      ISBN10: 1118291069

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      With emphasis on practical application and quantitative skill development, this book weaves together these disparate elements in a single coherent textbook for senior undergraduate and graduate students. It reviews analytical techniques, explaining the mathematical and statistical principles behind them.

      Trade Review

      �I recommend the book unreservedly to wildlife managers, park rangers, biological resource managers, and those working in ecotourism.� (Tahrcountry, 10 August 2014)

      "This book offers an integrated vision on [rapidly evolving wildlife management] in a comprehensive, experience driven, coherent overview. It is structured in two parts, of which the first one provides an overview of the key ecological concepts on which this field of applied ecology is based...The second section deals with wildlife conservation and management...

      Books that target their subject [this] specifically and in-depth are rare. All over the publication general subjects in ecology are most convincingly tailored to wildlife management. It provides applicable information on new (sometimes developing) methods. It illustrates the theory with a wealth of graphs, figures, and examples from the literature. This third edition entails new chapters on climate changes, wildlife response to rapidly changing conditions, habitat selection, and corridors in increasingly fragmented landscapes...

      A glossary and an impressive 36-page reference list enhance the documentary and didactical value of this book, which is excellent for senior undergraduates and graduate students in ecology, biology, and environment sciences. However, it is equally valuable for professional wildlife managers, park rangers, and those working in ecotourism. The book has a most useful accompanying website where additional resources, power points and PDFs of all tables can be found.

      The whole atmosphere of the book combines academic diligence with wildlife management practice...

      A great book of applied ecology in a most useful sector of increasing specialisation and professionalism." (International Journal of Environment and Pollution, 2016, http://www.inderscience.com/editorials/f164312115298710.pdf)



      Table of Contents

      Preface xi

      1 Introduction: goals and decisions 1

      1.1 How to use this book 1

      1.2 What is wildlife conservation and management? 2

      1.3 Goals of management 3

      1.4 Hierarchies of decision 6

      1.5 Policy goals 7

      1.6 Feasible options 7

      1.7 Summary 8

      Part 1 Wildlife ecology 9

      2 Food and nutrition 11


      2.1 Introduction 11

      2.2 Constituents of food 11

      2.3 Variation in food supply 14

      2.4 Measurement of food supply 17

      2.5 Basal metabolic rate and food requirement 20

      2.6 Morphology of herbivore digestion 23

      2.7 Food passage rate and food requirement 26

      2.8 Body size and diet selection 27

      2.9 Indices of body condition 28

      2.10 Summary 33

      3 Home range and habitat use 35

      3.1 Introduction 35

      3.2 Estimating home range size and utilization frequency 36

      3.3 Estimating habitat availability and use 38

      3.4 Selective habitat use 40

      3.5 Using resource selection functions to predict population response 42

      3.6 Sources of variation in habitat use 42

      3.7 Movement within the home range 45

      3.8 Movement among home ranges 48

      3.9 Summary 51

      4 Dispersal, dispersion, and distribution 53

      4.1 Introduction 53

      4.2 Dispersal 53

      4.3 Dispersion 55

      4.4 Distribution 56

      4.5 Distribution, abundance, and range collapse 61

      4.6 Species reintroductions or invasions 62

      4.7 Summary 67

      5 Population growth and regulation 69

      5.1 Introduction 69

      5.2 Rate of increase 69

      5.3 Geometric or exponential population growth 73

      5.4 Stability of populations 73

      5.5 The theory of population limitation and regulation 76

      5.6 Evidence for regulation 81

      5.7 Applications of regulation 85

      5.8 Logistic model of population regulation 86

      5.9 Stability, cycles, and chaos 88

      5.10 Intraspecific competition 90

      5.11 Interactions of food, predators, and disease 93

      5.12 Summary 93

      6 Competition and facilitation between species 95

      6.1 Introduction 95

      6.2 Theoretical aspects of interspecific competition 96

      6.3 Experimental demonstrations of competition 98

      6.4 The concept of the niche 103

      6.5 The competitive exclusion principle 106

      6.6 Resource partitioning and habitat selection 106

      6.7 Competition in variable environments 113

      6.8 Apparent competition 113

      6.9 Facilitation 114

      6.10 Applied aspects of competition 119

      6.11 Summary 122

      7 Predation 123

      7.1 Introduction 123

      7.2 Predation and management 123

      7.3 Definitions 123

      7.4 The effect of predators on prey density 124

      7.5 The behavior of predators 125

      7.6 Numerical response of predators to prey density 129

      7.7 The total response 130

      7.8 Behavior of the prey 136

      7.9 Summary 138

      8 Parasites and pathogens 139

      8.1 Introduction and definitions 139

      8.2 Effects of parasites 139

      8.3 The basic parameters of epidemiology 140

      8.4 Determinants of spread 143

      8.5 Endemic pathogens 144

      8.6 Endemic pathogens: synergistic interactions with food and predators 144

      8.7 Epizootic diseases 146

      8.8 Emerging infectious diseases of wildlife 147

      8.9 Parasites and the regulation of host populations 150

      8.10 Parasites and host communities 151

      8.11 Parasites and conservation 152

      8.12 Parasites and control of pests 155

      8.13 Summary 156

      9 Consumer–resource dynamics 157

      9.1 Introduction 157

      9.2 Quality and quantity of a resource 157

      9.3 Kinds of resource 157

      9.4 Consumer–resource dynamics: general theory 158

      9.5 Kangaroos and their food plants in semi-arid Australian savannas 161

      9.6 Wolf–moose–woody plant dynamics in the boreal forest 167

      9.7 Other population cycles 172

      9.8 Summary 175

      10 The ecology of behavior 177

      10.1 Introduction 17710.2 Diet selection 177

      10.3 Optimal patch or habitat use 183

      10.4 Risk-sensitive habitat use 186

      10.5 Social behavior and foraging 187

      10.6 Summary 190

      11 Climate change and wildlife 191

      11.1 Introduction 191

      11.2 Evidence for climate change 191

      11.3 Wildlife responses to climate change 192

      11.4 Mechanisms of response to climate change 196

      11.5 Complex ecosystem responses to climate change 199

      11.6 Summary 201

      Part 2 Wildlife conservation and management 203

      12 Counting animals 205

      12.1 Introduction 205

      12.2 Total counts 205

      12.3 Sampled counts: the logic 207

      12.4 Sampled counts: methods and arithmetic 212

      12.5 Indirect estimates of population size 220

      12.6 Indices 227

      12.7 Harvest-based population estimates 228

      12.8 Summary 231

      13 Age and stage structure 233

      13.1 Introduction 233

      13.2 Demographic rates 233

      13.3 Direct estimation of life table parameters 235

      13.4 Indirect estimation of life table parameters 236

      13.5 Relationships among parameters 238

      13.6 Age-specific population models 239

      13.7 Elasticity of matrix models 242

      13.8 Stage-specific models 243

      13.9 Elasticity of the loggerhead turtle model 245

      13.10 Short-term changes in structured populations 246

      13.11 Environmental stochasticity and age-structured populations 246

      13.12 Summary 249

      14 Experimental management 251

      14.1 Introduction 251

      14.2 Differentiating success from failure 251

      14.3 Technical judgments can be tested 252

      14.4 The nature of the evidence 255

      14.5 Experimental and survey design 257

      14.6 Some standard analyses 262

      14.7 Summary 271

      15 Model evaluation and adaptive management 273

      15.1 Introduction 273

      15.2 Fitting models to data and estimation of parameters 274

      15.3 Measuring the likelihood of the observed data 276

      15.4 Evaluating the likelihood of alternate models using AIC 278

      15.5 Adaptive management 281

      15.6 Summary 284

      16 Population viability analysis 285

      16.1 Introduction 285

      16.2 Environmental stochasticity 285

      16.3 PVA based on the exponential growth model 286

      16.4 PVA based on the diffusion model 287

      16.5 PVA based on logistic growth 290

      16.6 Demographic stochasticity 291

      16.7 Estimating both environmental and demographic stochasticity 294

      16.8 PVA based on demographic and environmental stochasticity 296

      16.9 Strengths and weaknesses of PVA 296

      16.10 Extinction caused by environmental change 298

      16.11 Extinction threat due to introduction of exotic predators or competitors 298

      16.12 Extinction threat due to unsustainable harvesting 300

      16.13 Extinction threat due to habitat loss 302

      16.14 Summary 302

      17 Conservation in practice 305

      17.1 Introduction 305

      17.2 How populations go extinct 305

      17.3 How to prevent extinction 315

      17.4 Rescue and recovery of near-extinctions 316

      17.5 Conservation in National Parks and reserves 317

      17.6 Community conservation outside National Parks and reserves 322

      17.7 International conservation 323

      17.8 Summary 324

      18 Wildlife harvesting 325

      18.1 Introduction 325

      18.2 Fixed-quota harvesting strategy 325

      18.3 Fixed-proportion harvesting strategy 329

      18.4 Harvesting in practice: dynamic variation in quotas or effort 332

      18.5 No-harvest reserves 334

      18.6 Age- or sex-biased harvesting 335

      18.7 Commercial harvesting 340

      18.8 Bioeconomics 340

      18.9 Game cropping and the discount rate 344

      18.10 Summary 346

      19 Wildlife control 347

      19.1 Introduction 347

      19.2 Definitions 347

      19.3 Effects of control 348

      19.4 Objectives of control 348

      19.5 Determining whether control is appropriate 349

      19.6 Methods of control 350

      19.7 Summary 356

      20 Evolution and conservation genetics 357

      20.1 Introduction 357

      20.2 Maintenance of genetic variation 358

      20.3 Natural selection 359

      20.4 Natural selection and life history tradeoffs 361

      20.5 Natural selection due to hunting 363

      20.6 Natural selection due to fishing 365

      20.7 Selection due to environmental change 367

      20.8 Ecological dynamics due to evolutionary changes 372

      20.9 Heterozygosity 374

      20.10 Genetic drift and mutation 375

      20.11 Inbreeding depression 376

      20.12 How much genetic variation is needed? 377

      20.13 Effective population size 378

      20.14 Effect of sex ratio 379

      20.15 How small is too small? 380

      20.16 Summary 380

      21 Habitat loss and metapopulation dynamics 381

      21.1 Introduction 381

      21.2 Habitat loss and fragmentation 381

      21.3 Ecological effects of habitat loss 384

      21.4 Metapopulation dynamics 386

      21.5 Territorial metapopulations 389

      21.6 Mainland–island metapopulations 390

      21.7 Source–sink metapopulations 391

      21.8 Metacommunity dynamics of competitors 392

      21.9 Metacommunity dynamics of predators and prey 393

      21.10 Corridors 394

      21.11 Summary 398

      22 Ecosystem management and conservation 399

      22.1 Introduction 399

      22.2 Definitions 400

      22.3 Gradients of communities 400

      22.4 Niches 400

      22.5 Food webs and intertrophic interactions 400

      22.6 Community features and management consequences 402

      22.7 Multiple states 404

      22.8 Regulation of top-down and bottom-up processes 405

      22.9 Ecosystem consequences of bottom-up processes 407

      22.10 Ecosystem disturbance and heterogeneity 408

      22.11 Ecosystem management at multiple scales 410

      22.12 Biodiversity 411

      22.13 Island biogeography and dynamic processes of diversity 413

      22.14 Ecosystem function 415

      22.15 Summary 417

      Appendices 419

      Glossary 423

      References 435

      Index 489

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