A major advancement in understanding the factors underlying wildlife–habitat relationships, Applications for Advancing Animal Ecology will be an invaluable resource to natural resource management professionals and practitioners, including state and federal agencies, non-governmental organizations, and environmental consultants.
MacArthur, R. H. 1958. Population ecology of some warblers ... MacArthur, R. H., and R. Levins. 1967. The limiting similarity ... Moore, E. K., G. R. Iason, J. M. Pemberton, J. Bryce, N. Dayton, A. J. Britton, and R. J. Pakeman. 2018.
Published in association with The Wildlife Society.
The book will be most useful for wildlife students, but will also have immense utility for managers seeking to understand and address emerging habitat threats, and for researchers aiming to broaden their perspectives on the variety of ...
Shortlisted for the 2018 TWS Wildlife Publication Awards in the edited book categoryDecomposition and recycling of vertebrate remains have been understudied, hampered largely due to these processes being aesthetically challenging (e.g., ...
This book fills a vacuum in the field and is expected to become a primary reference in Population Genomics world-wide.
Tracking Animal Migration with Stable Isotopes provides a consolidated overview of the current knowledge of stable isotopes in terrestrial migration research questions.
Bird community responses were similarly unaffected by thinning treatments (Stephens et al. 2014), but territory densities of California spotted owls (Strix occidentalis occidentalis) and a few other closedcanopy- associated avian ...
This pioneering book, written by experts in shark biology, examines technologies such as autonomous vehicle tracking, underwater video approaches, molecular genetics techniques, and accelerometry, among many others.
Smith, Jennifer A. Szymanski, Terry Walshe, Nicolas Zuël
Global warming is expected to change fire regimes, likely increasing the severity and extent of wildfires in many ecosystems around the world. What will be the landscape-scale effects of these altered fire regimes?