Fr. 134.00

Insects, Fire and Conservation

English · Hardback

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Description

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A global synthesis of the impacts of wildfires and controlled burning on insects, bringing together much hitherto scattered information to provide a guide to improved conservation management practice. The great variety of responses by insect species and assemblages demonstrates the often subtle balance between fire being a severe threat and a vital management component. Examples from many parts of the world and from diverse biotopes and production systems display the increasingly detailed appreciation of fire impacts on insects in terrestrial and freshwater environments and the ways in which prescribed burning may be tailored to reduce harmful ecological impacts and incorporated into protocols for threatened species and wider insect conservation benefits.

List of contents

1: Fire ecology and insect ecology.- 2: Insect responses to fire.- 3: Sampling and study techniques.- 4: Ecological impacts of fires on insects.- 5: Fires and insect pest management.- 6: Fire in threatened species conservation management.- 7: Fire and insect assemblages.- 8: Fire as a management component.- 9: Prospects.

About the author

Emeritus Professor Tim New is an entomologist with broad interests in insect systematics, ecology and conservation. For long based at La Trobe University, Melbourne, he has travelled widely to collect and study insects in many parts of the world, and his extensive publications on these topics include about 40 books. He is recognised globally as one of the leading advocates for insect conservation.

Summary

A global synthesis of the impacts of wildfires and controlled burning on insects, bringing together much hitherto scattered information to provide a guide to improved conservation management practice. The great variety of responses by insect species and assemblages demonstrates the often subtle balance between fire being a severe threat and a vital management component. Examples from many parts of the world and from diverse biotopes and production systems display the increasingly detailed appreciation of fire impacts on insects in terrestrial and freshwater environments and the ways in which prescribed burning may be tailored to reduce harmful ecological impacts and incorporated into protocols for threatened species and wider insect conservation benefits.

Additional text

“This book aims to survey current knowledge of the intricate relationships between fire and insect populations and how this knowledge can be applied toward insect management and conservation. … The well-written book contains numerous graphs, tables, and diagrams, a complete list of references, and a comprehensive index. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals/practitioners in fire ecology.” (D. L. Richter, Choice, Vol. 52 (9), May, 2015)

Report

"This book aims to survey current knowledge of the intricate relationships between fire and insect populations and how this knowledge can be applied toward insect management and conservation. ... The well-written book contains numerous graphs, tables, and diagrams, a complete list of references, and a comprehensive index. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals/practitioners in fire ecology." (D. L. Richter, Choice, Vol. 52 (9), May, 2015)

Product details

Authors Tim R New, Tim R. New
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 26.05.2014
 
EAN 9783319080956
ISBN 978-3-31-908095-6
No. of pages 208
Dimensions 171 mm x 245 mm x 11 mm
Weight 484 g
Illustrations XII, 208 p. 48 illus.
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Zoology

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