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Zusatztext Gillson has provided a valuable, well-written, easy to understand book that demonstrates the practical and theoretical interconnectedness of past, present and future ecology. Informationen zum Autor Lindsey Gillson was educated at the University of Oxford and Imperial College London. She worked in wildlife conservation for several years before returning to Oxford to research the application of palaeoecology in conservation, specialising in the management of African savannas as the subject of her doctoral thesis. She was appointed Trapnell Fellow in African Terrestrial Ecology at the University of Oxford in 2001, and moved to South Africa in 2006 to take up a post at the University of Cape Town. She is Deputy Director of the Plant Conservation Unit, and continues to work on the application of long-term data in the conservation and management of African biomes, and in developing the interface between palaeoecology and conservation biology. Klappentext Discusses how a knowledge of long-term change in ecosystems can inform and influence their conservation, integrating perspectives from archaeology, environmental history and palaeoecology. Zusammenfassung Discusses how a knowledge of long-term change in ecosystems can inform and influence their conservation, integrating perspectives from archaeology, environmental history and palaeoecology. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1: The Conservation Paradox 2: The Elephant Dilemma: A long-term perspective on the management of African savannas 3: Where the Wild Things Were: Re-wilding and the sixth extinction 4: A Burning Question: Can long-term data inform fire management in the 21st century? 5: Past, present and future climate change: can palaeoecology help manage a warming world? 6: Ecosystem Services: Lessons from the past for a sustainable future 7: Nature, Culture, and Conservation in the Age of the Anthropocene 8: Conclusions: Conservation in the Anthropocene ...