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The Importance of Species: Perspectives on Expendability and Triage
 
 
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The Importance of Species: Perspectives on Expendability and Triage [Hardcover]

Peter Kareiva (Editor), Simon A. Levin (Editor)


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Book Description

January 1, 2003 0691090041 978-0691090047

A great many species are threatened by the expanding human population. Though the public generally favors environmental protection, conservation does not come without sacrifice and cost. Many decision makers wonder if every species is worth the trouble. Of what consequence would the extinction of, say, spotted owls or snail darters be? Are some species expendable?

Given the reality of limited money for conservation efforts, there is a compelling need for scientists to help conservation practitioners set priorities and identify species most in need of urgent attention. Ecology should be capable of providing guidance that goes beyond the obvious impulse to protect economically valuable species (salmon) or aesthetically appealing ones (snow leopards). Although some recent books have considered the ecosystem services provided by biodiversity as an aggregate property, this is the first to focus on the value of particular species. It provides the scientific approaches and analyses available for asking what we can expect from losing (or gaining) species.

The contributors are outstanding ecologists, theoreticians, and evolutionary biologists who gathered for a symposium honoring Robert T. Paine, the community ecologist who experimentally demonstrated that a single predator species can act as a keystone species whose removal dramatically alters entire ecosystem communities. They build on Paine's work here by exploring whether we can identify species that play key roles in ecosystems before they are lost forever. These are some of our finest ecologists asking some of our hardest questions.

They are, in addition to the editors, S.E.B. Abella, G. C. Chang, D. Doak, A. L. Downing, W. T. Edmondson, A. S. Flecker, M. J. Ford, C.D.G. Harley, E. G. Leigh Jr., S. Lubetkin, S. M. Louda, M. Marvier, P. McElhany, B. A. Menge, W. F. Morris, S. Naeem, S. R. Palumbi, A. G. Power, T. A. Rand, R. B. Root, M. Ruckelshaus, J. Ruesink, D. E. Schindler, T. W. Schoener, D. Simberloff, D. A. Spiller, M. J. Wonham, and J. T. Wootton.


Editorial Reviews

Review

I recommend this book both as practical advice for conservation practitioners, and as a summary of recent theory and experiments for any ecologist interested in the interface between species and their communities and ecosystems. -- Gareth J. Russell Ecology

Review

I have great regard for this book, which addresses a new and highly important question: are some species expendable? It is a book that, given the complexity of the subject, necessarily speaks with many voices. It draws together an outstanding team of scholars and is well written and unusually well organized and synthetic.
(G. David Tilman, Distinguished McKnight University Professor, University of Minnesota )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 440 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (January 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691090041
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691090047
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,669,063 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
First Sentence:
For decades, Bob Paine has exhorted ecologists to conduct field experiments in which species are removed and the community-wide responses to those removals noted. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
total pollination service, species expendability, visitor taxa, average visitation frequency, sewage era, mean visitation frequency, temporal rarity, phytoplankton community biomass, established freshwater fishes, weak interactors, siting algorithm, lizard removal, biodiversity manipulations, spider removal, ecosystem reliability, expendable species, aerial arthropods, unit shoreline, pollination effectiveness, capita interaction strength, visitor species, total community biomass, numerical rarity, reliable visitors, biotic context
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lake Washington, Strawberry Hill, United States, New Zealand, North America, Puget Sound, Saddlebag Island, Boiler Bay, New England, Colin's Cove, Pacific Northwest, Bob Paine, Padilla Bay, Endangered Species Act, Lacey Act, Barro Colorado, National Science Foundation, Nova Scotia, South Island, Washington State, Boundary Bay, British Columbia, Local Species Pool, New York, Willapa Bay
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