Biodiversity
- PMID:25032475
- Bookshelf ID: NBK219272
- DOI: 10.17226/989
Biodiversity
Excerpt
This important book for scientists and nonscientists alike calls attention to a most urgent global problem: the rapidly accelerating loss of plant and animal species to increasing human population pressure and the demands of economic development. Based on a major conference sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences and the Smithsonian Institution,Biodiversity creates a systematic framework for analyzing the problem and searching for possible solutions.
Copyright © 1988 by the National Academy of Sciences.
Sections
- EDITOR'S FOREWORD
- Chapter 1. The Current State of Biological Diversity
- PART 1. CHALLENGES TO THE PRESERVATION OF BIODIVERSITY
- Chapter 2. The Loss of Diversity Causes and Consequences
- Chapter 3. Tropical Forests and Their Species Going, Going … ?
- Chapter 4. Ecological Diversity in Coastal Zones and Oceans
- Chapter 5. Diversity Crises in the Geological Past
- Chapter 6. Estimating Reductions in the Diversity of Tropical Forest Species
- Chapter 7. Challenges to Biological Diversity in Urban Areas
- PART 2. HUMAN DEPENDANCE ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
- PART 3. DIVERSITY AT RISK: TROPICAL FORESTS
- Chapter 12. Our Diminishing Tropical Forests
- Chapter 13. The Tropical Forest Canopy The Heart of Biotic Diversity
- Chapter 14. Tropical Dry Forests The Most Endangered Major Tropical Ecosystem
- Chapter 15. Deforestation and Indians in Brazilian Amazonia
- Chapter 16. Primate Diversity and the Tropical Forest Case Studies from Brazil and Madagascar and the Importance of the Megadiversity Countries
- PART 4. DIVERSITY AT RISK: THE GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART 5. THE VALUE OF BIODIVERSITY
- Chapter 21. Economics and the Preservation of Biodiversity
- Chapter 22. Commodity, Amenity, and Morality The Limits of Quantification in Valuing Biodiversity
- Chapter 23. The Rise of the Global Exchange Economy and the Loss of Biological Diversity
- Chapter 24. Why Put a Value on Biodiversity?
- Chapter 25. What Mainstream Economists Have to Say About the Value Biodiversity
- PART 6. HOW IS BIODIVERSITY MONITORED AND PROTECTED
- Chapter 26. Monitoring Biological Diversity for Setting Priorities in Conservation
- Chapter 27. Information Management for the Conservation of Biodiversity
- Chapter 28. Identifying and Protecting the Origins of Our Food Plants
- Chapter 29. Conserving and Monitoring Biotic Diversity Some African Examples
- PART 7. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY: HOW CAN THEY HELP
- Chapter 30. Can Technology Aid Species Preservation?
- Chapter 31. Conservation of Biological Diversity in Botanical Gardens
- Chapter 32. Using Science and Technology to Reestablish Species Lost in Nature
- Chapter 33. Intensive Technology in the Care of Ex Situ Populations of Vanishing Species
- Chapter 34. Cryobiology, Embryo Transfer, and Artificial Insemination in Ex Situ Animal Conservation Programs
- PART 8. RESTORATION ECOLOGY: CAN WE RECOVER LOST GROUND?
- Chapter 35. Ecological Restoration Reflections on a Half-Century of Experience at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Arboretum
- Chapter 36. Restoring Diversity in Salt Marshes Can We Do It?
- Chapter 37. Restoration of Degraded Lands in the Amazon Basin
- Chapter 38. Increasing Diversity by Restoring Damaged Ecosystems
- Chapter 39. Restoring Diversity The Search for a Social and Economic Context
- PART 9. ALTERNATIVES TO DESTRUCTION
- PART 10. POLICIES TO PROTECT DIVERSITY
- PART 11. PRESENT PROBLEMS AND FUTURE PROSPECTS
- Chapter 47. Diverse Considerations
- Chapter 48. The Conservation of Biodiversity in Latin America A Perspective
- Chapter 49. A Major New Opportunity to Finance the Preservation of Biodiversity
- Chapter 50. And Today We're Going to Talk about Biodiversity … that's Right, Biodiversity
- Chapter 51. The Effect of Global Climatic Change on Natural Communities
- PART 12. WAYS OF SEEING THE BIOSPHERE
- PART 13. EPILOGUE
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