Ecology, Conservation and Evolution

Ecology, Conservation and Natural Resource Management Evolution

www.cambridge.org/lifesciences 2006 Contents Message from the Press Editor, Dominic Lewis:

Ecology, Conservation and We are delighted to present the new Ecology, Conservation and Evolution Natural Resource Management 5 catalogue from Cambridge University Press, announcing our new titles in conservation biology, natural resource management, biological and evolutionary Evolution 13 anthropology, entomology and much more. Our range covers undergraduate and Other titles of interest 22 graduate textbooks and academic monographs from some of the best writers in science today.

Highlights include: Monitoring Ecological Change (2nd Edition) by Ian Spellerberg (p.6) Evolution of the Insects by David Grimaldi and Michael S Engel (p.13) Spatial Analysis: A Guide for Ecologists ‘…a hugely impressive achievement.’ TREE by Marie-Josée Fortin and Mark Dale (p.6)

Biological Diversity and Function in Soils Evolutionary Game Theory, Natural Selection edited by Richard Bardgett, David Hopkins and Darwinian Dynamics and Michael Usher (p.2) by Tom Vincent and Joel Brown (p.18) (Series: Ecological Reviews) Simulating Human Origins and Evolution Biotic Interactions in the Tropics: Their Role by Ken Wessen (p.19) in the Maintenance of Species Diversity (Series: Cambridge Studies in Biological edited by David Burslem, Michelle Pinard and Evolutionary Anthropology) and Sue Hartley (p.2) (Series: Ecological Reviews)

Look inside to find out more about these and other exciting new titles.

The Press Editor for this prestigious part of our publishing programme is Dominic Lewis (Cambridge, UK). We are very keen to continue to expand on the Cambridge University Press tradition of excellence in the areas of ecology, conservation, and evolution and look forward to hearing from you if you have ideas for new books or wish to comment on our present publications. We hope to meet you at major meetings and on campus visits throughout 2005 and 2006.

All the very best,

Dominic Lewis [email protected] +44 1223 326206

Cambridge University Press is the printing and publishing house of the University of Cambridge, and is the oldest press in the world. It is a charitable enterprise required by University Statute to devote itself to printing and publishing in the furtherance of the acquisition, advancement, conservation, and dissemination of knowledge in all subjects; to the advancement of education, religion, learning, and research; and to the advancement of literature and good letters.

Useful contacts www.cambridge.org/lifesciences The book industry is For further information about this catalogue: changing its numbering This catalogue contains a selection of our most recent publishing in Hannah Proctor system. When quoting this area. Please visit our website for a full and searchable listing of ([email protected]) the ISBN, please use all our titles in print and also an extensive range of news, features All other enquiries, phone +44 (0) 1223 312393 either the 13 or 10 digit and resources. Our online ordering service is secure and easy to use. ISBN (shown in brackets) or email [email protected] when ordering during journals.cambridge.org 2005 and 2006. Prices and Payment Many of our journal titles are now available online. Each journal Prices and publication dates are correct at the time of entry in this catalogue indicates where the price includes, or will include, access to the electronic going to press but are subject to alteration without notice. version of the journal. Full text is available FREE to all individuals within the registered domain address of full rate subscribers. In addition, the service provides all users with FREE access to tables of contents and abstracts, and a FREE email alerting service. 1

Ecology, Biodiversity, Ecology of Populations present mass extinctions. The and Conservation Esa Ranta assumption that competition is of University of Helsinki overriding importance is central to Series Editors: Professor Michael equilibrium ecology, and much space is Usher Veijo Kaitala University of Jyväskylä, Finland University of Stirling, and formerly Scottish devoted to its discussion. As Natural Heritage and Per Lundberg communities of some taxa appear to be Dr Denis Saunders Lunds Universitet, Sweden shaped more by competition than Formerly CSIRO Division of Sustainable The theme of the book is the others, an attempt is made to find an Ecosystems, Canberra distribution and abundance of explanation for these differences. Dr Andrew Dobson organisms in space and time. The core Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation Princeton University of the book lies in how local births and 2005 228 x 152 mm 272pp Dr Robert Peet deaths are tied to emigration and 53 line diagrams University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 978 0 521 85434 4 (0 521 85434 2) immigration processes, and how Hardback c. £70.00 Paul Adam environmental variability at different 978 0 521 67455 3 (0 521 67455 7) University of New South Wales scales affects population dynamics with Paperback c. £35.00 H. J. B. Birks Publication November 2005 University of Bergen stochastic processes and spatial structure and shows how elementary analytical tools can be used to Invertebrate Ecology of understand population fluctuations, Conservation and synchrony, processes underlying range Phytoplankton Agricultural Colin Reynolds distributions and community structure and species coexistence. The book also Ecosystems Communities of microscopic plant life, shows how spatial population dynamics T. R. New or phytoplankton, dominate the Earth’s models can be used to understand life La Trobe University, Victoria aquatic ecosystems. This important new history evolution and aspects of Invertebrate Conservation and book by Colin Reynolds covers the evolutionary game theory. Although Agricultural Ecosystems explores the adaptations, physiology and population primarily based on analytical and diverse interests of invertebrate dynamics of phytoplankton communities numerical analyses of spatial population conservation and agricultural in lakes and rivers and oceans. It processes, data from several study production. It is both an introduction to provides basic information on systems are also dealt with. invertebrate conservation biology for composition, morphology and Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation agriculturists and an introduction to physiology of the main phyletic groups 2005 228 x 152 mm 388pp crop protection for conservation represented in marine and freshwater 147 line diagrams 2 tables biologists, demonstrating how these systems and in addition reviews recent 978 0 521 85435 1 (0 521 85435 0) two disparate fields may draw on each advances in community ecology, Hardback c. £75.00 other for greater collective benefit. It developing an appreciation of assembly 978 0 521 67033 3 (0 521 67033 0) Paperback c. £38.00 draws on recent literature to show how processes, co-existence and Publication November 2005 invertebrate conservation in highly competition, disturbance and diversity. altered landscapes may be promoted Although focussed on one group of and enhanced. The book deals with organisms, the book develops many Nonequilibrium problems of, and approaches to, concepts relevant to ecology in the Ecology invertebrate conservation in highly broadest sense, and as such will appeal Klaus Rohde managed agricultural ecosystems, and to graduate students and researchers in University of New England, Australia how biodiversity may be promoted ecology, limnology and oceanography. Ecology has long been shaped by ideas without compromising agricultural Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation that stress the sharing of resources and production. It draws attention to the 2006 246 x 189 mm 564pp the competition for those resources, and 132 line diagrams 5 half-tones 37 tables importance of invertebrates in 978 0 521 84413 0 (0 521 84413 4) by the assumption that populations and agricultural systems and their role in Hardback c. £90.00 communities typically exist under ecosystem functions. 978 0 521 60519 9 (0 521 60519 9) equilibrium conditions in habitats Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation Paperback c. £45.00 saturated with both individuals and 2005 228 x 152 mm 368pp Publication January 2006 species. However, much evidence 68 line diagrams 54 tables contradicts these assumptions and it is 978 0 521 82503 0 (0 521 82503 2) likely that nonequilibrium is much more Hardback £70.00 978 0 521 53201 3 (0 521 53201 9) widespread than might be expected. Paperback £35.00 This book is unique in focusing on nonequilibrium aspects of ecology, providing evidence for nonequilibrium and equilibrium in populations (and metapopulations), in extant communities and in ecological systems over evolutionary time, including nonequilibrium due to recent and

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Risks and Decisions for Biological Diversity Biotic Interactions in Conservation and and Function in Soils the Tropics Environmental Edited by Richard Bardgett Their Role in the Maintenance of Management University of Lancaster Species Diversity Michael Usher Edited by David Burslem Mark Burgman University of Stirling University of Aberdeen University of Melbourne and David Hopkins Michelle Pinard This book outlines how to conduct a University of Stirling University of Aberdeen complete environmental risk Soil is a species-rich habitat, but many and Sue Hartley assessment. The first part documents questions about the ecological University of Sussex the psychology and philosophy of risk significance of the soil’s biological This volume synthesises the current perception and assessment, introducing diversity, and in particular how it affects state of knowledge of tropical a taxonomy of uncertainty and the ecosystem function, have never been ecosystems chapters providing reviews importance of context. It provides a asked. The linkages between above- or case studies drawn from research critical examination of the use and ground ecology, which is rich in conducted in both Old and New World abuse of expert judgement and goes on ecological theory, and below-ground tropics and including biotic interactions to outline approaches to hazard ecology, where investigation has been among taxa at all trophic levels. In most identification and subjective ranking restricted by methodological difficulties, chapters plants (typically trees) are the that account for uncertainty and have not been made. Recent technical starting point, but, taken together, the context. The second part of the book developments, including isotopic and chapters consider interactions of plants describes technical tools that can assist molecular methods as well as new with other plants, with micro-organisms risk assessments to be transparent and experimental and modelling approaches, and with animals, and the inter- internally consistent. These include have led to a renaissance in soil relationships of human-induced interval arithmetic, ecotoxicological biodiversity research. The key areas disturbance with interactions among methods, logic trees and Monte Carlo are reflected in this exciting new species. An underlying theme of the simulation. These methods have an volume, which brings together many volume is the attempt to understand the established place in risk assessments in leading contributors to the new maintenance of high diversity in tropical many disciplines and their strengths and understanding of the role and regions, which remains one of the most weaknesses are explored. The last part importance of soil biota. significant unexplained observations in of the book outlines some new ecological studies. approaches, including p-bounds and Contributors: Diana H. Wall, Alastair Contributors: John J. Ewel, Ankila information-gap theory, and describes H. Fitter, Eldor A. Paul, Iain M. Young, Hiremath, Lourens Poorter, Jim Dalling, how quantitative and subjective Karl Ritz, A. G. O’Donnell, S. R. Colvan, David Burslem, Maria Uriarte, Stephen P. assessments can be used to make E. Malosso, S. Supaphol, D. W. Hopkins, Hubbell, Robert John, Roger Condit, transparent decisions. E. G. Gregorich, Paul B. Rainey, Michael Charles D. Canham, Drew Purves, Steve Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation Brockhurst, Angus Buckling, David J. 2005 228 x 152 mm 500pp Hodgson, Rees Kassen, Richard D. Pacala, Greg Gilbert, Ian Alexander, Lee 111 line diagrams 1 half-tone 50 tables Bardgett, Gregor W. Yeates, Jonathon M. Su See, Edward Allen Herre, Damond 978 0 521 83534 3 (0 521 83534 8) Anderson, David A. Wardle, Peter C. Kyllo, Scott Mangan, Rebecca Husband, Hardback £70.00 Ruiter, Anje-Margriet Neutel, John Luis C. Mejia, Ahn-Heum Eom, S. A. Van 978 0 521 54301 9 (0 521 54301 0) Bael, Z. Maynard, N. Robbins, J. Bischoff, Paperback £35.00 Moore, D. B. Standing, J. I. Rangel Castro, J. I. Prosser, A. Meharg, K. A. E. Arnold, E. Rojas, R. A. Cordero, Killham, Joshua P. Schimel, Jennifer C. Woodward, Jaboury Ghazoul, Helene NEW SERIES Bennett, Noah Fierer, Clare H. Robinson, Muller-Landau, Denise Hardesty, Joe E. Janie Pryce Miller, Lewis Deacon, Fragoso, Bob Marquis, Fergus Massey, J. R. Leake, D. Johnson, D. P. Donnelly, Malcolm Press, Sue Hartley, Deborah Ecological Reviews L. Boddy, D. J. Read, Heikki Setälä, Matty Letourneau, Lee Dyer, Doyle McKey, Series Editors: Professor Nigel Webb P. Berg, T. Hefin Jones, Wim H. Van Der Laurence Gaume, Carine Brouat, Bruno NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Dorset, Putten, Allan J. McCarthy, Neil D. Gray, Di Gusto, Laurence Pascal, Gabriel UK Thomas P. Curtis, Ian M. Head, Ken Debout, Ambroise Dalecky, Martin Heil, Professor T. Hefin Jones Paulo S. Oliveira, Kleber Del-Claro, Cardiff University, UK Giller, David Bignell, Patrick La Velle, Mike Swift, Edmundo Barrios, Fatima William F. Laurence, Saara DeWalt, Ariel Professor James H. Brown Lugo, Thomas Brandeis, R. Sukumar, University of New Mexico, USA Moreira, Meine Van Noordwijk, Isabelle H. S. Suresh, H. S. Dattaraja, A. Srinidhi, Professor Richard Hobbs Barios, Nancy Karanja, Jeroen Huising, Murdoch University, Australia J. A. Harris, P. Grogan, R. J. Hobbs, C. Nath, Michelle Pinard Ecological Reviews Professor Louise Vet Lijbert Brussaard, Ron. G. M. De Goede, The Netherlands Institute of Ecology Lia Hemerik, Bart C. Verschoor, Michael 2005 247 x 174 mm 608pp 78 line diagrams 7 half-tones B. Usher 978 0 521 84707 0 (0 521 84707 9) Ecological Reviews Hardback £85.00 2005 247 x 174 mm 448pp 978 0 521 60985 2 (0 521 60985 2) 78 line diagrams 9 half-tones Paperback £43.00 978 0 521 84709 4 (0 521 84709 5) Publication September 2005 Hardback c. £75.00 978 0 521 60987 6 (0 521 60987 9) Paperback c. £38.00 Publication September 2005 3

Macroecology: Issues and Transport Processes in Concepts and Perspectives in Nature Consequences Landscape Ecology Propagation of Ecological Influences Through 43rd Symposium of the British Edited by John A. Wiens Environmental Space Ecological Society and Michael R. Moss Edited by Tim M. Blackburn University of Guelph, Ontario William A. Reiners University of Wyoming Through a series of personal essays, this and Kenneth L. Driese and Kevin J. Gaston book addresses a wide array of past, University of Sheffield University of Wyoming current, and future issues in landscape Brings together for the first time major The movement of organisms, abiotic ecology. The essays have been materials and energy across researchers in the field to present contributed by leading landscape overviews of current thinking about the environments is a key element in the ecologists from North America, Europe, study of ecology. Reiners and Driese form and determinants of and Australia, and provide an overview macroecological patterns. Each section introduce a conceptual framework for of the rich tapestry of viewpoints and the study and understanding of presents different viewpoints on the perspectives that make landscape answer to a key question in propagation of ecological influences in ecology at once a well-defined and yet nature, and provide examples of models macroecology, such as why are most also a frustratingly diverse discipline. species rare, why are most species that describe and predict propagation. The contributions span a range of topics Cambridge Studies in Landscape Ecology small-bodied, and why are most species and approaches, addressing theory as restricted in their distribution? 2004 247 x 174 mm 314pp well as practice, science as well as 77 line diagrams 27 half-tones 6 tables Contributors: Tim M. Blackburn, application, conservation as well as 978 0 521 80049 5 (0 521 80049 8) Kevin J. Gaston, Alfried P.Vogler, Ignacio utilization, and aquatic as well as Hardback £70.00 Ribera, Sean Nee, Stephen P. Hubbell, 978 0 521 80484 4 (0 521 80484 1) terrestrial systems. Paperback £35.00 Jeffrey Lake, Pablo A. Marquet, Juan Contributors: L. Fahrig, J. Solon, E. Keymer, Hernán Cofré, Michael L. R. V. O’Neill, A. W. King, H. H. Shugart, Rosenzweig, Robert J. Whittaker, J. A. Ludwig, R. MacNally, R. A. Ims, Ecological Networks Katherine J. Willis, Richard Field, Andrew J. Verboom, W. Wamelink, D. J. and Greenways Clarke, J. Alistair Crame, Andy Purvis, Mladenoff, R. Haines-Young, K. Concept, Design, C. David L. Orme, Konrad Dolphin, Brian McGarigal, S. A. Cushman, T. R. Implementation A. Maurer, John D. Reynolds, Bernt-Erik Lovelend, A. L. Gallant, J. E. Vogelmann, Edited by Rob H. G. Jongman Sæther, Steinar Engen, F. Ian Woodward, M. F.Thomas, D. A. Davidson, I. A. Alterra Green World Research C. K. Kelly, Andrew R. Watkinson, Simpson, H. R. Delcourt, P.A. Delcourt, and Gloria Pungetti University of Reading Jennifer A. Gill, Robert P. Freckleton, R. P. Neilson, F. Klijn, K. Freemark, R. K. Butlin, J. R. Bridle, M. Kawata, J. T. Crow, J. Rolstad, R. J. Hobbs, A thorough overview of recent Kozowski, M. Konarzewski, C. Margules, K. A. With, H. Décamps, developments in this emerging area, A. T. Gawelczyk, Brian J. Enquist, David B. Pedroli, J. Iverson Nassauer, N. combining theoretical concepts of Jablonski, Kaustuv Roy, James W. Pollock-Ellwand, J. Ot’ahel’, J. Ahern, landscape ecology with the practice of Valentine, Robert P. Freckleton, M. R. Jongman, I. S. Zonneveld, Z. Naveh, landscape planning and management to Pagel, Paul H. Harvey, James H. Brown, M. R. Moss, J. A. Wiens illustrate how sustainable land use James F. Gillooly, Geoffrey B. West, Van Cambridge Studies in Landscape Ecology policies can be implemented. M. Savage 2005 247 x 174 mm 104pp Cambridge Studies in Landscape Ecology Symposia of the British Ecological Society 31 line diagrams 5 tables 2004 247 x 174 mm 368pp 2003 247 x 174 mm 464pp 978 0 521 83053 9 (0 521 83053 2) 101 line diagrams 9 half-tones 34 tables 134 line diagrams 2 half-tones Hardback £75.00 978 0 521 82776 8 (0 521 82776 0) 978 0 521 83996 9 (0 521 83996 3) 978 0 521 53754 4 (0 521 53754 1) Hardback £80.00 Hardback £65.00 Paperback £38.00 978 0 521 53502 1 (0 521 53502 6) 978 0 521 54932 5 (0 521 54932 9) Paperback £30.00 Paperback £36.95 Conservation Biology Cambridge Studies in Series Editors: Professor Guy Landscape Ecology Cowlishaw Series Editors: Professor John Wiens Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London The Nature Conservancy, Washington D.C. Dr Lenore Fahrig Rosie Woodroffe University of California, Davis Carleton University Dr Bruce Milne John Gittleman University of Virginia University of New Mexico Dr Peter Dennis Michael Samways University of Stellenbosch, South Africa The Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen Dr Richard Hobbs Murdoch University, Western Australia Dr Joan Nassauer University of Michigan

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Management of Large Herbivore questions of great practical importance Marine Ecosystems Ecology, Ecosystem and urgency for conservation. Using case studies from many different taxa Edited by Ian Boyd Dynamics and and regions of the world, the volume University of St Andrews, Scotland Conservation and Sarah Wanless evaluates how useful phylogeny is in NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, UK Edited by Kjell Danell understanding the processes that have Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences C. J. Camphuysen generated today’s diversity and the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research Roger Bergström processes that now threaten it. The The Forrestry Research Institute of Sweden The sustainable exploitation of the novelty of many of the applications, the Patrick Duncan increasing ease with which phylogenies marine environment depends upon our Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique capacity to develop systems of (CNRS), Paris can be generated, the urgency with management with predictable and John Pastor which conservation decisions have to be outcomes. This book investigates the University of Minnesota, Duluth made and the need to make decisions that are as good as possible together theory that the population and This book addresses the scientifically make this volume a timely and behavioural dynamics of predators at based action plans to manage both the important synthesis which will be of the upper end of marine food chains large herbivore populations and their great value to researchers, practitioners can be used to assist with management. habitats worldwide. It covers the and policy-makers alike. Since these species integrate the processes by which large herbivores not dynamics of marine ecosystems across a only affect their environment (e.g. Contributors: Andy Purvis, John L. wide range of spatial and temporal grazing) but are affected by it (e.g. Gittleman, Thomas M. Brooks, Elizabeth scales, they offer new sources of nutrient cycling) and the management A. Sinclair, Marcos Pérez-Losada, Keith information that can be formally used in strategies required. Also discussed are A. Crandall, Paul-Michael Agapow, John setting management objectives. This new modeling techniques, which help C. Avise, Ana S. L. Rodrigues, Thomas M. book examines the current advances in assess integration processes in a Brooks, Kevin J. Gaston, Arne Ø. Mooers, the understanding of the ecology of landscape context, as well as assessing Stephen B. Heard, E. Chrostowski, Kate marine predators and will investigate the consequences of new developments E. Jones, Wes Sechrest, John L. how information from these species in the processes of conservation. This Gittleman, Thomas B. Smith, Sassan could be used in management. book will be essential reading for all Saatchi, Catherine Graham, Hans Contributors: I. L. Boyd, S. Wanless, involved in the management of both Slabbekoorn, Greg Spicer, Jon C. Lovett, C. J. Campheysen, Andrew W. Trites, Villy large herbivores and natural resources. Rob Marchant, James Taplin, Wolfgang Küper, Guy F. Midgley, Gail Reeves, C. Christensen, Daniel Pauly, P. N. Trathan, Contributors: Hervé Fritz, Anne Klak, Craig Moritz, Conrad Hoskin, E. J. Murphy, J. Forcada, J. P. Croxall JP, Loison, Jon Moen, Reidar Andersen, Catherine H. Graham, Andrew Hugall, K. Reid, S. E. Thorpe, B. E. Scott, Andrew W. Illius, Alison J. Hester, Adnan Moussalli, J. D. Pilgrim, Gustavo J. Sharples, O. Ross, M. Frederiksen, Margareta Bergman, Glenn R. Iason, A. B. da Fonseca, Marcel Cardillo, F. Daunt, W. D. Bowen, C. A. Beck, David Ward, Robin Gill, Frans W. M. Richard Grenyer, Ben Collen, Peter M. S. J. Iverson, D. Austin, J. I. McMillan, Vera, Elisabeth S. Bakker, Han Olff, Bennett, Ian P. F. Owens, Daniel Nussey, Sara J. Iverson, Ian Stirling, Shelley L. C. Richard Bodmer, N. Thompson Hobbs, Stephen T. Garnett, Gabriel M. Crowley, Lang, W. A. Montevecchi, S. Garthe, John P. Pastor, Yosef Cohen, Douglas A. José M. Cardoso da Silva, Anthony B. G. K. Davoren, Iain J. Staniland, Anthony Frank, Peter J. Weisberg, Michael B. Rylands, José S. Silva Júnior, Claude R. Martin, Paul M. Thompson, G. Peters, Coughenour, Harald Bugmann, Otso Gascon, Julie Lockwood, Sean Nee, S. Benvenuti, J. Sharples, D. Grémillet, Suominen, Kjell Danell, John D. C. Timothy G. Barraclough, T. Jonathan M. R. Enstipp, E. M. Humphreys, Linnell, Erling J. Solberg, Ian J. Gordon, Davies K. C. Hamer, Robert W. Furness, Simon P. Roger Bergström, Patrick Duncan Conservation Biology, 10 R. Greenstreet, Sue Lewis, Richard A. Conservation Biology, 11 2005 228 x 152 mm 400pp Phillips, Tom N. Sherratt, Janos 2006 228 x 152 mm 407pp 32 line diagrams 1 half-tone Hennicke, K. Reid, E. J. Murphy, 74 line diagrams 2 half-tones 17 tables 2 colour plates 30 tables Christian Asseburg, John Harwood, 978 0 521 83005 8 (0 521 83005 2) 978 0 521 82502 3 (0 521 82502 4) Hardback c. £70.00 Hardback £70.00 Jason Matthiopoulos, Sophie Smout, 978 0 521 53687 5 (0 521 53687 1) Nicholas Wolf, Jason Melbourne, Marc 978 0 521 53200 6 (0 521 53200 0) Paperback c. £35.00 Paperback £35.00 Publication March 2006 Mangel, J. G. Ollason, J. M. Yearsley, Publication September 2005 K. Liu, N. Ren, Tore Schweder, Andrew J. Constable, Sascha K. Hooker, Mark L. Phylogeny and Tasker People and Wildlife, Conservation Biology Conservation Conflict or Co- 2006 228 x 152 mm 346pp Edited by Andrew Purvis existence? 81 line diagrams 4 half-tones 9 tables Imperial College of Science, Technology and 978 0 521 84773 5 (0 521 84773 7) Medicine, London Edited by Rosie Woodroffe Hardback c. £65.00 John L. Gittleman University of California, Davis 978 0 521 61256 2 (0 521 61256 X) University of Virginia Simon Thirgood Paperback c. £38.00 and Thomas Brooks MacAuley Institute, Scotland Publication March 2006 Conservation International, Washington DC and Alan Rabinowitz Wildlife Conservation Society, New York Phylogeny is a potentially powerful tool for conserving biodiversity. This book Human-wildlife conflict is a major issue explores how it can be used to tackle in conservation. As people encroach into natural habitats, and as conservation Ecology, Conservation and Natural Resource Management 5 efforts restore wildlife to areas where • Authoritative - written and edited by a they may have been absent for Ecology, team of experienced field ecologists generations, contact between people Conservation Contents: Preface; Acknowledgements; and wild animals is growing. Some Part I. Planning M. Fasham, G. Tucker, A. species, even the beautiful and and Natural Bennett, T. Rich, M. Shewry, P. Shaw and endangered, can have serious impacts M. Wade: 1. Introduction to Part 1; 2. on human lives and livelihoods. Tigers Resource Planning a programme; 3. Evaluation kill people, elephants destroy crops and methods; Part II. Habitats G. Tucker, M. African wild dogs devastate sheep herds Fasham, T. Rich, M. Rebane, G. Peterken, Management F. McMeechan and R. Birnie: left unattended. Historically, people 4. Introduction to Part 2; 5. Habitat have responded to these threats by Handbook of requirements and issues; 6. Methods for killing wildlife wherever possible, and surveying habitats; 7. Surveying and this has led to the endangerment of Biodiversity Methods monitoring management or environmental many species that are difficult Survey, Evaluation and impacts; 8. Habitat conservation evaluation neighbours. The urgent need to conserve Monitoring criteria; Part III. Species: 9. Introduction to such species, however, demands Edited by David Hill Part 3; 10. General principles and methods coexistence of people and endangered RPS Group plc, UK for species M. Fasham and S. Mustoe; wildlife. This book presents a variety of Matthew Fasham 11. Fungi R. Watling, M. Fasham and D. solutions to human-wildlife conflicts, RPS Group plc, UK Dobson; 12. Lichens S. Davey, M. Fasham and D. Dobson; 13. Bryophytes G. Rothero, including novel and traditional farming Graham Tucker Ecological Solutions, UK D. Dobson and M. Fasham; 14. Aquatic practices, offsetting the costs of wildlife macrophytes and algae N. Stewart and M. damage through hunting and tourism, Michael Shewry Scottish Natural Heritage Wade; 15. Vascular plants T. Rich, V. Hack and the development of local and and F. McMeechan; 16. Dragonflies and and Philip Shaw national policies. Scottish Natural Heritage damselflies C. Plant, R. Sands, M. Fasham; 17. Butterflies C. Plant, R. Sands and M. Contributors: John G. Robinson, Biodiversity is recognised to be of global Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood, Alan Fasham; 18. Macromoths C. Plant, R. Sands importance, yet species and habitats and M. Fasham; 19. Other terrestrial Rabinowitz, Howard Quigley, Stephen continue to be under increasing invertebrates P. Dennis, C. Plant, R. Sands Herrero, Urs Breitenmoser, Christof pressure from human-induced and M. Fasham; 20. Aquatic invertebrates Angst, Jean-Marc Landry, Christine influences. Environmental concerns are P. Kerrison, T. Norman, M. Fasham; Breitenmoser-Wursten, John D. C. Linnell high on the political agenda, driving 21. Fish N. Giles, R. Sands and M. Fasham; & Jean-Marc Weber, F.V. Osborn, C. M. increased legislation to protect the 22. Amphibians D. Latham, E. Jones, M. Hill, Adrian Treves, Lisa Naughton- natural environment. The starting point Fasham; 23. Reptiles D. Latham, E. Jones, Treves, Philip J. Nyhus, Steven A. M. Fasham; 24. Birds S. Mustoe, D. Hill, D. for much of this legislation is the Frost, G. Tucker; 25. Bats R. Stebbings, H. Osofsky, Paul Ferraro, Francine Madden, requirement for a comprehensive Hank Fischer, M. J. Walpole, C. R. Mansfield and M. Fasham; 26. Other biodiversity audit. For those needing to mammals A. Bennett, P. Ratcliffe, E. Jones, Thouless, N. Leader-Williams, J. M. undertake such audits, this Handbook H. Mansfield and R. Sands; Hutton, Erlend Birkeland Nilsen, Unni provides standard procedures which will Acknowledgements; Glossary, Appendices; Stobet Lande, Ivar Herfindal, John enable practitioners to better monitor Recommended sources of further Odden, Ketil Skogen, Reidar Andersen, the condition of the biodiversity information; References; Index. David Cope, Juliet Vickery, Marcus resource, resulting in improved data 2005 246 x 189 mm 622pp Rowcliffe, Steve Redpath, Richard P. upon which to base future policy 28 line diagrams 58 tables Reading, Lauren McCain, Tim W. Clark, 978 0 521 82368 5 (0 521 82368 4) decisions and actions. Organised in Hardback £80.00 Brian J. Miller, Timothy J. Knickerbocker, three parts, the Handbook first John Waithaka, Dale Lewis, John addresses planning, covering method Jackson, Laurence G. Frank, Rosie selection, experimental design, sampling Woodroffe, Mordecai O. Ogada, Dale strategy, and data analysis and Miquelle, Igor Nikolaev, John Goodrich, evaluation. The second part describes Boris Litvinov, Evgeny Smirnov, Evgeny survey, evaluation and monitoring Suvorov, Jon E. Swenson, Henrik methods for a broad range of habitats. Andren, E. Bangs, Joseph A. Fontaine, Part three considers species and Michael D. Jimenez, Thomas J. Meier, provides information on general Elizabeth H. Bradley, Carter C. Niemeyer, methods before addressing specific Douglas W. Smith, Curt M. Mack, Val methods of survey and monitoring for Asher, John K. Oakleaf, David Western, the major taxonomic groups. K. Ullas Karanth, Rajesh Gopal Conservation Biology, 9 • Comprehensive - provides best 2005 228 x 152 mm 517pp practice methods for surveying a broad 32 line diagrams 30 tables range of habitats and species 978 0 521 82505 4 (0 521 82505 9) • Unique in providing information on Hardback £75.00 978 0 521 53203 7 (0 521 53203 5) both survey methods and on current Paperback £38.00 methods for evaluating ecological data Publication August 2005 in a single volume

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Handbook of 5. Oceania Ian Hannam and Alison monitoring of species and biological Cochrane; Part II. The Biomes: 6. Marine communities; 10. Ecological monitoring and Ecological Restoration and coastal ecosystems S. J. Hawkins, environmental impact assessments; Edited by Martin R. Perrow J. R. Allen, P. M. Ross and M. J. Genner; Appendix 1. Acronyms used in the text; University of East Anglia 7. Seagrasses Mark S. Fonseca, W. Judson Appendix 2. The 1992 Convention on and Anthony J. Davy Kenworthy, Brian E. Julius, Sharon Shutler Biological Diversity; References; Index. University of East Anglia and Stephanie Fluke; 8. Coral reefs Susan 2005 247 x 174 mm 409pp Volume 1: Principles of Restoration Clark; 9. Beaches Clive A. Walmsley; 54 line diagrams 23 half-tones 48 tables Contents: Part I. The Background: 10. Dunes Sigurdur Greipsson; 978 0 521 82028 8 (0 521 82028 6) Hardback £70.00 1. Introduction and philosophy Anthony D. 11. Saltmarshes Joy B. Zedler and Paul Adam; 12. Rivers and streams P. W. 978 0 521 52728 6 (0 521 52728 7) Bradshaw; 2. Rationale for restoration John Paperback £35.00 Cairns Jr; 3. The ecological context: a Downs, K. S. Skinner and G. M. Kondolf; landscape perspective Richard Hobbs;4.The 13. Lakes Erik Jeppesen and Ilkka ecological context: a species population Sammalkorpi; 14. Restoration of freshwater GRADUATE TEXTBOOK perspective David W. MacDonald, Thomas wetlands Bryan D. Wheeler, Russ P. Money P. Moorhouse and Jody W. Enck;5.The and Sue C. Shaw; 15. Polar tundra Bruce C. Spatial Analysis evolutionary context: a species perspective Forbes and Jay D. McKendrick; 16. High- A Guide for Ecologists Alan Gray; Part II. Manipulation of the elevation ecosystems Krystyna M. Urbanska Marie-Josée Fortin Physical Environment: 6. Terrestrial systems and Jeanne C. Chambers; 17. Atlantic University of Toronto Steve G. Whisenant; 7. Wetlands and still heathlands Nigel R. Webb; 18. Calcareous and Mark R. T. Dale waters Jillian C. Labadz, David P. Butcher grasslands M. J. Hutchings and A. J. A. University of Alberta Stewart; 19. Prairies Scott D. Wilson; and Dennis Sinnott; 8. Running water: This book gives an overview of the wide 20. Semi-arid woodlands and desert fringes fluvial geomorphology and river restoration range of spatial statistics available to Malcolm Newson, John Pitlick and David A. J. Aronson, E. Le Floc’h and C. Ovalle; analyse ecological data, and provides Sear; Part III. Manipulation of the Chemical 21. Australian semi-arid lands and savannas Environment: 9. Manipulating the chemical David Tongway and John Ludwig; advice and guidance for graduate environment of the soil Robert H. Marrs; 22. Temperate woodlands Peter Buckley, students and practising researchers who 10. Chemical treatment of water and Satoshi Ito and Stéphane McLachlan; are either about to embark on spatial sediments with special reference to lakes 23. Tropical moist forest restoration Karen analysis in ecological studies or who Martin Sondergaard, Klaus-Dieter Wolter D. Holl; 24. Tropical dry forest restoration have started but are unsure how to and Wilhelm Ripl; 11. Atmospheric Dan H. Janzen. proceed. chemistry Peter Brimblecombe; Part IV. 2002 246 x 189 mm 618pp 60 tables Contents: Preface; 1. Introduction; Manipulation of the Biota: 95 figures 2. Spatial analysis for population data; 12. Establishment and manipulation of 978 0 521 79129 8 (0 521 79129 4) Hardback £75.00 3. Spatial analysis for sample data; plant populations and communities in 4. Spatial partitioning of regions: patch and terrestrial systems Anthony J. Davy; Two-volume set boundary; 5. Dealing with spatial 13. Ecology and management of plants in 2002 autocorrelation; 6. Spatio-temporal analysis; aquatic ecosystems Stefan E. B. Weisner 978 0 521 81865 0 (0 521 81865 6) 2 Volume Set £130.00 7. Closing comments and future directions; and John A. Strand; 14. Micro-organisms References; Index. Michael F. Allen, David A. Jasper and John 2005 247 x 174 mm 380pp C. Zak; 15. Terrestrial invertebrates TEXTBOOK 150 line diagrams 20 tables Jonathan D. Majer, Karl E. C. Brennan and NEW EDITION 978 0 521 80434 9 (0 521 80434 5) Lubomir Bisevac; 16. Aquatic invertebrates Hardback £60.00 John S. Richardson and Michael J. Jackson; Monitoring Ecological 978 0 521 00973 7 (0 521 00973 1) 17. Fish Martin R. Perrow, Luis Zambrano Paperback £30.00 and Mark L. Tomlinson; 18. Reptiles and Change amphibians Carl Jones; 19. Birds Jose Maria Second edition Cardoso da Silva and Peter D. Vickery; Ian F. Spellerberg 20. Mammals David W. MacDonald, Lincoln University, New Zealand Thomas P. Moorhouse, Jody W. Enck and This fully revised edition offers an Fran H. Tattersall; Part V. Monitoring and introduction to ecological monitoring, Appraisal: 21. Monitoring and appraisal providing a rationale for monitoring and Karen D. Holl and John Cairns Jr; Index. 2002 246 x 189 mm 460pp a practical guide to the techniques 50 line diagrams 13 half-tones 21 tables available, including many examples from 978 0 521 79128 1 (0 521 79128 6) monitoring programmes around the Hardback £75.00 world. Volume 2: Restoration in Practice Contents: Foreword; Preface; Contents: Part I. Restoration Policy and Acknowledgements; 1. Ecological Infrastructure: 1. The Americas Mohan K. monitoring; 2. Environmental monitoring Wali, N. M. Safaya and F. Evrendilek; programmes and organizations; 3. State of 2. Europe Jane Madgwick and Tim Jones; the environment reporting and ecological 3. Ecological restoration in Africa W. M. monitoring; 4. Biological scales and spatial Adams; 4a. Restoration policy and scales in ecological monitoring; 5. Biological infrastructure in India B. B. Dhar and M. K. indicators and indices; 6. Diversity and Chakraborty; 4b. Progress in the similarity indices; 7. Planning and designing reclamation of degraded land in China ecological monitoring; 8. Community-based M. H. Wong and A. D. Bradshaw; ecological monitoring; 9. Ecological Ecology, Conservation and Natural Resource Management 7

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK Ecological Census TEXTBOOK Spatial Data Analysis Techniques A Primer of A Handbook Theory and Practice Conservation Genetics Robert Haining Edited by William J. Sutherland University of East Anglia Richard Frankham University of Cambridge Macquarie University, Sydney 2003 247 x 174 mm 452pp A concise guide to the techniques for Jonathan D. Ballou 88 line diagrams 33 tables estimating population numbers in plants Smithsonian National Zoological Park, 978 0 521 77319 5 (0 521 77319 9) and animals. Washington DC Hardback £80.00 978 0 521 77437 6 (0 521 77437 3) 1996 247 x 174 mm 352pp and David A. Briscoe Paperback £30.00 30 line diagrams 10 tables Macquarie University, Sydney 978 0 521 47244 9 (0 521 47244 X) Hardback £65.00 Illustrated by Karina H. McInnes TEXTBOOK 978 0 521 47815 1 (0 521 47815 4) ‘ideal for absolute beginners as well as Paperback £23.99 those seeking to consolidate Introduction to knowledge. The authors bring to the Population Biology book the wealth of their own TEXTBOOK experience in laboratory Dick Neal Conservation Biology experimentation, hands-on genetic University of Saskatchewan, Canada management and empirical data 2003 246 x 189 mm 408pp Andrew S. Pullin collection.’ 112 line diagrams 16 half-tones 46 tables University of Birmingham Contents: Preface; Take home messages; 978 0 521 82537 5 (0 521 82537 7) ‘I shall certainly recommend it as a 1. Introduction; 2. Genetic diversity; Hardback £80.00 text for my undergraduate audience … 978 0 521 53223 5 (0 521 53223 X) 3. Evolutionary genetics of natural this is a welcome addition to the Paperback £30.00 populations; 4. Genetic consequences of library of books on conservation small population size; 5. Genetics and biology.’ Journal of Parasitology extinction; 6. Resolving taxonomic TEXTBOOK uncertainties and defining management 2002 246 x 189 mm 358pp Experimental Design 119 line diagrams 15 tables 41 graphs units; 7. Genetic management of 145 figures 46 maps endangered species in the wild; 8. Captive and Data Analysis for 978 0 521 64284 2 (0 521 64284 1) breeding and reintroduction; 9. Molecular Biologists Hardback £80.00 genetics in forensics and understanding Gerry P. Quinn 978 0 521 64482 2 (0 521 64482 8) species biology; Final messages; Glossary; Monash University, Victoria Paperback £30.00 Sources and copyright acknowledgments; and Michael J. Keough Index. University of Melbourne Australian Mammalogy Reviews TEXTBOOK 2004 246 x 189 mm 234pp ‘ … a wonderful book that is packed Conservation 162 line diagrams 4 half-tones 16 tables with lots of practical advice …’. 978 0 521 83110 9 (0 521 83110 5) Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Clive Hambler Hardback £55.00 Ecology University of Oxford 978 0 521 53827 5 (0 521 53827 0) 2002 246 x 189 mm 556pp ‘… the best current introduction to Paperback £19.99 125 line diagrams 85 tables conservation.’ 978 0 521 81128 6 (0 521 81128 7) BES Bulletin Hardback £85.00 Studies in Biology TEXTBOOK 978 0 521 00976 8 (0 521 00976 6) Paperback £35.00 2004 228 x 152 mm 378pp Introduction to 74 line diagrams 19 half-tones 44 tables 79 figures Conservation Genetics Experiments in Ecology 978 0 521 80190 4 (0 521 80190 7) Richard Frankham Hardback £47.50 Their Logical Design and Macquarie University, Sydney 978 0 521 00038 3 (0 521 00038 6) Jonathan D. Ballou Interpretation Using Analysis of Paperback £19.99 Variance Smithsonian National Zoological Park A. J. Underwood and David A. Briscoe University of Sydney Macquarie University, Sydney Illustrated by Karina H. McInnes Logical and consistent approach to experimental design using statistical ‘I anticipate that this book and its principles. successors will be the standard text and reference for years to come.’ 1996 228 x 152 mm 522pp Charles E. Taylor, Conservation Biology 81 line diagrams 94 tables 978 0 521 55329 2 (0 521 55329 6) 2002 246 x 189 mm 640pp Hardback £80.00 300 line diagrams 8 half-tones 47 tables 978 0 521 55696 5 (0 521 55696 1) 978 0 521 63014 6 (0 521 63014 2) Paperback £33.00 Hardback £100.00 978 0 521 63985 9 (0 521 63985 9) Paperback £35.00

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Chemical Ecology of preserve genetic diversity, as the Plant-Provided Food Vertebrates females are sexually receptive for only 3 for Carnivorous Insects days per year and generally produce Dietland Muller-Schwarze A Protective Mutualism and its State University of New York twins, but often lose one due to Applications maternal neglect. This book provides the The first book to focus exclusively on Edited by F. L. Wäckers scholarly knowledge that will help the chemically-mediated interactions Netherlands Institute of Ecology conserve this treasured species in between vertebrates including fish, P. C. J. van Rijn nature, while there is still time. Netherlands Institute of Ecology amphibians, reptiles, birds and 2006 228 x 152 mm 510pp and J. Bruin mammals, and other animals and 37 line diagrams 53 half-tones Universiteit van Amsterdam plants. Reviewing the latest research in 16 colour plates three core areas - pheromones, and 978 0 521 83295 3 (0 521 83295 0) Written by an international team of interspecific interactions involving Hardback c. £65.00 experts, this book is a topical Publication January 2006 allomones and kairomones, it pulls commentary set to influence thought on together information from widely plant-defence theory and evolution, and scattered technical literature in many GRADUATE TEXTBOOK agricultural practice. different disciplines into a coherent 2005 247 x 174 mm 368pp Insect Diversity 18 line diagrams 5 half-tones whole. While the main focus is 978 0 521 81941 1 (0 521 81941 5) ecological, dealing with behaviour and Conservation Hardback £75.00 interactions in the field, it also covers Michael J. Samways chemoreception, orientation and University of Stellenbosch, South Africa navigation, the development of Insects dominate and maintain the Insect Herbivore-Host behaviour and the practical applications world around us. Yet their diversity and Dynamics of chemosignals. future survival is being challenged by Tree-Dwelling Aphids 2006 247 x 174 mm 526pp the impact of humans. Development of A. F. G. Dixon 104 line diagrams 31 half-tones 49 tables the natural environment, pollution, the University of East Anglia 978 0 521 36377 8 (0 521 36377 2) introduction of foreign plants and global Literature currently available on the Hardback c. £65.00 Publication May 2006 change is jeopardising a quarter of all population dynamics of insect the insects. This is a unique, herbivores tends to favour top-down contemporary, global synthesis intended regulation of abundance by the action Giant Pandas for students and practitioners in of natural enemies. This unique volume Biology, Veterinary Medicine and conservation. Examining the ethical challenges this paradigm and shows Management foundation of why we should conserve that tree dwelling species of aphids, Edited by David Wildt insects and their habitats, it also through competition for resources, Smithsonian National Zoological Park addresses the threats they face, and regulate their own abundance. The Zhang Anju proposes ways we can maintain the rich biology of tree dwelling aphids is Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding diversity of insect life. examined, particularly their adaptation Zhang Hemin Contents: Preface; Part I. The Need for to the seasonal development of their Wildlife Conservation and Research Center for Insect Diversity Conservation: 1. Ethical host plants. When host plant quality is Giant Pandas foundation for insect conservation; 2. The favourable aphids, by telescoping Donald Janssen special case of insects in conservation generations, can achieve prodigious Zoological Society of San Diego biology; 3. Insects and the conservation of rates of increase, which their natural and Susie Ellis ecosystem processes; Part II. Insects and the enemies are unable to match. Using Conservation Breeding Specialist Group Changing World: 4. Degradation and analyses from long-term population fragmentation of ecosystems; 5. Responses The giant panda is one of the world’s of insects to the changing land mosaic; 6. studies and experiments, this book most recognized animals, but until now Threats from invasive aliens, biological introduces students and research the biology of this threatened species control, and genetic engineering; 7. Global workers to insect herbivore-host has been a mystery. With the climate change and synergistic impacts; Part dynamics using the interaction between environment undergoing unprecedented III. Conserving and Managing Insect aphids and trees as a model. change at a rapid and accelerating rate, Diversity: 8. Methods, approaches, and 2005 228 x 152 mm 208pp can such a highly specialized species prioritization criteria; 9. Mapping, 91 line diagrams 13 tables 978 0 521 80232 1 (0 521 80232 6) survive? This book is the first of its kind inventorying, and monitoring; 10. Managing for insect diversity; 11. Restoration of insect Hardback £50.00 to summarize the present state of diversity; 12. Conventions and social issues knowledge about panda biology, in insect diversity conservation; References; encompassing topics such as Index. Advances in Insect reproduction, behaviour, nutrition, 2005 247 x 174 mm 354pp Chemical Ecology genetics and veterinary medicine. It also 104 line diagrams 30 half-tones Edited by Ring T. Cardé provides the latest information on 134 figures University of California, Riverside veterinary management, advances in 978 0 521 78338 5 (0 521 78338 0) and Jocelyn G. Millar Hardback £60.00 University of California, Riverside neonatal care, disease detection and 978 0 521 78947 9 (0 521 78947 8) prevention and the use of ‘assisted Paperback £30.00 ‘This volume presents an excellent breeding’ to promote reproduction and collection of reviews that should be Ecology, Conservation and Natural Resource Management 9 useful to those working within and Soay Sheep T. Prance; Part III. Establishing Priorities: The outside this study area.’ Dynamics and Selection in an Role of Taxonomy: 8. Measuring diversity Bulletin of the World Health Organization Island Population Christopher Humphries; 9. The need for 2004 228 x 152 mm 352pp plant taxonomy in setting priorities for 31 line diagrams 13 half-tones Edited by T. H. Clutton-Brock University of Cambridge designated areas and conservation 2 colour plates 36 figures management plants: a European and J. M. Pemberton 978 0 521 79275 2 (0 521 79275 4) perspective Dominique Richard and Doug Hardback £60.00 University of Edinburgh Evans; 10. The identification, conservation Soay Sheep synthesises one of the most and use of wild plants of the Mediterranean Parasites, People, and detailed studies of demography and region - the Medusa network - a Places dynamics in a naturally regulated programme for encouraging the sustainable population of mammals. Covering use of Mediterranean plant resources Essays on Field Parasitology population dynamics, demography and Melpomeni Skoula and Christopher B. Gerald W. Esch Johnson; 11. Chemosystematics, diversity of Wake Forest University, North Carolina their effects on selection, energetic and resource limitations on the interaction plant compounds and plant conservation ‘… stimulating throughout, exciting in Renee J. Grayer; Part IV. Conservation places, thought provoking, and with between sheep and parasites, and the Strategies: Taxonomy in the Practice and some fascinating insights. adaptive significance of their Measurement of Effective Conservation Recommended.’ reproductive characteristics, it provides Action: 12. The business of a poet - James C. Chubb, University of Liverpool, unique insights into the regulation of taxonomy and conservation of island floras Parasitology other herbivore populations and the David Bramwell; 13. The role of the 2004 228 x 152 mm 250pp effects of environmental change on taxonomist in conservation of critical 5 line diagrams 45 half-tones 50 figures selection and adaptation. It will be vascular plants T. C. G. Rich; 14. Plant 978 0 521 81549 9 (0 521 81549 5) taxonomy and reintroduction John R. Hardback £45.00 essential reading for vertebrate Akeroyd; 15. Rattans, taxonomy and 978 0 521 89457 9 (0 521 89457 3) ecologists, demographers, evolutionary development John Dransfield; 16. Molecular Paperback £17.99 biologists and behavioural ecologists. systematics - measuring and monitoring Advance praise for this book: diversity Alastair Culham; 17. Legislation: a TEXTBOOK ‘ A major, very important book in key user of taxonomy for plant conservation population biology, with first class and sustainable use H. Noel McGough; Parasitism contributors … a most valuable 18. Gardening the Earth - the contribution The Diversity and Ecology of contribution to the ecology literature. I of botanic gardens to plant conservation Animal Parasites recommend it most highly.’ and habitat restoration Stephen Blackmore Charles J. Krebs, University of British Columbia Albert O. Bush and David S. Paterson; 19. Using taxonomic Brandon University, Manitoba, Canada 2004 228 x 152 mm 396pp expertise in conservation - the botanic 115 line diagrams 18 half-tones 24 tables Jacqueline C. Fernandez 978 0 521 82300 5 (0 521 82300 5) garden contribution Etelka Leadlay; Wake Forest University, North Carolina Hardback £80.00 20. Wild seed banks and taxonomy Paul Gerald W. Esch 978 0 521 52990 7 (0 521 52990 5) Smith; 21. Good networks - supporting the Wake Forest University, North Carolina Paperback £33.00 infrastructure for taxonomy and and J. Richard Seed conservation Stephen Jury. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 2005 247 x 174 mm 300pp GRADUATE TEXT 26 line diagrams 14 half-tones 18 tables ‘The authors and publishers have 978 0 521 84506 9 (0 521 84506 8) succeeded in producing a book that Taxonomy and Plant Hardback c. £70.00 conveys all the fascinating complexity Conservation 978 0 521 60720 9 (0 521 60720 5) of host-parasite associations, and that Paperback c. £35.00 Edited by Etelka Leadlay should stimulate students to pursue Publication December 2005 postgraduate research and careers in Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew parasitology.’ and Stephen Jury Robert Poulin, Parasitology University of Reading 2001 246 x 189 mm 576pp Highlights the key role played by 157 line diagrams 162 half-tones 42 tables taxonomy in the conservation and 319 figures 978 0 521 66278 9 (0 521 66278 8) sustainable utilisation of plant Hardback £95.00 biodiversity. 978 0 521 66447 9 (0 521 66447 0) Contents: Part I. Introduction: 1. Science, Paperback £38.00 taxonomy and the future of plant diversity Peter Crane; 2. Taxonomy in the implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity Alan Paton, China Williams, Kate Davis; Part II. The Practice of Taxonomy: 3. Principles and practice of plant taxonomy Tod F. Stuessy;4.Flowering plant families: how many do we need? James Cullen and Max Walters; 5. Taxonomy, floras and conservation Santiago Castroviejo; 6. The democratic processes of botanical nomenclature R. K. Brummitt; 7. Bringing taxonomy to the users Ghillean

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GRADUATE TEXTBOOK The World’s Largest Prehistoric Native The Ecology of Seeds Wetlands Americans and Ecology and Conservation Michael Fenner Ecological Change University of Southampton Edited by Lauchlan H. Fraser Human Ecosystems in Eastern University of Akron, Ohio and Ken Thompson North America since the University of Sheffield and Paul A. Keddy Pleistocene Southeastern Louisiana University A succinct review of the ecological Paul A. Delcourt During the past century approximately University of Tennessee, Knoxville aspects of seed biology which fifty percent of the world’s wetlands and Hazel R. Delcourt encompasses a wide range of concepts have been destroyed, largely due to University of Tennessee, Knoxville of general relevance to plant ecology. human activities. Increased human Prehistoric Native Americans and Contents: Preface, 1. Life histories, population has lead to shrinkage of Ecological Change demonstrates the reproductive strategies and allocation; 2. Pre- wetland areas, and data show that as dispersal hazards; 3. Seed dispersal; 4. Soil importance of prehistoric human seed banks; 5. Dormancy; 6. Germination; they shrink, their important functions activities in the ecology of eastern North 7. Post-dispersal hazards; 8. Seedling decline. Reduced wetland area causes America, and as such has important establishment; 9. Gaps, regeneration and more flooding in Spring, less available implications for conservation biology, diversity; References; Index. water during drought, greater risk of forest management and ecological 2005 247 x 174 mm 260pp water pollution, and less food restoration today. 48 line diagrams 2 tables production and reduced carbon storage. 2004 228 x 152 mm 214pp 978 0 521 65311 4 (0 521 65311 8) Much of the remaining pristine wetland 29 line diagrams 1 table Hardback £55.00 systems are found in the world’s largest 978 0 521 66270 3 (0 521 66270 2) 978 0 521 65368 8 (0 521 65368 1) Hardback £50.00 Paperback £26.00 wetlands, and yet these areas have received surprisingly little scientific research or attention. This volume TEXTBOOK GRADUATE TEXTBOOK presents the views of leading experts on Environmental Change Evolutionary Ecology each of the world’s largest wetland Key Issues and Alternative of Plant Reproductive systems. Here, this international team of Approaches Strategies authors share their understanding of the Frank Oldfield ecological dynamics of large wetlands Tom de Jong University of Liverpool and their significance, and emphasise Universiteit Leiden This book explains the significance of their need of conservation. and Peter Klinkhamer past and contemporary environmental Universiteit Leiden 2005 247 x 174 mm 498pp 84 line diagrams 18 half-tones and climatic change. Extensively Places the wealth of data on plant 978 0 521 83404 9 (0 521 83404 X) referenced and illustrated, it is a reproductive strategies into the unifying Hardback £75.00 balanced, non-specialist exploration of framework of game theory, allowing global change for advanced testing of the theory of natural selection The Hudson River undergraduates in Geography, in some cases, while in other cases Environmental, Earth, Biological and highlighting the need for additional Estuary Ecological Sciences. Edited by Jeffrey S. Levinton data collection and theoretical Contents: 1. Defining and exploring the State University of New York, Stony Brook development. key questions; 2. An introduction to models and John R. Waldman Contents: 1. Optimisation models; and modelling; 3. The palaeo-record: 2. Investments, returns and proportionality; A comprehensive look at the physical, approaches, timeframes and chronology; 3. Gain curves: efficiency factors; chemical, biological and environmental 4. The palaeo-record: archives, proxies and 4. Evolutionary stable strategies: sex management issues that are important calibration; 5. Glacial and interglacial allocation strategies as an example; 5. Size to our understanding of the Hudson worlds; 6. The transition from the Last at flowering; 6. Reproductive effort; 7. Size River. This book places special emphasis Glacial Maximum to the Holocene; 7. The Holocene; 8. The Anthropocene – a and number trade-offs: the evolution of on important issues specific to the seed size; 8. Sex allocation theory for changing atmosphere; 9. The Anthropocene Hudson, such as the effect of power – changing land; 10. The Anthropocene: partially selfing plants; 9. Size dependent plants and high concentrations of PCBs. sex allocation; 10. Sex ratios in dioecious changing aquatic environments and The chapters are written by specialists plants; 11. Outcrossing, selfing or no sex at ecosystems; 11. Changing biodiversity; all?; 12. Heterostyly; 13. Selective embryo at a level that is accessible to students, 12. Detection and attribution; 13. Future abortion; 14. Attractiveness to pollinators; teachers and the interested layperson. mean global temperatures and sea-level; 15. Parent-offspring conflict; The Hudson River Estuary is a unique 14. From the global to the specific; 16. Intragenomic conflict; 17. Group and scientific biography of a major estuary, 15. Impacts and vulnerability; 16. Sceptics, kin selection; Appendix 1. Mathematical with relevance to the study of any responses and partial answers. help; References. similar natural system in the world. 2005 246 x 189 mm 392pp 2005 228 x 152 mm 342pp 101 line diagrams 2005 253 x 177 mm 496pp 978 0 521 82936 6 (0 521 82936 4) 109 line diagrams 1 half-tone 17 tables 144 line diagrams 24 half-tones 978 0 521 82142 1 (0 521 82142 8) Hardback £70.00 28 colour plates 48 tables 10 maps 978 0 521 53633 2 (0 521 53633 2) Hardback c. £70.00 978 0 521 84478 9 (0 521 84478 9) 978 0 521 52894 8 (0 521 52894 1) Paperback £35.00 Hardback c. £45.00 Publication August 2005 Paperback c. £35.00 Publication December 2005 Publication November 2005 Ecology, Conservation and Natural Resource Management 11

TEXTBOOK GRADUATE TEXTBOOK Environmental Primer on Climate Ecosystem Education and Change and Sustainability and Advocacy Changing Perspectives of Sustainable Health Ecology and Education A Practical Approach Development Edited by Edward A. Johnson Facts, Policy Analysis, and David Waltner-Toews University of Calgary University of Guelph, Ontario Applications and Michael J. Mappin Mohan Munasinghe Improving the health of people and University of Calgary and Rob Swart animals while ensuring sustainability of This book brings together ecologists, This book presents a condensed and ecosystems are laudable and important environmental philosophers and accessible review of the latest state-of- objectives. Drawing on fields as diverse educators to address concerns over the-art assessments of the IPCC, within as epidemiology, environmental advocacy in environmental education, the context of sustainable development. sciences, ecology and systems sciences whilst providing those interested in It will be an invaluable textbook for this book is about searching for education with guidelines and students of environmental science and solutions to complex problems to frameworks to develop resources and policy, and researchers and policy produce a new science for sustainability. programs that integrate ecology, makers involved in all aspects of climate Contents: Introduction; 1. Presenting education and action. change. complaint; 2. The clinical examination: 2005 228 x 152 mm 346pp asking questions, getting data; 3. Making a 8 line diagrams 6 tables Contents: Foreword; Acknowledgements; diagnosis: synthesising information from 978 0 521 82410 1 (0 521 82410 9) 1. Climate change: scientific background data; 4. Setting goals: where do we want to Hardback £55.00 and introduction; 2. Future scenarios of go?; 5. Achieving goals: managing and development and climate change; monitoring; 6. Responding to change: 3. Framework for making development AMESH and the never ending story; Forests, Water and more sustainable: concepts and analytical Readings and references; People in the Humid tools; 4. Making development more Acknowledgements; Index. sustainable; 5. Adaptation to climate Tropics 2004 228 x 152 mm 150pp change: concepts, approaches and linkages Past, Present and Future 28 line diagrams 11 tables Hydrological Research for with wider sustainable development issues; 978 0 521 82478 1 (0 521 82478 8) 6. Vulnerability, impacts and adaptation by Hardback £65.00 Integrated Land and Water sectors and systems; 7. Vulnerability, 978 0 521 53185 6 (0 521 53185 3) Management impacts and adaptation by geographic Paperback £24.99 Edited by M. Bonell region; 8. Mitigating climate change: UNESCO, Paris concepts and linkages with sustainable and L. A. Bruijnzeel development; 9. Mitigating measures: Spatial Ecological- Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam technologies, practices, barriers and policy Economic Analysis for This volume is the most comprehensive instruments; 10. Assessment of mitigation Wetland Management review available of the hydrological and costs and benefits; 11. Climate change and Modelling and Scenario physiological functioning of tropical rain sustainable development: a synthesis; Index. Evaluation of Land Use 2005 247 x 174 mm 458pp forests, the environmental impacts of 70 line diagrams 41 tables Jeroen C. J. M. van den Bergh their disturbance and conversion to 978 0 521 81066 1 (0 521 81066 3) Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam other land uses, and optimum strategies Hardback £60.00 Aat Barendregt for managing them. It will be invaluable 978 0 521 00888 4 (0 521 00888 3) Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands for specialists, managers and Paperback £30.00 and Alison J. Gilbert practitioners, scientists and advanced Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam students. The Science of In all parts of the world wetlands are International Hydrology Series Sustainable endangered by human activities and 2005 276 x 219 mm 944pp development. This book approaches the 450 line diagrams 5 half-tones Development study of wetlands management and 12 colour plates 120 tables Local Livelihoods and the Global development policy by using integrated 978 0 521 82953 3 (0 521 82953 4) Environment Hardback £175.00 ecosystem modelling that builds upon Jeffrey Sayer WWF International, Switzerland insights from hydrology, ecology and economics. and Bruce Campbell Center for International Forestry Research 2004 247 x 174 mm 254pp (CIFOR) 37 line diagrams 6 half-tones 54 tables 978 0 521 82230 5 (0 521 82230 0) 2003 228 x 152 mm 288pp Hardback £70.00 35 line diagrams 4 tables 978 0 521 82728 7 (0 521 82728 0) Hardback £65.00 978 0 521 53456 7 (0 521 53456 9) Paperback £26.00

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Flooding and Climate Change and Ecohydrology of Environmental Africa Water-controlled Challenges for Venice Edited by Pak Sum Low Ecosystems and its Lagoon At the beginning of the twenty-first Soil moisture and Plant State of Knowledge century, no environmental issue is of Dynamics Edited by C. A. Fletcher such truly global magnitude as the issue Ignacio Rodríguez-Iturbe University of Cambridge of climate change. The poorer, Princeton University, New Jersey and T. Spencer developing countries are the least and Amilcare Porporato Duke University, North Carolina, USA University of Cambridge equipped to adapt to the potential Time may be running out for Venice effects of climate change, although This book addresses the connections with continuing land subsidence, most of them have played an between the hydrologic cycle and plant acceleration in the rate of sea level rise, insignificant role in causing it. African ecosystems. It will appeal to advanced and possible changes in storminess countries are amongst the poorest of students and researchers from a large increasing the risk of flooding in the developing countries. This book range of disciplines, including prospect. The lagoon surrounding the presents the issues of most relevance to environmental science, hydrology, city shows signs of severe Africa, such as past and present climate, ecology, earth science, civil and environmental degradation. This timely desertification, biomass burning and its environmental engineering, agriculture, scientific and technical volume implications for atmospheric chemistry and atmospheric science. synthesises the great volume and and climate, energy generation, sea- ‘Students and researchers interested in diversity of recent interdisciplinary level rise, ENSO-induced drought and the earth system will find it an research on Venice and its lagoon. The flood, adaptation, disaster risk invaluable resource that is brimming reduction, the UNFCCC and Kyoto with exciting ideas.’ lessons reported here are relevant not Professor Marc Parlange, Department of only to Venice but also to other cities Protocol (especially the Clean Geography and Environmental Engineering The under the threat of coastal flooding, Development Mechanism), capacity- Johns Hopkins University such as London and St. Petersburg. building, and sustainable development. 2005 247 x 174 mm 460pp 2005 246 x 189 mm 718pp It provides a comprehensive and up-to- 200 line diagrams 25 half-tones 100 line diagrams 30 half-tones date review of these and many other 16 colour plates 20 tables 978 0 521 81943 5 (0 521 81943 1) 32 colour plates issues, with chapters by the leading 978 0 521 84046 0 (0 521 84046 5) Hardback £80.00 Hardback £85.00 experts from a range of disciplines. Climate Change and Africa will prove to be an invaluable reference for all TEXTBOOK Southeast Asian researchers and policy makers with an Ecological Economics Biodiversity in Crisis interest in climate change and Africa. An Introduction Navjot S. Sodhi 2005 276 x 219 mm 416pp Michael Common 93 line diagrams 15 half-tones 69 tables National University of Singapore University of Strathclyde 978 0 521 83634 0 (0 521 83634 4) and Barry W. Brook Hardback £85.00 and Sigrid Stagl Charles Darwin University, Australia Publication August 2005 University of Leeds This book contains the first A comprehensive introduction to the comprehensive determination of the Adaptation Policy emerging field of ecological economics. current state of Southeast Asia’s It assumes no prior knowledge of terrestrial biotas and highlights the Frameworks for economics and is well suited for use on primary drivers responsible for the grave Climate Change interdisciplinary environmental science threat to the region’s unique and rich Developing Strategies, Policies and management courses. and Measures biodiversity. The looming Southeast Contents: 1. What is ecological Asian biodiversity disaster demands Edited by Bo Lim economics?; Part I. Interdependent Systems: tangible actions. However, such will and Erika Spanger-Siegfried 2. The environment; 3. The economy in the continue to be constrained by Ian Burton environment; 4. How we got here; Part II. socioeconomic variables (e.g. rampant Eizabeth Malone Economic Activity: 5. Economic accounting; poverty and lack of infrastructure). Any and Saleemul Huq 6. Economic growth and human well-being; realistic solution should involve a multi- 7. Economic growth and the environment; The Adaptation Policy Framework pronged strategy (e.g. political, 8. Exchange and markets; 9. Limits to provides the rapidly evolving process of socioeconomic and scientific), in which markets; Part III. Governance: adaptation policy-making with a much- 10. Determining policy objectives; 11. Policy all major stakeholders (e.g. people, needed roadmap. The APF supports instruments; Part IV.The International governments and national and adaptation processes to protect - and Dimension: 12. A world of nation states; international non-government enhance - human well-being in the face 13. Climate change; 14. Biodiversity loss. organizations) must partake. of climate change. This volume will be 2005 247 x 174 mm 646pp 78 tables Cambridge Tropical Biology Series invaluable for everyone working on 114 graphs 22 figures 2006 228 x 152 mm 192pp 978 0 521 81645 8 (0 521 81645 9) 43 line diagrams 12 half-tones 13 tables climate change and policy-making. Hardback £60.00 978 0 521 83930 3 (0 521 83930 0) 2005 279 x 215 mm 266pp 978 0 521 01670 4 (0 521 01670 3) Hardback c. £65.00 75 line diagrams 25 tables Paperback £30.00 Publication January 2006 978 0 521 61760 4 (0 521 61760 X) Publication November 2005 Paperback £35.00 Evolution 13

Natural Resources and • Beautifully illustrated with almost Modern: Cretaceous and Tertiary Periods: Economic 1000 images, many in full colour and The Cretaceous; flowering of the world: the almost all original Angiosperm Radiations; Plant sex and Development insects: insect pollination; Radiations of ‘Beautifully conceived, splendidly Edward B. Barbier Phytophagous insects; Austral arthropods: written, and exquisitely illustrated . . . University of Wyoming remnants of Gondwana?; Insects, mass Bound to remain a primary scientific extinctions, and the K/T boundary; The Natural Resources and Economic reference for years to come. A must tertiary; Mammalian radiations; Pleistocene Development is the first comprehensive for naturalists, young and old. Truly a definitive work.‘ dispersal and species lifespans; Island analysis of natural resource use and faunas; Section 15. Epilogue: Why so many economic development in poor countries. Thomas Eisner, Cornell University, author of For Love of Insects insect species?; The future; Glossary; It explores the reasons why natural References; Index. Contents: Section 1. Diversity and resource exploitation is not yielding 2005 279 x 215 mm 772pp Evolution: Introduction; Species: their nature greater benefits to the economies of 100 line diagrams 165 half-tones and number; How many species of insects?; Africa, Asia and Latin America, and 400 colour plates Reconstructing evolutionary history; proposes institutional and policy reforms. 978 0 521 82149 0 (0 521 82149 5) Section 2. Fossil Insects: Insect fossilization; Hardback £45.00 ‘Few writers can compete with Dating and ages; Major fossil Insect Barbier’s authority in this area - he deposits; Section 3. Arthropods and the commands respect for his combination Origin of Insects: Onychophora: the velvet- NEW EDITION of field experience, sound theory and worms; Tardigrada: the water-bears; The Mammals of the applied analysis.’ Arthropoda: the jointed animals; Hexapoda: David Pearce, Emeritus Professor of the six-legged arthropods; Section 4. The Southern African Sub- Environmental Economics, University College insects: Morphology of insects; London region Relationships among the insect orders; Sponsor’s Edition 2005 228 x 152 mm 410pp 30 tables Section 5. Earliest insects: Archaeognatha: 25 figures Third edition the bristletails; Zygentoma: the silverfish; 978 0 521 82313 5 (0 521 82313 7) R.H.N. Smithers †Rhyniognatha; Section 6. Insects Take to Hardback c. £45.00 University of Pretoria Publication November 2005 the Skies: Pterygota, Wings, and flight; Ephemeroptera: the mayflies; Adaptation by J.D. Skinner University of Pretoria †Palaeodictyopterida: extinct beaked insects; Odonatoptera: dragonflies and early This comprehensive volume covers all Evolution relatives; Neoptera; Section 7. The mammals that occur naturally on the Polyneopterous Orders: Plecopterida; African mainland south of the Cunene Orthopterida; Plecoptera: the stoneflies; and Zambezi rivers, and also in the Evolution of the Embiodea: the webspinners; Zoraptera: the subregion’s coastal waters. Extensively Insects Zorapterans; Orthoptera: the grasshoppers, revised and updated for the new crickets, and kin; Phasmatodea: the stick- David Grimaldi and leaf insects; †Titanoptera: the titanic edition, it now includes the latest data American Museum of Natural History, New York crawlers; †Caloneurodea: the from from mammal research in southern and Michael S. Engel Caloneurodeans; Dermaptera: the earwigs; Africa along with the radical taxonomic University of Kansas Grylloblattodea: the ice crawlers; changes across all levels of mammalian Insects are the most diverse group of Mantophasmatodea: the African rock classification. Containing contributions organisms in the 3 billion-year history of crawlers; Dictyoptera; Blattodea: the from specialists on each mammalian life on Earth, and the most ecologically roaches; Citizen roach: the termites; order, each species description has been dominant animals on land. This book Mantodea: the mantises; Section 8. The reviewed by a range of independent chronicles for the first time the complete Paraneopteran Orders: Psocoptera: the and internationally recognised ‘bark’lice; Phthiraptera: the true lice; Fringe evolutionary history of insects: their authorities. Along with the latest wings: Thysanoptera (thrips); The sucking living diversity, relationships and 400 bugs: Hemiptera; Section 9. The taxonomic information, the distribution million years of fossils. Whereas other Holometabola: problematic fossil orders; maps and illustrations have been volumes have focussed on either living The origins of complete metamorphosis; updated and redrawn, several new species or fossils, this is the first On wings of lace: Neuropterida; colour plates have been added, and the comprehensive synthesis of all aspects Section 10. Coleoptera: early fossils and whole design has been enhanced to aid of insect evolution. The book is overview of past diversity; Archostemata; access to key information. This is the illustrated with 955 photo- and Adephaga; Myxophaga; Polyphaga; most comprehensive and up-to-date electronmicrographs, drawings, Strepsiptera: the enigmatic order; survey of southern-African mammals diagrams, and field photos, many in full Section 11. Hymenoptera: Ants, Bees, and and forms an essential reference for Other Wasps: The Euhymenoptera and colour and virtually all of them original. zoologists, evolutionary biologists and parasitism; Aculeata; Evolution of insect The book will appeal to anyone sociality; Section 12. Antliophora: anyone wanting an overview of the engaged with insect diversity: Scorpionflies, Flies, and Fleas: Mecopterida: region’s wildlife. professional entomologists and mecopterans and relatives; Siphonaptera: 2005 300 x 230 mm 872pp students, insect and fossil collectors, and the fleas; Evolution of ectoparasites and 300 line diagrams 978 0 521 84418 5 (0 521 84418 5) blood-feeders; Diptera: the true flies; naturalists. Hardback c. £150.00 • The first complete evolutionary history Section 13. Amphiesmenoptera: The Publication January 2006 Caddisflies and Lepidoptera: Trichoptera: the of Insects caddisflies; Lepidoptera: the moths and • Covers both living and extinct species butterflies; Section 14. Insects Become

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Urban Insects and interactions; 8. Transmission of parasites by TEXTBOOK blood-sucking insects; 9. The blood-sucking Arachnids insect groups. The Insects A Handbook of Urban 2005 228 x 152 mm 336pp Structure and Function Entomology 84 line diagrams 7 half-tones 91 figures Fourth edition William H. Robinson 978 0 521 83608 1 (0 521 83608 5) R. F. Chapman Hardback £70.00 Providing the only comprehensive University of Arizona 978 0 521 54395 8 (0 521 54395 9) coverage of household and structural Paperback £35.00 ‘… a high standard of insect and arthropod (spiders, mites, comprehensiveness and accuracy … ticks, scorpions) pests, this book spans will surely prove to be a really useful the major and minor pests at the GRADUATE TEXTBOOK book.’ international level (all continents and Medical Entomology Nature major countries). Arranged 1998 246 x 189 mm 788pp for Students 604 line diagrams 25 half-tones 29 tables alphabetically, it is useful to the Third edition 978 0 521 57048 0 (0 521 57048 4) entomologist and non-entomologist. The Hardback £105.00 Mike Service references are extensive and include the 978 0 521 57890 5 (0 521 57890 6) Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine major scientific papers for each family or Paperback £45.00 species. The format of the descriptions A popular textbook by providing the reader with all the basic information on and the biological information is TEXTBOOK standardised, so that information is insects, mites and ticks that affect NEW EDITION concise and easily retrieved. There are human health. It examines illustrations to help identify some of the identification, the biology and ecology The Evolution and important pest species. of these medically important arthropods Extinction of the and how they can be controlled. Contents: Part I. Urban Entomology: Dinosaurs Contents: 1. Introduction to mosquitoes 1. Introduction; 2. Urban ecosystem; 3. Pest Second edition status and control; Part II. Insects in the (Culicidae); 2. Anopheline mosquitoes Urban Environment: 4. Blattaria; (Anophelinae); 3. Culicine mosquitoes David E. Fastovsky University of Rhode Island 5. Coleoptera; 6. Collembola, Dermaptera; (Culicinae); 4. Black-flies (Simuliidae); 7. Diptera, Ephemeroptera; 8. Hemiptera, 5. Phlebotomine sand-flies (Phlebotominae); and David B. Weishampel Homoptera; 9. Hymenoptera; 10. Isoptera; 6. Biting midges (Ceratopogonidae); The Johns Hopkins University 11. Lepidoptera; 12. Mantodea, Neuroptera; 7. Horse-flies (Tabanidae); 8. Tsetse-flies Illustrated by John Sibbick 13. Orthptera, Phasmatodea; (Glossinidae); 9. House-flies and Stable-flies This new edition of The Evolution and (Muscidae) and Latrine flies (Fanniidae); 14. Phthiraptera; 15. Plecoptera, Extinction of the Dinosaurs is a unique, Psocoptera; 16. Siphonaptera; 10. Flies and myiasis; 11. Fleas (Siphonaptera); 12. Lice (Anoplura); comprehensive treatment of this 17. Thysanoptera, Thysanura, Trichoptera; fascinating group of organisms. It is a Part III. Other Arthropods in the Urban 13. Bedbugs (Cimicidae); 14. Triatomine Environment: 18. Arthropods. bugs (Triatominae); 15. Cockroaches detailed survey of dinosaur origins, their 2005 276 x 219 mm 480pp (Blattaria); 16. Soft ticks (Argasidae); diversity, and their eventual extinction. 570 line diagrams 17. Hard ticks (Ixodidae); 18. Scabies mites The book can easily be used as a 978 0 521 81253 5 (0 521 81253 4) (Sarcoptidae); 19. Scrub typhus mites teaching textbook for a class, but it is Hardback £95.00 (Trombiculidae); 20. Miscellaneous mites; also written as a series of readable, Appendix; Glossary. entertaining essays covering important 2004 228 x 152 mm 302pp and timely topics appealing to non- GRADUATE TEXTBOOK 100 line diagrams 4 tables 978 0 521 54775 8 (0 521 54775 X) specialists and all dinosaur enthusiasts: The Biology of Blood- Paperback £27.00 birds as ‘living dinosaurs’, the new Sucking in Insects feathered dinosaurs from China, ‘warm- Second edition bloodedness’. Along the way, the reader TEXTBOOK M. J. Lehane learns about dinosaur functional Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine An Introduction to the morphology, physiology, and systematics Blood-sucking insects transmit many of Invertebrates using cladistic methodology - in short, the most devastating human and animal Janet Moore how professional paleontologists and diseases including malaria, sleeping New Hall, Cambridge dinosaur experts go about their work, sickness and dengue. This book is Illustrated by Raith Overhill and why they find it so rewarding. The primarily aimed at scientists from ‘Most major invertebrate themes are book is spectacularly illustrated by John undergraduates and above who are touched on and, as such, this book is Sibbick, a world-famous illustrator of studying parasitology or medical and genuinely and introduction, and a good dinosaurs, commissioned exclusively for veterinary entomology. It is written in an one at that.’ this book. accessible manner with a useful quick- C. Arme, Parasitology From reviews of the previous edition: reference section. Studies in Biology ‘The book amply fulfils its objective of 2001 228 x 152 mm 372pp providing an authoritative, stimulating Contents: 1. The importance of blood- 96 line diagrams and lively introduction to dinosaurs. sucking insects; 2. The evolution of the 978 0 521 77076 7 (0 521 77076 9) Angela Milner, New Scientist blood-sucking habit; 3. Feeding preferences Hardback £50.00 of blood-sucking insects; 4. Location of the 978 0 521 77914 2 (0 521 77914 6) ‘The presentation of te book is superb. host; 5. Ingestion of the blood meal; Paperback £19.99 The writing style is lively, and there are 6. Managing the blood meal; 7. Host-insect many amusing anecdotes and sidelines Evolution 15 on popular attitudes to dinosaurs … The Domestic Horse Organized conceptually, special There are even 14 colour plates, which The Origins, Development and attention is given to ways in which is astounding in a textbook at this Management of its Behaviour cooperative breeders have proved fertile price.’ subjects for testing modern advances to Michael J. Benton, Trends in Ecology and Edited by D. S. Mills Evolution University of Lincoln classic evolutionary problems including and S. M. McDonnell those of sexual selection, sex-ratio Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. The Mesozoic University of Pennsylvania era; 3. Discovering order; 4. Interrelationships; manipulation, life-history evolution, 5. Origin of Dinosauria; Saurischia; Humans have had a profound influence partitioning of reproduction and incest 6. Sauropoda; 7. Theropoda; 8. The origin of on the horse since its domestication in avoidance. It will be of interest to both birds; 9. Mesozoic birds; Ornithischia; the late Neolithic period. Used for students and researchers interested in 10. Stegosauria; 11. Ankylosauria; transport, labour, food and recreation, behaviour and ecology. 12. Pachycephalosauria; 13. Ceratopsia; horses have become important in many 2004 246 x 189 mm 304pp 14. Ornithopoda; 15. Endothermy; facets of our society. Daniel Mills and 31 line diagrams 15 tables 978 0 521 82271 8 (0 521 82271 8) 16. Dinosaur Paleoecology; Sue McDonnell have produced an 17. Reconstructing extinctions; 18. The Hardback £85.00 exceptional account of our current Cretaceous/Tertiary extinction. 978 0 521 53099 6 (0 521 53099 7) Paperback £35.00 2005 246 x 189 mm 500pp knowledge of the development and 225 line diagrams 25 half-tones management of the behaviour of the 200 figures horse, from its wild roots. The Domestic Marsupials 978 0 521 81172 9 (0 521 81172 4) Horse brings together, for the first time, Hardback £35.00 Edited by Patricia Armati an unrivalled collection of international University of Sydney scientific authors to write on the latest C. R. Dickman The Evolution of North findings concerning the behaviour and University of Sydney American Rhinoceroses welfare of this beautiful animal. and Ian Hume Illustrated throughout, The Domestic Donald R. Prothero University of Sydney Horse will appeal to animal scientists, Occidental College, Los Angeles The last 20 years have seen many those working with horses in a The family Rhinocerotidae has a long exciting discoveries in the study of professional capacity and the and amazing history in North America. marsupials, leading to significant owner/enthusiast. It also provides sound From their first appearance about 40 developments in our understanding of complementary reading for million years ago, they diversified into this unique group of mammals. The animal/equine science courses and an incredible array of taxa, with a impact of these developments have veterinary students. variety of ecologies that don’t resemble been such that marsupials are coming 2005 246 x 189 mm 264pp any of the five living species. They 31 line diagrams 36 half-tones to be seen as model organisms in ranged from delicate long-legged dog- 978 0 521 81414 0 (0 521 81414 6) studies of life history evolution, ageing sized forms, to huge hippo-like forms Hardback £50.00 and senescence, sex determination and that apparently lived in rivers and lakes. 978 0 521 89113 4 (0 521 89113 2) the development and regeneration of Paperback £24.99 This book includes a systematic review the nervous system. This volume of the entire North American provides a synthesis of current Rhinocerotidae, with complete Ecology and Evolution knowledge, bringing together descriptions, measurements, and figures of Cooperative information scattered throughout the of every bone in every species - the first Breeding in Birds primary literature. Coverage includes such review in over a century. More evolutionary history and management Edited by Walter D. Koenig strategies as well as all aspects of basic importantly, it discusses the University of California, Berkeley biology. A complete listing of currently biogeographic patterns of rhinos, their and Janis L. Dickinson evolutionary patterns and paleoecology, University of California, Berkeley known species and a comprehensive list and what rhinos tell us about the of references make this a unique Cooperative breeders are species in evolution of North American landscapes repository of information on this which more than a pair of individuals and faunas over 35 million years. It is a fascinating group of animals. assist in the production of young. complete and authoritative volume that 2005 247 x 174 mm 350pp Cooperative breeding is found in only a will be a reference of interest to a 68 line diagrams 36 half-tones few hundred bird species world-wide, 978 0 521 65074 8 (0 521 65074 7) variety of scientists for years to come. and understanding this often strikingly Hardback c. £70.00 2005 276 x 219 mm 228pp Publication December 2005 247 line diagrams 78 half-tones altruistic behaviour has remained an 978 0 521 83240 3 (0 521 83240 3) important challenge in behavioural Hardback £60.00 ecology for over 30 years. This book highlights the theoretical, empirical and technical advances that have taken place in the field of cooperative breeding research since the publication of the seminal work Cooperative Breeding in Birds: Long-term Studies of Behavior and Ecology (1990, HB ISBN 0521 372984, PB ISBN 0521 378907).

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What Makes Biology Biased Embryos and Extinctions in the Unique? Evolution History of Life Considerations on the Wallace Arthur Edited by Paul D. Taylor Autonomy of a Scientific National University of Ireland, Galway Natural History Museum, London Discipline This is the first book on the new field of Extinction is the ultimate fate of all Ernst Mayr Evolutionary Developmental Biology biological species - over 99% of the Harvard University, Massachusetts that is aimed primarily at an species that have ever inhabited the A collection of revised, collected, and undergraduate and general readership. Earth are now extinct. The long fossil new essays written by Ernst Mayr in It focuses on the question of how record of life provides scientists with time for his 100th birthday. Mayr, the embryonic development changes in the crucial information about when species most eminent evolutionary biologist of course of evolution, thus giving rise to became extinct, which species were the past century, explores biology as an new types of creatures. most vulnerable to extinction, and what autonomous science, offers insights on ‘I thoroughly enjoyed this book … it is processes may have brought about the history of evolutionary thought, short, clearly written and easy to extinctions in the geological past. Key critiques the contributions of philosophy understand …’. aspects of extinctions in the history of to the science of biology, and comments Trends in Ecology and Evolution life are here reviewed by six leading on several of the major ongoing issues 2004 228 x 152 mm 248pp palaeontologists, providing a source text in evolutionary theory. Notably, he 34 line diagrams 4 half-tones 38 figures 978 0 521 83382 0 (0 521 83382 5) for geology and biology undergraduates explains that Darwin’s theory of Hardback £50.00 as well as more advanced scholars. evolution is actually five separate 978 0 521 54161 9 (0 521 54161 1) Topical issues such as the causes of theories, each with its own history, Paperback £18.95 mass extinctions and how animal and trajectory and impact. He points out plant life has recovered from these that a number of the perennial NEW IN PAPERBACK cataclysmic events that have shaped Darwinian controversies may well have biological evolution are dealt with. This been caused by the confounding of the Life’s Solution helps us to view the current biodiversity five separate theories into a single Inevitable Humans in a Lonely crisis in a broader context, and shows composite. Those interested in Universe how large-scale extinctions have had evolutionary theory, or the philosophy Simon Conway Morris profound and long-lasting effects on the University of Cambridge and history of science will find useful Earth’s biosphere. ideas in this book, which should appeal ‘Life’s Solution builds a forceful case 2004 228 x 152 mm 204pp to virtually anyone with a broad for the predictability of evolutionary 53 line diagrams 9 half-tones curiosity about biology. outcomes, their broad phenotypic 978 0 521 84224 2 (0 521 84224 7) manifestations. I recommend the book Hardback £40.00 ‘In this first book of the second to anyone grappling with the meaning century of his long career, the biologist of evolution and our place in the Ernst Mayr at age 100 has given us his Universe, and to biologists interested Darwin’s Fishes reflections on the most interesting and in adaptation and constraints.’ An Encyclopedia of Ichthyology, important questions about life. Written Nature Ecology, and Evolution with a clarity and vigor that shine from 2005 228 x 152 mm 486pp Daniel Pauly every page, this book is best 27 line diagrams 23 half-tones University of British Columbia, Vancouver summarized in one word: exciting!’ 978 0 521 60325 6 (0 521 60325 0) Jared Diamond, Professor of Geography, UCLA, Paperback £11.99 Darwin’s Fishes: An Encyclopedia of author of Guns, Germs and Steel (Pulitzer Prize, Ichthyology, Ecology and Evolution 1998) presents everything Charles Darwin ever ‘I am convinced that What Makes The Development of wrote about fishes. Entries are Biology Unique? will be loved by those Animal Form alphabetical and were extracted from who are curious about biology… I only Ontogeny, Morphology, and Darwin’s books, short publications, regret not having this excellent little Evolution book in my pocket during my first notebooks and correspondence. Alessandro Minelli research in the tropics.’ Darwin’s Fishes will appeal to natural Università degli Studi di Padova, Italy Matthias Glaubrecht, Science scientists (especially marine biologists ‘… a discerning and critical, yet loving, Contents: Preface: what is there at issue?; and their students), laypersons view of a dynamic field. It will be read Introduction; 1. Science and sciences; 2. The interested in fish and Darwin. with profit by those who seriously autonomy of biology; 3. Teleology; 2004 246 x 189 mm 366pp desire to mold evolutionary 43 line diagrams 43 figures 4. Analysis or reductionism; 5. Darwin’s developmental biology.’ influence on modern thought; 6. Darwin’s 978 0 521 82777 5 (0 521 82777 9) Science Hardback £55.00 five theories of evolution; 7. Maturation of 2003 228 x 152 mm 342pp Darwinism; 8. Selection; 9. Kuhn’s scientific 37 line diagrams 12 half-tones revolutions; 10. Another look at the species 978 0 521 80851 4 (0 521 80851 0) problem; 11. The origin of man; 12. Are we Hardback £55.00 alone in this vast universe?; Glossary. 2004 228 x 152 mm 246pp 978 0 521 84114 6 (0 521 84114 3) Hardback £25.00 Evolution 17

The Correspondence of Behaviour and signals). It also specifically addresses Charles Darwin Neurodynamics in the many areas of interface between communication networks and other Volume 14: 1866 Auditory disciplines. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt Communication 2005 247 x 174 mm 672pp American Council of Learned Societies Edited by Jagmeet Kanwal 66 line diagrams 12 half-tones 14 tables Duncan M. Porter Georgetown University, Washington DC 78 figures Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State and Günter Ehret 978 0 521 82361 6 (0 521 82361 7) University Hardback £75.00 Universität Ulm, Germany Sheila Ann Dean University of Cambridge Library How do animals produce and process Samantha Evans sounds for communication? How do Sexual Segregation in University of Cambridge Library their brains encode the large amounts Vertebrates and Shelley Innes of sensory information so rapidly and Edited by Kathreen Ruckstuhl University of Cambridge Library how do they use this to cope with their University of Cambridge Volume 14 contains letters for 1866, a environment? These questions not only and Peter Neuhaus year marked by the deaths of two of concern the evolution of sound University of Cambridge Darwin’s sisters, when Darwin submitted communication systems but also aim to Males and females often differ in the manuscript of Variation under understand how arousal, motivation, developmental patterns, adult Domestication to his publisher, and emotion and behavioral contexts are morphology, ecology and behaviour, and began thinking about a work dealing vocally expressed and how important in many mammals males are often specifically with the controversial sound attributes are recognized and larger. Size dimorphism results in subject of human evolution. perceived. This book highlights auditory divergent nutritional and energetic The Correspondence of Charles Darwin communication in several species from requirements or reproductive strategies 2004 234 x 156 mm 700pp four perspectives: actual sound by the sexes, which in turn sometimes 25 line diagrams 12 half-tones communication, audio-vocal causes them to select different forage, 978 0 521 84459 8 (0 521 84459 2) adaptations, adaptations of sound Hardback £75.00 use different habitats, and express processing and representation in higher differing social affinities. Such divergent auditory brain centers, and emotional life-styles often lead males and females Self-organisation and and cognitive adaptations in signaling to live large parts of their lives Evolution of Biological and processing. separately. Sexual segregation is and Social Systems 2005 228 x 152 mm 379pp widespread in animals. Males and 54 line diagrams 28 half-tones females may share the same habitat, Edited by Charlotte Hemelrijk 978 0 521 82918 2 (0 521 82918 6) Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands Hardback c. £50.00 but at different times, for example, or Publication October 2005 they might use different habitats Self-organisation of social systems can entirely. Why did sexual segregation be observed at all levels of biological evolve and what factors contribute to complexity, from cells to organisms and Animal it? Sexual Segregation in Vertebrates communities. Although individuals are Communication explores these questions by looking at a governed by simple rules, their Networks wide range of vertebrates and is aimed interactions with each other and their as a synthesis of our current environment leads to complex patterns. Edited by P. K. McGregor Cornwall College, Newquay understanding and a guide for future This book observes social systems research. ranging from simple single-celled Most animal communication has 2005 247 x 174 mm 448pp organisms to very complex ones, such evolved and now takes place in the context of a communication network, 55 line diagrams 19 half-tones 24 tables as humans. It examines groups of all 978 0 521 83522 0 (0 521 83522 4) sizes, from small as in certain species of i.e. several signallers and receivers Hardback c. £60.00 primates, to very large as with some within communication range of each Publication October 2005 species of fish and social insects. Self- other. This idea follows naturally from the observation that many signals travel organisation is widespread throughout TEXTBOOK the animal kingdom. This book further than the average spacing illustrates the numerous aspects that between animals. This is self evidently Pheromones and demonstrate social organisation, true for long-range signals, but at a Animal Behaviour including group formation, task-division, high density the same is true for short- Communication by Smell and foraging, dominance interactions, infant range signals (e.g. begging calls of Taste protection, language and voting. This nestling birds). This book provides a Tristram D. Wyatt volume is recommended reading for all current summary of research on University of Oxford academic researchers and professionals communication networks and appraises ‘Pheromones are by far the most interested in the recent progress of this future prospects. It combines important signals used by organisms of fascinating field. information from studies of several all kinds. Wyatt’s book is an excellent text and review: up-to-date, 2005 247 x 174 mm 208pp taxonomic groups (insects to people via comprehensive, balanced, detailed, 42 line diagrams 5 half-tones 2 tables fiddler crabs, fish, frogs, birds and 978 0 521 84655 4 (0 521 84655 2) mammals) and several signalling clearly written, and nicely illustrated.’ Edward O. Wilson Hardback £60.00 modalities (visual, acoustic and chemical Publication September 2005 2003 246 x 189 mm 408pp

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118 line diagrams 28 half-tones 18 tables 55 line diagrams 2004 228 x 152 mm 476pp 978 0 521 48068 0 (0 521 48068 X) 978 0 521 83220 5 (0 521 83220 9) 110 line diagrams 12 colour plates 9 tables Hardback £80.00 Hardback £60.00 978 0 521 82842 0 (0 521 82842 2) 978 0 521 48526 5 (0 521 48526 6) Hardback £60.00 Paperback £29.00 Evolutionary GRADUATE TEXTBOOK TEXTBOOK Conservation Biology Edited by Régis Ferrière Information Theory, Nerve Cells and Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris Evolution, and The Animal Behaviour Ulf Dieckmann Origin of Life Second edition International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria Hubert P. Yockey Peter J. Simmons University of Newcastle upon Tyne and Denis Couvet A timely introduction to the use of Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris and David Young information theory and coding theory in As anthropogenic environmental molecular biology. The author discusses ‘The strengths of the book lie in its ability to stimulate those interested in changes spread and intensify across the how these tools can be used to analyse neurobiology and provide, through planet, conservation biologists have to the sequences of the genome and the clear examples, an excellent analyze dynamics at large spatial and proteome, and thereby aid our introduction to the field of temporal scales. Ecological and understanding of the nature and origin neuroethology.’ evolutionary processes are then closely of life. Thomas H. J. Burne, The Association for the intertwined. In particular, evolutionary Contents: 1. The genetic information Study of Animal Behaviour responses to anthropogenic system; 2. James Watson, Francis Crick, 1999 228 x 152 mm 276pp 96 line diagrams 96 figures environmental change can be so fast George Gamow and the genetic code; 978 0 521 62216 5 (0 521 62216 6) and pronounced that conservation 3. The central dogma of molecular biology; Hardback £48.00 biology can no longer afford to ignore 4. The measure of information content in 978 0 521 62726 9 (0 521 62726 5) them. To tackle this challenge, currently the genetic message; 5. Communication of Paperback £16.99 disparate areas of conservation biology information from the genome to the proteome; 6. The information content or ought to be integrated into a unified complexity of protein families; 7. Evolution Branching Processes framework. Bringing together of the genetic code and its modern Variation, Growth, and conservation genetics, demography, and characteristics; 8. Haeckel’s Urschleim and Extinction of Populations ecology, this book introduces the role of the central dogma in the origin Patsy Haccou evolutionary conservation biology as an of life; 9. Philosophical approaches to the Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, The Netherlands integrative approach to managing origin of life; 10. Error catastrophe and the Peter Jagers species in conjunction with ecological hypercycles of Eigen and Schuster; Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenberg interactions and evolutionary processes. 11. Randomness, complexity, the and Vladimir A. Vatutin Which characteristics of species and unknowable and the impossible; 12. Does Steklov Institute of Mathematics, Moscow which features of environmental change evolution need an intelligent designer? Biology takes a special place among the 2005 228 x 152 mm 272pp foster or hinder evolutionary responses 50 line diagrams 5 half-tones other natural sciences because in ecological systems? How do such 978 0 521 80293 2 (0 521 80293 8) biological units, be they pieces of DNA, responses affect population viability, Hardback £35.00 cells, or organisms, reproduce more or community dynamics, and ecosystem less faithfully. As for any other biological functioning? Under which conditions Evolutionary Game processes, reproduction has a large will evolutionary responses ameliorate, random component. The theory of rather than worsen, the impact of Theory, Natural branching processes was developed environmental change? Selection, and especially as a mathematical Cambridge Studies in Adaptive Dynamics, 4 Darwinian Dynamics counterpart to this most fundamental of 2004 228 x 152 mm 446pp Thomas L. Vincent 121 line diagrams 8 tables biological processes. This active and rich University of Arizona 978 0 521 82700 3 (0 521 82700 0) research area allows us to make Hardback £55.00 and Joel S. Brown predictions about both extinction risks University of Illinois, Chicago and the development of population All of life is a game and evolution by composition, and also uncovers aspects Adaptive Speciation natural selection is no exception. The of a population’s history from its current Edited by Ulf Dieckmann evolutionary game theory developed in genetic composition. Branching International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria this book provides the tools necessary processes play an increasingly important for understanding many of nature’s role in models of genetics, molecular Michael Doebeli University of British Columbia, Vancouver mysteries, including co-evolution, biology, microbiology, ecology, and speciation, extinction and the major evolutionary theory. This book presents Johan A. J. Metz Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, The Netherlands biological questions regarding fit of this body of mathematical ideas for a and Diethard Tautz form and function, diversity, procession, biological audience, but should also be Universität zu Köln and the distribution and abundance of enjoyable to mathematicians. life. Mathematics for the evolutionary Cambridge Studies in Adaptive Dynamics, 5 Cambridge Studies in Adaptive Dynamics, 3 game are developed based on Darwin’s 2005 228 x 152 mm 330pp postulates leading to the concept of a Evolution 19

fitness generating function (G-function). Bioarchaeology of Seasonality in G-function is a tool that simplifies Southeast Asia Primates notation and plays an important role Edited by Marc Oxenham Studies of Living and Extinct developing Darwinian dynamics that Australian National University, Canberra Human and Non-Human drive natural selection. Natural selection and Nancy Tayles Primates may result in special outcomes such as University of Otago, New Zealand Edited by Diane K. Brockman the evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS). The first book to examine the biology University of North Carolina, Charlotte An ESS maximum principle is formulated and lives of the pre-historic people of and Carel P. van Schaik and its graphical representation as an Universität Zürich this region. Bringing together the most adaptive landscape illuminates concepts active researchers in late The emergence of the genus Homo is such as adaptation, Fisher’s Pleistocene/Holocene Southeast Asian widely linked to the colonization of Fundamental Theorem of Natural human osteology, the book deals with “new” highly seasonal savannah Selection, and the nature of life’s major approaches to studying human habitats. However, until now, our evolutionary game. skeletal remains. Using analysis of the understanding of the possible impact of 2005 228 x 152 mm 400pp seasonality on this shift has been 79 line diagrams physical appearance of the region’s past 978 0 521 84170 2 (0 521 84170 4) peoples, the first section explores issues limited because we have little general Hardback £60.00 such as the first inhabitants of the knowledge of how seasonality affects region, the evidence for subsequent the lives of primates. This book documents the extent of seasonality in The Phylogenetic migratory patterns (particularly between Southeast and Northeast Asia) and food abundance in tropical woody Handbook counter arguments centering on in situ vegetation, and then presents A Practical Approach to DNA and microevolutionary change. The second systematic analyses of the impact of Protein Phylogeny section reconstructs the health of these seasonality in food supply on the Edited by Marco Salemi people, in the context of major behavioural ecology of non-human University of Florida economic and demographic changes primates. Written for graduate students and Anne-Mieke Vandamme and researchers in biological Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium over time, including those caused by the adoption or intensification of anthropology and behavioural ecology, Broad introduction to the theory and agriculture. this is an absorbing account of how practice of phylogenetic analysis. Each Cambridge Studies in Biological and seasonality may have affected an chapter begins with the theory, followed Evolutionary Anthropology, 43 important episode in our own evolution. by a practical section explaining the 2005 228 x 152 mm 384pp Cambridge Studies in Biological and applications of some of the most 40 line diagrams 9 half-tones Evolutionary Anthropology, 44 widely-used phylogeny software. 978 0 521 82580 1 (0 521 82580 6) 2005 228 x 152 mm 574pp Hardback c. £75.00 97 line diagrams 3 half-tones 51 tables 2003 253 x 177 mm 430pp Publication October 2005 120 line diagrams 10 half-tones 978 0 521 82069 1 (0 521 82069 3) 4 colour plates 20 tables Hardback £70.00 978 0 521 80390 8 (0 521 80390 X) Publication October 2005 Hardback £40.00 Simulating Human Origins and Evolution Shaping Primate K. P. Wessen Cambridge Studies in University of Western Australia, Perth Evolution Form, Function, and Behavior Biological and In this book, computer simulation is Evolutionary used to model migration, extinction, Edited by Fred Anapol University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee fossilisation, interbreeding, selection Anthropology Rebecca Z. German and non-hereditary effects in the Series Editors: Dr C. G. Nicholas University of Cincinnati context of human populations and the Mascie-Taylor and Nina G. Jablonski University of Cambridge observed distribution of fossil and California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco current hominoid species. The Dr R. A. Foley Shaping Primate Evolution is a state-of- University of Cambridge simulations described enable the the-art book on how form is described visualisation and study of lineages, Professor Nina Jablonski in primate biology, and the California Academy of Sciences genetic diversity in populations, consequences of form for function and Professor Karen Strier character diversity across species and behavior. University of Wisconsin, Madison the accuracy of reconstructions, allowing Cambridge Studies in Biological and Professor Michael Little new insights into human evolution and Evolutionary Anthropology, 40 State University of New York the origins of humankind for graduate 2004 228 x 152 mm 442pp Professor Kenneth M. Weiss students and researchers in the fields of 97 line diagrams 9 half-tones 39 tables Pennsylvania State University physical anthropology, human evolution, 978 0 521 81107 1 (0 521 81107 4) and human genetics. Hardback £70.00 Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, 42 2005 228 x 152 mm 258pp 72 line diagrams 978 0 521 84399 7 (0 521 84399 5) Hardback £65.00

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Methods in Human The Cambridge Biomedicine and the Growth Research Dictionary of Human Human Condition Edited by Roland C. Hauspie Biology and Evolution Challenges, Risks, and Rewards Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam Larry L. Mai Michael G. Sargent Noël Cameron California State University, Long Beach National Institute for Medical Research, London Loughborough University Marcus Young Owl How to avoid disease, how to breed and Luciano Molinari California State University, Long Beach successfully and how to live to a Kinderspital Zürich and M. Patricia Kersting reasonable age, are questions that have This volume is a review of up-to-date Audio-Digest Foundation, California perplexed mankind throughout history. methods used in human growth The Dictionary of Human Biology and This book explores our progress in research. It provides a minimum of the Evolution (DHBE) is an invaluable understanding these challenges, and the mathematics behind the methods, and research and study tool for both risks and rewards of our attempts to focuses on concepts, possibilities, professionals and students covering a find solutions. From the moment of limitations and applications. broad range of subjects within human conception, nutrition and exposure to Cambridge Studies in Biological and biology, physical anthropology, anatomy, microbes or alien chemicals have Evolutionary Anthropology, 39 auxology, primatology, physiology, consequences that are etched into our 2004 228 x 152 mm 414pp 54 line diagrams 18 half-tones 46 tables genetics, paleontology and zoology. cells and genomes. Such events have a 978 0 521 82050 9 (0 521 82050 2) Packed with 13000 descriptions of crucial impact on development in utero Hardback £65.00 terms, specimens, sites and names, and in childhood, and later, on the way DHBE also includes information on over we age, respond to infection, or the Neanderthals and 1000 word roots, taxonomies and likelihood of developing chronic reference tables for extinct, recent and diseases, including cancer. The issues Modern Humans extant primates, geological and oxygen covered include the powerful influence An Ecological and Evolutionary isotope chronologies, illustrations of of infectious disease on human society, Perspective landmarks, bones and muscles and an the burden of our genetic legacy and Clive Finlayson illustration of current hominid the lottery of procreation. The author University of Toronto phylogeny, making this a must-have discusses how prospects for human life ‘… valuable for its synthesis of the volume for anyone with an interest in might continually improve as climatic backdrop to later human evolution, which reminds us of the human biology or evolution. DHBE is biomedicine addresses these problems remarkable climatic challenges that our especially complete in its inventory of and also debates the ethical Pleistocene predecessors had to face.’ archaeological sites and the best-known checkpoints encountered. Science hominid specimens excavated from • Highly readable take on biomedical Cambridge Studies in Biological and them, but also includes up-to-date innovation, from prehistory to the Evolutionary Anthropology, 38 information on terms such as in silico, present 2004 228 x 152 mm 266pp and those relating to the rapidly 38 line diagrams 6 tables • Broad, multidisciplinary approach developing fields of human genomics. 978 0 521 82087 5 (0 521 82087 1) draws on history, evolutionary biology Hardback £60.00 Contents: Preface and acknowledgements; and biomedicine Word roots; A-Z listing of terms; Appendix I. Taxonomy of extinct primates; Appendix II. • Debates the ethical checkpoints Macaque Societies Taxonomy of recent and extant primates; arising from biomedical advances A Model for the Study of Social Appendix III. Reference table of extant Contents: Preface; 1. Challenge, risk and Organization primate species; Appendix IV. Geological reward: learning to control our biological Edited by Bernard Thierry time scale; Appendix V.Terrestrial fate; 2. Learning to breed successfully; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique chronology of the Pleistocene ‘Ice Age’ in 3. How life is handled; 4. Cells in sickness (CNRS), Paris the northern hemisphere; Appendix VI. and health; 5. Experiences in utero affect Mewa Singh Marine oxygen isotope chronology; later life; 6. Infection, nutrition and poisons: University of Mysore, India Appendix VII. Illustrations of anatomical avoiding an unhealthy life; 7. Signs of and Werner Kaumanns landmarks, postcranial bones and muscle ageing: when renovation slows; 8. Cancer Universität zu Köln groups, cranial bones and muscle groups; and the body plan: a Darwinian struggle; The 20 species of macaques show a Appendix VIII. Event timeline of human 9. Fighting infection; 10. Are devastating broad range of social relationships, biology and evolution; Appendix IX. epidemics still possible?; 11. Discovering Tentative human phylogeny. making them an ideal group for medicines: infinite variety through 2005 247 x 174 mm 668pp chemistry; 12. Protein medicines from gene exploring the evolution of primate 7 line diagrams 5 tables technology; 13. Refurbishing the body; societies. Written especially for those 978 0 521 66250 5 (0 521 66250 8) 14. Living with the genetic legacy; studying animal behaviour and Hardback £70.00 15. Epilogue. 978 0 521 66486 8 (0 521 66486 1) primatology, this book will also be of 2005 228 x 152 mm 364pp Paperback £35.00 interest to those studying human 7 line diagrams 5 tables societies and their evolution. 978 0 521 83366 0 (0 521 83366 3) Cambridge Studies in Biological and Hardback £40.00 Evolutionary Anthropology, 41 978 0 521 54148 0 (0 521 54148 4) Paperback £18.99 2004 228 x 152 mm 434pp 25 line diagrams 19 half-tones 2 colour plates 20 tables 978 0 521 81847 6 (0 521 81847 8) Hardback £70.00 Evolution 21

Forensic Facial The Evolution of culture reflects social learning of Reconstruction Thought traditions, and more closely resembles cultural variety in humans than the Caroline Wilkinson Evolutionary Origins of Great Ape Intelligence simpler behaviour of other animal species. This stimulating book shows that Forensic facial reconstruction is the Edited by Anne E. Russon the field of cultural primatology may reproduction of an individual’s face from York University, Toronto therefore help us to reconstruct the skeletal remains. This comprehensive and David R. Begun University of Toronto cultural evolution of Homo sapiens from work starts with a discussion of the earlier forms, and that it is essential for importance of the face in society and Great apes are the most intelligent anthropologists, archaeologists and the history of facial reconstruction, primates next to humans, but exactly zoologists to work together to develop a going on to evaluate the accuracy of how this intelligence arose has been stronger understanding of human and modern reconstruction methods. The debated for many years. Here, primate cultural evolution. Manchester method of facial paleontologists, biologists, reconstruction, and the relationships anthropologists, and psychologists are … McGrew’s Chimpanzee Material Culture (1992) is already recognized as between the hard and soft tissues of brought together to review the reasons for, and the nature of, great ape one of primatology’s classic textbooks the face are described in detail. and this 2004 follow-up should receive intelligence and its implications for Uniquely, it also describes the methods similarly wide attention and become and problems associated with human intelligence. another milestone in the study of the reconstructing the faces of children. ‘… a good overview of the present evolutionary basis of human culture.’ Collating all published facial tissue data state of research.’ Nature and describing tissue variations with Gorilla Journal 2004 228 x 152 mm 244pp 15 half-tones 10 tables reference to age, sex, stature and ethnic 2004 246 x 189 mm 394pp 30 line diagrams 6 half-tones 48 tables 978 0 521 82841 3 (0 521 82841 4) origin, this book will be an important 978 0 521 78335 4 (0 521 78335 6) Hardback £50.00 reference volume for all practitioners in Hardback £65.00 978 0 521 53543 4 (0 521 53543 3) the field. Paperback £19.99 2004 247 x 174 mm 302pp 13 line diagrams 104 half-tones 19 tables Dental Functional 978 0 521 82003 5 (0 521 82003 0) Morphology Sexual Selection in Hardback £65.00 How Teeth Work Primates Peter W. Lucas New and Comparative The First Americans The University of Hong Kong Perspectives Race, Evolution and the Origin ‘… provides a fresh perspective on Edited by Peter M. Kappeler Deutsches Primatenzentrum, Göttingen, of Native Americans dental function. Lucas succeeds in conveying his enthusiasm for the Germany Joseph F. Powell and Carel P. van Schaik University of New Mexico challenges of learning about the biology and ecology of organisms from Duke University, North Carolina Who were the first Americans? What is such a small and humble organ.’ Sexual Selection in Primates is a book their relationship to living native Nature about primate sexual strategies. This peoples in the Americas? What do their 2004 247 x 174 mm 372pp volume provides the first comprehensive 91 line diagrams 13 half-tones 25 tables remains tell us of the current concepts summary of the various forms of of racial variation, and short-term 978 0 521 56236 2 (0 521 56236 8) Hardback £75.00 communication and behaviour and their evolutionary change and adaptation. consequences. Sexual Selection in The First Americans explores these Primates is aimed at graduates and questions by using racial classifications The Cultured researchers in primatology, animal and microevolutionary techniques to Chimpanzee behaviour, evolutionary biology and better understand who colonized the Reflections on Cultural comparative psychology. Americas and how. It will be required Primatology 2004 246 x 189 mm 298pp reading for all those interested in W. C. McGrew 45 line diagrams 1 half-tone 14 tables anthropology, and the history and Miami University 978 0 521 53738 4 (0 521 53738 X) Paperback £40.00 archaeology of the earliest Americans. Short of inventing a time machine, we 2005 228 x 152 mm 250pp will never see our extinct forebears in 24 line diagrams 7 half-tones 4 tables 978 0 521 82350 0 (0 521 82350 1) action and be able to determine directly Hardback c. £60.00 how human behaviour and culture has 978 0 521 53035 4 (0 521 53035 0) developed. However, we can learn from Paperback c. £30.00 our closest living relatives, the African Publication September 2005 great apes. The Cultured Chimpanzee explores the astonishing variation in chimpanzee behaviour across their range, which cannot be explained by individual learning, genetic or environmental influences. It promotes the view that this rich diversity in social life and material

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The Complete 978 0 521 83740 8 (0 521 83740 5) The Moss Flora of Hardback c. £30.00 Capuchin Publication October 2005 Britain and Ireland The Biology of the Genus Cebus Second edition Dorothy M. Fragaszy A. J. E. Smith TEXTBOOK University of Georgia Illustrated by Ruth Smith Elisabetta Visalberghi Plants: Evolution and Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), Rome This long-awaited new edition describes Diversity and Linda M. Fedigan and illustrates the 760 species of University of Calgary Martin Ingrouille mosses currently known to occur in the Birkbeck College, British Isles and incorporates the most Capuchin monkeys in the genus Cebus and Bill Eddie up-to-date information available on are one of the most widely distributed University of Edinburgh classification and nomenclature, genera of primates in Central and South How did the array of plant form and including recent synonyms. America. Capuchin Monkeys explores habitat that we see today come about, 2004 247 x 174 mm 1024pp our understanding of these fascinating and how do we humans interact with 317 line diagrams 1 half-tone monkeys in relation to their natural the plant kingdom? This new textbook 978 0 521 81640 3 (0 521 81640 8) history, their physical, mental and social Hardback £120.00 provides a stimulating consideration of characteristics, and in comparison to 978 0 521 54672 0 (0 521 54672 9) these questions, advocating a more other primate species. Paperback £55.00 ecological and process-oriented 2004 246 x 189 mm 356pp approach to plant sciences. 40 line diagrams 47 half-tones TEXTBOOK 4 colour plates 108 figures Contents: Preface; Acknowledgements; 978 0 521 66116 4 (0 521 66116 1) 1. Process, form, and pattern; 2. The genesis The Physiology of Hardback £75.00 of form; 3. Endless forms?; 4. Sex, Flowering Plants 978 0 521 66768 5 (0 521 66768 2) multiplication, and dispersal; 5. Ordering Paperback £32.95 Fourth edition the paths of diversity; 6. The lives of plants; 7. The fruits of the Earth; 8. Knowing Helgi Öpik plants; Glossary; References. University of Wales, Swansea Also of Interest 2006 246 x 189 mm 480pp and Stephen A. Rolfe 200 line diagrams 50 half-tones University of Sheffield 200 colour plates 30 tables Consultant Editor Arthur J. Willis 978 0 521 79097 0 (0 521 79097 2) University of Sheffield TEXTBOOK Hardback c. £60.00 This latest, fully updated edition of The An Introduction to 978 0 521 79433 6 (0 521 79433 1) Paperback c. £30.00 Physiology of Flowering Plants provides Plant Structure and Publication March 2006 an account of the fundamental Development principles of plant biology. It examines Charles B. Beck Flora of Great Britain the new developments in molecular University of Michigan, Ann Arbor techniques including the use of and Ireland A comprehensive introduction to plant genetically modified plants and Volume 4: Campanulaceae - Asteraceae anatomy incorporating basic anatomical examines growth, development and Peter Sell function, looking particularly at information with contemporary ideas University of Cambridge about the development of plant adaptations to different habitats. and Gina Murrell Contents: 1. Introduction; Part I. Nutrition structure and form. University of Cambridge and Transport: 2. Flow of energy and carbon Contents: 1. Problems of adaptation to a Foreword by S. M. Walters through the plant: photosynthesis and terrestrial environment; 2. General aspects Planned in five volumes, this critical respiration; 3. Water relations; 4. Mineral of plant structure and development; 3. The nutrition; 5. Translocation of organic protoplast of the eukaryotic cell; Flora provides a definitive account of compounds; Part II. Growth and 4. Structure and development of the cell the native species, naturalised species, Development: 6. Growth as a quantitative wall; 5. Meristems of the shoot and their frequent garden escapes and casuals process; 7. Plant growth hormones; 8. Cell role in plant growth and development; found in the British Isles. growth and differentiation; 9. Vegetative 6. Morphology and development of the Flora of Great Britain and Ireland development; 10. Photomorphogenesis; primary vascular system of the stem; 2005 247 x 174 mm 644pp 11. Reproductive development; 12. Growth 7. Sympodial systems and patterns of nodal 20 line diagrams movements; 13. Resistance to stress; anatomy; 8. The epidermis; 9. The origin of 978 0 521 55338 4 (0 521 55338 5) Appendix. secondary tissue systems and the effect of Hardback c. £100.00 their formation on the primary body in seed Publication December 2005 2005 246 x 189 mm 402pp 121 line diagrams 47 half-tones 24 tables plants; 10. The vascular cambium: structure 978 0 521 66251 2 (0 521 66251 6) and function; 11. Secondary xylem; 12. The Hardback £60.00 phloem; 13. Periderm, rhytidome, and the 978 0 521 66485 1 (0 521 66485 3) nature of bark; 14. Unusual features of Paperback £30.00 structure and development in stems and roots; 15. Secretion in plants; 16. The root; 17. The leaf; 18. Plant reproduction and the origin of the sporophyte; Bibliography; Glossary; Index. 2005 246 x 189 mm 464pp 116 line diagrams 198 half-tones Also of Interest 23

The Freshwater Algal TEXTBOOK TEXTBOOK Flora of the British Pest and Vector Understanding Isles Control Environmental An Identification Guide to H. F. van Emden Freshwater and Terrestrial Algae Pollution University of Reading A Primer Edited by David M. John and M. W. Service Natural History Museum, London Second edition Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine Brian A. Whitton Marquita K. Hill University of Durham This short, readable textbook is University of Maine, Orono and Alan J. Brook designed to introduce students to the Provides the basic concepts of pollution, University of Buckingham biology and techniques of agricultural toxicology and risk assessment for non- ‘This book provides the ultimate pest and disease vector control. science majors as well as environmental answer to questions of algal identity ‘This book should be read by a wider science students. … it is an enormous and heroic work. audience than students of applied Contents: 1. Understanding pollution; I highly recommend this book for entomology as it shows that we still 2. Reducing pollution; 3. Chemical toxicity; laboratories where microscopes are in need insecticides despite the 4. Chemical exposures and risk assessment; daily use, and for all keen prophecies of ‘Silent Spring’. 5. Ambient air pollution; 6. Acid deposition; microscopists.’ Crop Protection Bookshelf 7. Global climate change; 8. Stratispheric Contents: Preface; 1. Man and insects; ozone depletion; 9. Water pollution; 2002 297 x 210 mm 714pp 2. The causes of pest and vectored disease 10. Drinking water; 11. Solid waste; 2000 line diagrams 11 half-tones outbreaks; 3. Insecticides and their 978 0 521 77051 4 (0 521 77051 3) 12. Hazardous waste; 13. Energy; formulation; 4. Application of insecticides; Mixed Media £85.00 14. Persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic; 5. Problems with insecticides; 15. Metals; 16. Pesticides; 17. Pollution at 6. Environmental/cultural control; home; 18. Zero waste, zero emissions; GRADUATE TEXTBOOK 7. Biological control; 8. Insect pathogens; Index. 9. Genetic control; 10. Pheromones; 2004 246 x 189 mm 484pp Natural Enemies 11. Plant and host resistance; 12. Other 51 line diagrams 18 half-tones 42 tables An Introduction to Biological control measures and related topics; 978 0 521 82024 0 (0 521 82024 3) Control 13. Pest and vector management; Hardback £60.00 Ann E. Hajek References; Appendix: names of some 978 0 521 52726 2 (0 521 52726 0) Cornell University, New York chemicals and microbials used as pesticides. Paperback £30.00 Natural Enemies gives a thorough 2004 228 x 152 mm 362pp 36 line diagrams 62 half-tones 98 figures grounding in the biological control of 978 0 521 81195 8 (0 521 81195 3) TEXTBOOK arthropods, vertebrates, weeds and Hardback £75.00 plant pathogens using natural enemies. 978 0 521 01083 2 (0 521 01083 7) Global Warming The Complete Briefing Written expressly for students, it Paperback £30.00 assumes little prior knowledge of the Third edition field, and emphasises ecological and John Houghton Climate Change in Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change biological relationships that make the Prehistory control of pests possible. The most comprehensive guide available The End of the Reign of Chaos ‘… a nicely written and illustrated to the subject. The first two editions William James Burroughs received excellent reviews, and this book on biological control …’. formerly UK Department of Energy Journal of Insect Conservation completely updated new edition will 2004 246 x 189 mm 394pp This book explores the challenges that prove to be the best briefing the 77 line diagrams 50 half-tones faced humankind in a glacial climate student or interested general reader 978 0 521 65295 7 (0 521 65295 2) and the opportunities that arose when could wish for. Hardback £80.00 the climate improved dramatically after 978 0 521 65385 5 (0 521 65385 1) Contents: Introduction to the first edition; Paperback £30.00 the Ice Age. It weaves together studies Introduction to the second edition; of the climate with anthropological, Introduction to the third edition; 1. Global archaeological and historical studies, warming and climate change; 2. The and will fascinate all those interested in Greenhouse effect; 3. The Greenhouse climate and human development. Gases; 4. Climates of the past; 5. Modelling 2005 228 x 152 mm 368pp the climate; 6. Climate change for the 10 line diagrams 19 half-tones twenty-first century and beyond; 7. The 978 0 521 82409 5 (0 521 82409 5) impacts of climate change; 8. Why should Hardback £19.99 we be concerned?; 9. Weighing the uncertainty; 10. Strategy for action to slow and stabilize climate change; 11. Energy and transport for the future; 12. The Global Village; Glossary; Index. 2004 247 x 174 mm 382pp 101 line diagrams 21 tables 80 exercises 978 0 521 81762 2 (0 521 81762 5) Hardback £50.00 978 0 521 52874 0 (0 521 52874 7) Paperback £24.99

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TEXTBOOK Impacts of a Warming geochemists, biogeochemists, Arctic – Arctic Climate environmental and forensic scientists, The Science and natural product chemists and Politics of Global Impact Assessment archaeologists. The Biomarker Guide is an Climate Change Arctic Climate Impact Assessment all-inclusive reference detailing the origin A Guide to the Debate ‘In October, a body of nearly 300 of petroleum, technology for its analysis scientists completed the Arctic Climate Andrew E. Dessler and key parameters for interpretation. Impact Assessment, a report based not Texas A & M University on worst-case scenarios but on ‘This expanded second edition is a great and Edward A. Parson observed changes to-date combined step forward from the outstanding first University of Michigan, Ann Arbor with projected temperature increases edition. It contains a wealth of Combining their expertise in that are below the middle range of information for researchers and should atmospheric science and public policy, those anticipated by complex, be compulsory reading for all increasingly accurate global climate petroleum exploration and production the authors present an accessible geologists and engineers as well as all description of the scientific and political models. Despite this methodological caution, the predictions made in the earth science graduate students.’ issues involved in the climate-change Assessment are terrifying.’ Isaac R. Kaplan, Forensic Geochemist, 1993 debate. This introductory primer will London Review of Books Alfred Treibs Medalist, UCLA Emeritus Professor, Geology and Geochemistry help students and the general public to 2005 284 x 241 mm 144pp sort through the conflicting claims made 50 line diagrams 50 colour plates 10 tables Volume 1: Biomarkers and Isotopes in the by scientists, politicians and the media. 978 0 521 61778 9 (0 521 61778 2) Environment and Human History Paperback £19.99 2004 246 x 189 mm 490pp Contents: 1. Global climate change: a new 270 line diagrams 10 half-tones 20 tables type of environmental problem; 2. Science, 280 figures politics, and science in politics; 3. Climate TEXTBOOK 978 0 521 78158 9 (0 521 78158 2) change: present scientific knowledge and Hardback £85.00 uncertainties; 4. The climate change policy Introduction to Volume 2: Biomarkers and Isotopes in debate: impacts and potential responses; Biodeterioration Petroleum Systems and Earth History 5. The present impasse and steps forward; Second edition Second edition Glossary; Appendices; Bibliography; Index. Dennis Allsopp 2004 246 x 189 mm 700pp 2005 247 x 174 mm 250pp Formerly of CAB International Mycology Institute 443 line diagrams 20 half-tones 20 tables 12 line diagrams 6 half-tones 4 tables 463 figures 978 0 521 83170 3 (0 521 83170 9) Kenneth J. Seal Thor Chemicals (UK) Ltd, Cheshire 978 0 521 83762 0 (0 521 83762 6) Hardback c. £45.00 Hardback £85.00 978 0 521 53941 8 (0 521 53941 2) and Christine C. Gaylarde Paperback c. £19.99 Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Publication October 2005 Introduction to the attack of man-made The Biomarker Guide materials by living organisms and the Two Volume set The Arctic Climate ways in which such damage can be Second edition System controlled and prevented. This overview 2004 246 x 189 mm 1024pp Mark C. Serreze is suitable for biologists and anyone in 743 line diagrams 30 half-tones 40 tables 978 0 521 83763 7 (0 521 83763 4) and Roger G. Barry industry, commerce or local government concerned with the preservation and 2 Volume Hardback Set£150.00 This comprehensive, up-to-date conservation of materials of economic assessment begins by outlining early or cultural importance. Arctic exploration and the growth of Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. Natural modern research. Recent climate materials; 3. Biodeterioration of refined and variability and trends, and projected processed materials; 4. Built environment, future states are discussed in detail. The structures, systems and transportation; Arctic Climate System provides an 5. Investigative biodeterioration; 6. The overview of the subject for researchers control of biodeterioration. and advanced students in a wide range 2004 228 x 152 mm 252pp of disciplines. 37 line diagrams 32 half-tones 36 tables Cambridge Atmospheric and Space Science 978 0 521 82135 3 (0 521 82135 5) Series Hardback £45.00 978 0 521 52887 0 (0 521 52887 9) 2005 247 x 174 mm 424pp Paperback £19.99 159 line diagrams 5 half-tones 8 colour plates 172 figures 978 0 521 81418 8 (0 521 81418 9) Hardback £75.00 The Biomarker Guide Publication October 2005 Second edition K. E. Peters United States Geological Survey, California C. C. Walters ExxonMobil Research & Engineering Co. and J. M. Moldowan Stanford University These two volumes provide an invaluable resource for geologists, petroleum Also of Interest 25

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK TEXTBOOK readable and well supported by over 180 maps, diagrams and photographs, it Biostratigraphy Thinking about is a standard text for students and an Microfossils and Geological Time Biology invaluable guide for professionals in the Brian McGowran Stephen Webster field. University of Adelaide Imperial College of Science, Technology and Contents: 1. Introduction to natural Medicine, London Using fossils to tell geological time, hazards; Part I. Climatic Hazards: biostratigraphy balances biology with A philosophical commentary on biology, 2. Mechanisms of climate variability; geology. This important modern intended for biology students. It aims to 3. Large-scale storms as a hazard; synthesis explores the origins and make science students’ studies more 4. Localized storms; 5. Drought as a hazard; development of the subject, and the interesting, by offering an easy way into 6. Flooding as a hazard; 7. Fires in nature; surprisingly wide application of the philosophy of science, and into 8. Oceanic hazards; Part II. Geological biostratigraphic methods. Essential debates about the social and political Hazards: 9. Causes and prediction of earthquakes and volcanoes; 10. Earthquakes reading for advanced students and implications of biology. and tsunami as hazards; 11. Volcano as a researchers working in basin analysis, 2003 228 x 152 mm 248pp 16 half-tones hazard; 12. Land instability as a hazard; 978 0 521 59059 4 (0 521 59059 0) sequence stratigraphy, 13. Personal and group response to palaeoceanography, palaeobiology and Hardback £40.00 978 0 521 59954 2 (0 521 59954 7) hazards; 14. Epilogue. related fields. Paperback £16.99 2005 276 x 213 mm 328pp Contents: 1. Biogeohistory and the 100 line diagrams 80 half-tones development of classical biostratigraphy; 978 0 521 53743 8 (0 521 53743 6) 2. The biostratigraphy of fossil Building a Successful Paperback £21.99 microplankton; 3. Biostratigraphy: its Career in Scientific integration into modern geochronology; GRADUATE TEXTBOOK 4. Biostratigraphy and biohistorical theory I: Research A Guide for PhD Students and evolution and correlation; 5. Systemic Volcanoes and the Postdocs stratigraphy: beyond classical Environment biostratigraphy; 6. Biostratigraphy and Phil Dee Edited by Joan Marti biohistorical theory II: carving nature at the Phil Dee’s invaluable and entertaining Institut de Ciències de la Terra ‘Jaume Almera’, joints; 7. Biostratigraphy and advice, shared with fellow scientists in Barcelona chronostratigraphic classification; his acclaimed Science Next Wave and Gerald G. J. Ernst 8. On biostratigraphy and biogeohistory. column are now available in this Universiteit Gent, Belgium 2005 247 x 174 mm 424pp 164 line diagrams 34 half-tones compact guide. From getting your A comprehensive, accessible guide to 978 0 521 83750 7 (0 521 83750 2) science PhD to working as a Post-doc it how volcanism has affected our planet’s Hardback £50.00 offers the inside track on what life in environment. It spans a variety of topics Publication October 2005 the lab is really like, alongside practical across disciplines, and considers the advice. various impacts of volcanic activity. This Applied Palaeontology 2005 228 x 152 mm 128pp book is intended for students and 2 line diagrams 1 half-tone Robert Wynn Jones 978 0 521 85191 6 (0 521 85191 2) researchers interested in environmental Applied Palaeontology adopts a holistic, Hardback c. £40.00 change, and those working on natural 978 0 521 61740 6 (0 521 61740 5) hazard planning and mitigation. integrated approach to palaeontology. Paperback c. £14.99 Contents: After an introduction to fossils, the Publication December 2005 Introduction; 1. Understanding the principal groups are studied in detail. physical behaviour of volcanoes; 2. Volcano Latter sections focus on their hazards; 3. Anticipating volcanic eruptions; 4. Volcanoes and the geological cycle; applications in interpreting earth and Birds, Scythes and Combines 5. Effects of volcanic eruptions on the life processes and environments. A atmosphere and climate; 6. Volcanoes, A History of Birds and valuable reference for scientists and hydrothermal venting and the origin of life; Agricultural Change professionals involved in the 7. Volcanism and mass extinction; 8. Effects of applications of palaeontology. Michael Shrubb modern volcanic impacts on vegetation; 2006 246 x 189 mm 550pp 223 figures 2003 228 x 152 mm 382pp 9. Animals and volcanoes: survival and revival; 978 0 521 84199 3 (0 521 84199 2) 36 line diagrams 28 half-tones 35 tables 10. Human impacts of volcanoes; Hardback c. £45.00 40 maps 11. Volcanoes, geothermal energy and the Publication January 2006 978 0 521 81463 8 (0 521 81463 4) Hardback £35.00 environment; 12. Volcanic-hosted ore deposits; 13. Industrial uses of volcanic materials; 14. Volcanoes, society and culture; 15. TEXTBOOK Volcanoes and the economy; References; Index. Natural Hazards 2005 246 x 189 mm 488pp 18 tables Second edition 234 figures Edward Bryant 978 0 521 59254 3 (0 521 59254 2) University of Wollongong, New South Wales Hardback £50.00 Publication September 2005 This revised edition is a comprehensive, inter-disciplinary treatment of the full range of natural hazards. Accessible,

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The Volcano Adventure TEXTBOOK Understanding Guide Practical Applied Probability Rosaly Lopes Chance Rules in Everyday Life NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Mathematics Henk Tijms Modelling, Analysis, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam The Volcano Adventure Guide is packed Approximation full of vital information for anyone Sam Howison Written with wit and clarity, this book wishing to visit, explore, and University of Oxford introduces the world of probability in an photograph active volcanoes safely and informal way. This book illustrates how the reader’s enjoyably. The illustrated guides to 42 2004 228 x 152 mm 390pp knowledge of applied mathematics can volcanoes around the world will delight 41 line diagrams 22 tables 279 exercises be used to describe the world around 978 0 521 83329 5 (0 521 83329 9) armchair travellers as well as inspire the them. Hardback £40.00 adventurous to get out and explore Cambridge Texts in Applied Mathematics, 38 978 0 521 54036 0 (0 521 54036 4) volcanoes for themselves. 2005 247 x 174 mm 340pp Paperback £18.99 2005 276 x 219 mm 362pp 17 line diagrams 3 half-tones 123 exercises 210 colour plates 20 figures 978 0 521 55453 4 (0 521 55453 5) 978 0 521 84274 7 (0 521 84274 3) How to Write and Hardback £30.00 Hardback £65.00 Illustrate a Scientific 978 0 521 60369 0 (0 521 60369 2) Paperback £28.00 Paper GRADUATE TEXTBOOK Björn Gustavii University Hospital, Lund, Sweden2003 228 x Pattern Formation GRADUATE TEXTBOOK 152 mm 152pp An Introduction to Methods 43 line diagrams 1 half-tone 7 tables Rebecca Hoyle Statistical Analysis of 978 0 521 82323 4 (0 521 82323 4) University of Surrey Stochastic Processes in Hardback £40.00 978 0 521 53024 8 (0 521 53024 5) Fully illustrated mathematical guide to Time Paperback £13.99 pattern formation. Includes instructive J. K. Lindsey exercises and examples. Université de Liège, Belgium A Geologic Time Scale 2005 247 x 174 mm 400pp Introduces ways of modelling 100 line diagrams 30 half-tones 2004 8 colour plates 9 tables 50 exercises phenomena that occur over time. Covers 978 0 521 81750 9 (0 521 81750 1) stochastic processes, survival analysis, Edited by Felix M. Gradstein Hardback c. £40.00 time series. Markov Chains and more. Universitetet i Oslo Publication November 2005 Cambridge Series in Statistical and James G. Ogg Probabilistic Mathematics, 14 Purdue University, Indiana 2004 253 x 177 mm 352pp and Alan G. Smith GRADUATE TEXTBOOK 978 0 521 83741 5 (0 521 83741 3) University of Cambridge Essentials of Statistical Hardback £40.00 ‘The publication of A Geologic Time Scale 2004, written by an international Inference team of 40 scientists, is a milestone in TEXTBOOK G. A. Young our understanding of that past, and Imperial College of Science, Technology and An Introduction to sets the standard in stratigraphy.’ Medicine, London New Scientist and R. L. Smith Partial Differential 2005 276 x 219 mm 610pp University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Equations 164 line diagrams 24 colour plates Aimed at advanced undergraduates and Yehuda Pinchover 63 tables Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 978 0 521 78142 8 (0 521 78142 6) graduate students in mathematics and Hardback £80.00 related disciplines, this engaging and Jacob Rubinstein 978 0 521 78673 7 (0 521 78673 8) textbook gives a concise account of the Indiana University Paperback £40.00 main approaches to inference, with A complete introduction to partial particular emphasis on the contrasts differential equations. A textbook aimed Economic Systems of between them. It is the first textbook to at students of mathematics, physics and synthesize contemporary material on engineering. Foraging, Agricultural, computational topics with basic 2005 247 x 174 mm 384pp and Industrial mathematical theory. 35 line diagrams 200 exercises 35 figures 978 0 521 84886 2 (0 521 84886 5) Societies Cambridge Series in Statistical and Hardback £65.00 Frederic L. Pryor Probabilistic Mathematics, 16 978 0 521 61323 1 (0 521 61323 X) Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania 2005 262 x 182 mm 236pp 92 exercises Paperback £26.00 2005 228 x 152 mm 332pp 27 figures 2 line diagrams 23 tables 978 0 521 83971 6 (0 521 83971 8) 978 0 521 84904 3 (0 521 84904 7) Hardback £30.00 Hardback £40.00 978 0 521 61347 7 (0 521 61347 7) Paperback £17.99 Ecology, Conservation and Evolution Journals 27

Mathematical Models JOURNAL and scientists wishing to keep abreast of current developments in in Biology Antarctic Science An Introduction environmental science. Editors: David W. H. Walton Subscriptions Elizabeth S. Allman British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge University of Southern Maine Volume 33 in 2006: March, June, September Michiel R. van den Broeke and John A. Rhodes and December Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research, Institutions print and electronic: £274/$448 Bates College, Maine Utrecht Institutions electronic only: £235/$386 Linear and non-linear models of and Alan P. M. Vaughan Institutions print only: £252/$416 populations, molecular evolution, British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge Individuals print only: £84/$136 Print ISSN 0376-8929 phylogenetic tree construction, genetics, Published for Antarctic Science Ltd, Electronic ISSN 1469-4387 and infectious diseases are presented Cambridge with minimal prerequisites. Antarctic Science provides a focus for 2003 228 x 152 mm 384pp JOURNAL 65 line diagrams 40 tables 375 exercises many of the interdisciplinary studies 978 0 521 52586 2 (0 521 52586 1) that increasingly characterize Antarctic Bird Conservation Paperback £26.99 science, yet also carries a wide range of International disciplinary papers. It publishes both Editors: Martin Jones review and data papers with no limits Manchester Metropolitan University Ecology, on length, two page short notes on and Stuart J. Marsden technical developments and recent Manchester Metropolitan University Conservation discoveries, book reviews and a diary of Published for BirdLife International forthcoming events. These, together with Bird Conservation International is a an Editorial discussing broader aspects and Evolution quarterly peer-reviewed journal focusing of science, provide a rich and varied on the conservation of birds and their mixture of items to interest researchers Journals habitats. The official journal of BirdLife in all areas of science. International, it provides stimulating, Subscriptions international and up-to-date coverage JOURNAL Volume 18 in 2006: March, June, September, December of a broad range of conservation topics, Oryx Institutions print and electronic: £328/$528 using birds to illuminate wider issues of The International Journal of Institutions electronic only: £279/$463 biodiversity conservation and Conservation Institutions print only: £292/$483 sustainable resource use. Bird Editor: Martin Fisher Individuals print only: £103/$165 Conservation International publishes Fauna & Flora International Print ISSN 0954-1020 Electronic ISSN 1365-2079 original papers and reviews, including Published for Fauna & Flora specifically-targeted articles and International recommendations by leading experts. It Oryx aims to provide a comprehensive Environmental seeks to promote world-wide research view of the conservation and status of Conservation and action for the conservation of birds fauna, flora and habitats, and of International Journal of and the habitats they depend on. conservation policy and sustainable use. Environmental Science Special issue 2006: Hornbills The journal publishes original, succinct Editor: Nicholas V. C. Polunin Subscriptions and up-to-date papers on all aspects of University of Newcastle Volume 16 in 2006: March, June, September biodiversity conservation, particularly Published for the Foundation for and December Institutions print and electronic: £156/$256 material that has the potential to Environmental Conservation Institutions electronic only: £136/$225 improve conservation management and Environmental Conservation is one of Institutions print only: £145/$236 that enhances understanding of the longest-standing, most highly cited Individuals print only: £56/$92 conservation needs. Other sections of of the comprehensive interdisciplinary Individuals in low-income countries: £10 the journal include Briefly, for concise BirdLife International Partners: £37/$62 environmental science journals. It Print ISSN 0959-2709 topical news reports, Grants and includes research papers, comments, Electronic ISSN 1474-0001 Opportunities, Letters, Meetings, and subject reviews, and book reviews Conservation News. addressing environmental policy, Subscriptions practice, and natural and social science Volume 40 in 2006: January, April, July and of environmental concern at a global October level. The Journal’s scope is very broad, Institutions print and electronic: £300/$488 Institutions electronic only: £265/$435 including issues in human institutions, Institutions print only: £280/$456 pollution and habitat degradation, Special arrangements exist for members of resource exploitation, terrestrial biomes, Fauna and Flora International. atmospheric and oceanic processes, and Print ISSN 0030-6053 Electronic ISSN 1365-3008 coastal and land management. Environmental Conservation is essential reading for all environmentalists, managers, consultants, agency workers

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JOURNAL JOURNAL JOURNAL Journal of the Marine Journal of Tropical Experimental Biological Association Ecology Agriculture of the United Kingdom Editor: Ian Turner Editor: Mike K. V. Carr Editor-in-Chief: P. E. Gibbs Winchelsea Crop and Water Management Systems The Marine Biological Association of the UK, Journal of Tropical Ecology publishes Experimental Agriculture publishes the Plymouth papers in the important and now results of original research, from any Associate Editors: J. A. Raven FRS established field of the ecology of source, on the agronomy of field, University of Dundee tropical regions, either arising from plantation and herbage crops grown for R. Seed original research (experimental or human or animal food, or for industrial University of Wales, Bangor descriptive) or forming significant purposes, and on systems of agricultural and P. A. Tyler reviews. First published in 1985, Journal production, including livestock. With a Southampton Oceanography Centre of Tropical Ecology has become a major focus on the warmer regions of the Executive Editor: Ann L. Pulsford The Marine Biological Association of the UK, international ecological journal. With world, it reports on the results of Plymouth clear, stimulating and readable reports of experimental work designed to explain recent research findings, the journal how crops respond to the environment Published for the Marine Biological provides a platform for the dissemination in biological, and physical terms, and on Association of the United Kingdom of information on all aspects of tropical the social and economic issues that may JMBA publishes original research on all communities and ecosystems. influence the uptake of the results of aspects of marine biology. 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Naylor Biodiversity Subscriptions University of Aberdeen Editor-in-Chief: Brian Rosen Volume 86 in 2006: February, April, June, and Julian Wiseman The Natural History Museum August, October and December University of Nottingham Published for The Natural History Institutions print and electronic: £494/$795 The Journal of Agricultural Science Institutions electronic only: £410/$655 Museum Institutions print only: £445/$720 publishes papers concerned with the Systematics and Biodiversity is an Special arrangements exist for members of the advance of agriculture and the use of international life science journal devoted Marine Biological Association of the United land resources throughout the world. It to whole-organism biology, especially Kingdom. publishes original scientific work related Print ISSN 0025-3154 systematics and taxonomic biodiversity. 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Coverage also relevance, and letters. includes relevant theory and Subscriptions methodology, and conservation biology. Volume 144 in 2006: February, April, June, Subscriptions August, October and December Institutions print and electronic: £494/$795 Volume 4 in 2006: March, June, September, Institutions electronic only: £432/$694 December Institutions print only: £448/$722 Institutions print and electronic: £176/$288 Print ISSN 0021-8596 Institutions electronic only: £152/$248 Electronic ISSN 1469-5146 Institutions print only: £162/$266 Individuals print only: £70/$112 Print ISSN 1477-2000 Electronic ISSN 1478-0933 Related Journals 29

JOURNAL Subscriptions non-specialist biologists as well as Volume 38 in 2006: January, March, May, July, researchers in the field. Authors are Journal of Systematic September, November instructed to be aware of this in their Institutions print and electronic: £440/$676 Palaeontology Institutions electronic only: £370/$565 writing, and the resulting reviews serve Editor-in-Chief: Andrew B. Smith Institutions print only: £396/$606 as extensive introductions to particular The Natural History Museum Special arrangements made for members of fields, outlining the state of the art, and Published for the Natural History the British Lichen Society (BLS) drawing attention to gaps in Print ISSN 0024-2829 Museum Electronic ISSN 1096-1135 knowledge. 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Perkins Institutions print and electronic: £158/$260 regarded for its articles on the floras of The Evergreen State College Institutions electronic only: £140/$230 SE and SW Asia and the Himalayas. Managing Editor: Debora R. Holmes Institutions print only: £144/$240 Papers linking traditional and modern The Evergreen State College Individuals print only: £57/$94 taxonomic techniques are especially Print ISSN 1477-2019 Environmental Practice provides a Electronic ISSN 1478-0941 encouraged. Regular commissioned multidisciplinary forum for authoritative book reviews and review articles are discussion and analysis of issues of also included. JOURNAL wide interest to the international community of environmental The Lichenologist Subscriptions professionals, with the intent of Senior Editor: Peter D. 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As the and commentaries, along with news leading forum for the dissemination of articles and points of view, link findings new concepts and topical reviews, The in science and technology with issues of Lichenologist reaches more scientists Related public policy, health, environmental concerned with the study of lichens and quality, law, political economy, lichen symbionts than any other single Journals management, and the appropriate journal. All aspects of lichenology are standards for expertise. considered including systematics and Subscriptions phylogenetics; molecular biology; JOURNAL Volume 8 in 2006: March, June, September, December floristic surveys; ultrastructure, anatomy Biological Reviews Institutions print and electronic: £123/$212 and morphology; developmental Editor: W. A. 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Visit our website at www.cambridge.org 30 Author and Title Index

A Cameron, Noël ...... 20 Environmental Practice...... 29 Adaptation Policy Frameworks for Climate Campbell, Bruce ...... 11 Ernst, Gerald G. J...... 25 Change...... 12 Camphuysen, C. J...... 4 Esch, Gerald W...... 9 Adaptive Speciation...... 18 Cardé, Ring T...... 8 Essentials of Statistical Inference...... 26 Advances in Insect Chemical Ecology ...... 8 Carr, Mike K. V...... 28 Evans, Samantha ...... 17 Alexander, Crinan ...... 29 Chapman, R. F...... 14 Evolution and Extinction of the Allman, Elizabeth S...... 27 Chemical Ecology of Vertebrates ...... 8 Dinosaurs, The...... 14 Allsopp, Dennis...... 24 Climate Change and Africa ...... 12 Evolution of North American Anapol, Fred...... 19 Climate Change in Prehistory...... 23 Rhinoceroses, The...... 15 Animal Communication Networks...... 17 Clutton-Brock, T. H...... 9 Evolution of the Insects...... 13 Anju, Zhang...... 8 Common, Michael...... 12 Evolution of Thought, The...... 21 Antarctic Science ...... 27 Complete Capuchin, The ...... 22 Evolutionary Conservation Biology ...... 18 Applied Palaeontology ...... 25 Conservation ...... 7 Evolutionary Ecology of Plant Arctic Climate Impact Assessment...... 24 Conservation Biology ...... 7 Reproductive Strategies...... 10 Arctic Climate System, The ...... 24 Conway Morris, Simon ...... 16 Evolutionary Game Theory, Natural Armati, Patricia...... 15 Correspondence of Charles Darwin, The..17 Selection, and Darwinian Dynamics ....18 Arthur, Wallace ...... 16 Couvet, Denis ...... 18 Experimental Agriculture ...... 28 Crittenden, Peter D...... 29 Experimental Design and Data Analysis Cultured Chimpanzee, The...... 21 for Biologists...... 7 B Experiments in Ecology ...... 7 Ballou, Jonathan D...... 7 Extinctions in the History of Life...... 16 Barbier, Edward B...... 13 D Bardgett, Richard...... 2 Dale, Mark R. T...... 6 Barendregt, Aat ...... 11 Danell, Kjell ...... 4 F Barry, Roger G...... 24 Darwin, Charles ...... 17 Fasham, Matthew...... 5 Beck, Charles B...... 22 Darwin's Fishes...... 16 Fastovsky, David E...... 14 Begun, David R...... 21 Davy, Anthony J...... 6 Fedigan, Linda M...... 22 Behaviour and Neurodynamics in de Jong, Tom ...... 10 Fenner, Michael...... 10 Auditory Communication...... 17 Dean, Sheila Ann ...... 17 Fernández, Jacqueline C...... 9 Bergström, Roger...... 4 Dee, Phil...... 25 Ferrière, Régis...... 18 Biased Embryos and Evolution ...... 16 Delcourt, Hazel R...... 10 Finlayson, Clive...... 20 Bioarchaeology of Southeast Asia ...... 19 Delcourt, Paul A...... 10 First Americans, The ...... 21 Biological Diversity and Function in Soils...2 Dental Functional Morphology ...... 21 Fisher, Martin ...... 27 Biological Reviews ...... 29 Dessler, Andrew E...... 24 Fletcher, C. A...... 12 Biology of Blood-Sucking in Insects, The..14 Development of Animal Form, The...... 16 Flooding and Environmental Challenges Biomarker Guide, The...... 24 Dickinson, Janis L...... 15 for Venice and its Lagoon...... 12 Biomedicine and the Human Condition..20 Dickman, C. R...... 15 Flora of Great Britain and Ireland...... 22 Biostratigraphy ...... 25 Dieckmann, Ulf...... 18 Forensic Facial Reconstruction...... 21 Biotic Interactions in the Tropics...... 2 Dixon, A. F. G...... 8 Forests, Water and People in the Humid Bird Conservation International...... 27 Doebeli, Michael...... 18 Tropics...... 11 Birds, Scythes and Combines...... 25 Domestic Horse, The...... 15 Fortin, Marie-Josée ...... 6 Blackburn, Tim M...... 3 Driese, Kenneth L...... 3 Foster, W. A...... 29 Bonell, M...... 11 Duncan, Patrick...... 4 Fragaszy, Dorothy M...... 22 Boyd, Ian...... 4 Frankham, Richard...... 7 Branching Processes ...... 18 E Fraser, Lauchlan H...... 10 Briscoe, David A...... 7 Freshwater Algal Flora of the British Ecohydrology of Water-controlled Isles, The...... 23 Brockman, Diane K...... 19 Ecosystems ...... 12 Brook, Alan J...... 23 Ecological Census Techniques...... 7 Brook, Barry W...... 12 Ecological Economics...... 12 G Brooks, Thomas...... 4 Ecological Networks and Greenways...... 3 Gaston, Kevin J...... 3 Brown, Joel S...... 18 Ecology and Evolution of Cooperative Gaylarde, Christine C...... 24 Bruijnzeel, L. A...... 11 Breeding in Birds ...... 15 Geologic Time Scale 2004, A...... 26 Bruin, J...... 8 Ecology of Phytoplankton ...... 1 German, Rebecca Z...... 19 Bryant, Edward ...... 25 Ecology of Populations...... 1 Giant Pandas...... 8 Building a Successful Career in Scientific Ecology of Seeds, The...... 10 Gibbs, P. E...... 28 Research...... 25 Economic Systems of Foraging, Gilbert, Alison J...... 11 Burgman, Mark...... 2 Agricultural, and Industrial Societies...26 Gittleman, John L...... 4 Burkhardt, Frederick...... 17 Ecosystem Sustainability and Health...... 11 Global Warming...... 23 Burroughs, William James ...... 23 Eddie, Bill ...... 22 Gradstein, Felix M...... 26 Burslem, David ...... 2 Edinburgh Journal of Botany...... 29 Grimaldi, David...... 13 Burton, Ian ...... 12 Ehret, Günter...... 17 Gustavii, Björn...... 26 Bush, Albert O...... 9 Ellis, Susie...... 8 Engel, Michael S...... 13 H Environmental Change...... 10 C Haccou, Patsy ...... 18 Cambridge Dictionary of Human Biology Environmental Conservation...... 27 Environmental Education and Advocacy..11 Haining, Robert ...... 7 and Evolution, The ...... 20 Hajek, Ann E...... 23 Author and Title Index 31

Hambler, Clive ...... 7 Keough, Michael J...... 7 Nerve Cells and Animal Behaviour ...... 18 Handbook of Biodiversity Methods...... 5 Kersting, M. Patricia...... 20 Neuhaus, Peter ...... 17 Handbook of Ecological Restoration...... 6 Klinkhamer, Peter...... 10 New, T. R...... 1 Hartley, Sue ...... 2 Koenig, Walter D...... 15 Nonequilibrium Ecology ...... 1 Hauspie, Roland C...... 20 Hemelrijk, Charlotte...... 17 L O Hemin, Zhang...... 8 Hill, David...... 5 Large Herbivore Ecology, Ecosystem Ogg, James G...... 26 Hill, Marquita K...... 23 Dynamics and Conservation ...... 4 Oldfield, Frank ...... 10 Holmes, Debora R...... 29 Leadlay, Etelka...... 9 Öpik, Helgi ...... 22 Hopkins, David...... 2 Lehane, M. J...... 14 Oryx ...... 27 Houghton, John ...... 23 Levinton, Jeffrey S...... 10 Overhill, Raith...... 14 How to Write and Illustrate a Scientific Lichenologist, The ...... 29 Oxenham, Marc ...... 19 Paper...... 26 Life's Solution...... 16 Howison, Sam...... 26 Lim, Bo...... 12 P Lindsey, J. K...... 26 Hoyle, Rebecca ...... 26 Parasites, People, and Places...... 9 Hudson River Estuary, The ...... 10 Lopes, Rosaly...... 26 Low, Pak Sum ...... 12 Parasitism...... 9 Hume, Ian...... 15 Parson, Edward A...... 24 Huq, Saleemul ...... 12 Lucas, Peter W...... 21 Lundberg, Per ...... 1 Pastor, John ...... 4 Pattern Formation...... 26 I Pauly, Daniel...... 16 M Impacts of a Warming Arctic - Arctic Pemberton, J. M...... 9 Climate Impact Assessment...... 24 Macaque Societies...... 20 People and Wildlife, Conflict or Information Theory, Evolution, and The Macroecology: Concepts and Co-existence? ...... 4 Origin of Life...... 18 Consequences...... 3 Perkins, John H...... 29 Ingrouille, Martin ...... 22 Mammals of the Southern African Perrow, Martin R...... 6 Innes, Shelley...... 17 Sub-region, The...... 13 Pest and Vector Control ...... 23 Insect Diversity Conservation...... 8 Mai, Larry L...... 20 Peters, K. E...... 24 Insect Herbivore-Host Dynamics ...... 8 Malone, Eizabeth...... 12 Peters, Kenneth E...... 24 Insects, The...... 14 Management of Marine Ecosystems...... 4 Pheromones and Animal Behaviour...... 17 Introduction to Biodeterioration ...... 24 Mappin, Michael J...... 11 Phylogenetic Handbook, The ...... 19 Introduction to Conservation Genetics.....7 Marsden, Stuart J...... 27 Phylogeny and Conservation ...... 4 Introduction to Partial Differential Marsupials...... 15 Physiology of Flowering Plants, The...... 22 Equations, An...... 26 Marti, Joan ...... 25 Pinard, Michelle...... 2 Introduction to Plant Structure and Mathematical Models in Biology ...... 27 Pinchover, Yehuda...... 26 Development, An ...... 22 Mayr, Ernst ...... 16 Plant-Provided Food for Carnivorous Introduction to Population Biology ...... 7 McDonnell, S. M...... 15 Insects ...... 8 Introduction to the Invertebrates, An .....14 McGowran, Brian...... 25 Plants...... 22 Invertebrate Conservation and McGregor, P. K...... 17 Polunin, Nicholas V. C...... 27 Agricultural Ecosystems...... 1 McGrew, W. C...... 21 Porporato, Amilcare...... 12 Issues and Perspectives in Landscape McInnes, Karina H...... 7 Porter, Duncan M...... 17 Ecology...... 3 Medical Entomology for Students...... 14 Powell, Joseph F...... 21 Methods in Human Growth Research....20 Practical Applied Mathematics ...... 26 Metz, Johan A. J...... 18 Prehistoric Native Americans and J Millar, Jocelyn G...... 8 Ecological Change ...... 10 Jablonski, Nina G...... 19 Mills, D. S...... 15 Primer of Conservation Genetics, A ...... 7 Jagers, Peter ...... 18 Minelli, Alessandro...... 16 Primer on Climate Change and Janssen, Donald...... 8 Moldowan, J. M...... 24 Sustainable Development...... 11 John, David M...... 23 Moldowan, J. Michael ...... 24 Prothero, Donald R...... 15 Johnson, Edward A...... 11 Molinari, Luciano...... 20 Pryor, Frederic L...... 26 Jones, Martin...... 27 Monitoring Ecological Change ...... 6 Pullin, Andrew S...... 7 Jones, Robert Wynn ...... 25 Moore, Janet...... 14 Pulsford, Ann L...... 28 Jongman, Rob H. G...... 3 Moss Flora of Britain and Ireland, The ...22 Pungetti, Gloria ...... 3 Journal of Agricultural Science, The...... 28 Moss, Michael R...... 3 Purvis, Andrew...... 4 Journal of Systematic Palaeontology...... 29 Muller-Schwarze, Dietland...... 8 Journal of the Marine Biological Munasinghe, Mohan...... 11 Q Association of the United Kingdom ....28 Murrell, Gina ...... 22 Journal of Tropical Ecology...... 28 Quinn, Gerry P...... 7 Jury, Stephen ...... 9 N R Natural Enemies ...... 23 K Natural Hazards...... 25 Rabinowitz, Alan...... 4 Kaitala, Veijo ...... 1 Natural Resources and Economic Ranta, Esa ...... 1 Kanwal, Jagmeet ...... 17 Development ...... 13 Raven FRS, J. A...... 28 Kappeler, Peter M...... 21 Naylor, Robert E. L...... 28 Reiners, William A...... 3 Kaumanns, Werner...... 20 Neal, Dick...... 7 Reynolds, Colin...... 1 Keddy, Paul A...... 10 Neanderthals and Modern Humans...... 20 Rhodes, John A...... 27

For monthly email alerts visit www.cambridge.org/eservices 32 Author and Title Index

Risks and Decisions for Conservation T and Environmental Management...... 2 Tautz, Diethard ...... 18 Robinson, William H...... 14 Taxonomy and Plant Conservation...... 9 Rodríguez-Iturbe, Ignacio ...... 12 Tayles, Nancy ...... 19 Rohde, Klaus...... 1 Taylor, Paul D...... 16 Rolfe, Stephen A...... 22 Thierry, Bernard ...... 20 Rosen, Brian ...... 28 Thinking about Biology ...... 25 Rubinstein, Jacob...... 26 Thirgood, Simon...... 4 Ruckstuhl, Kathreen...... 17 Thompson, Ken...... 10 Russon, Anne E...... 21 Tijms, Henk...... 26 Transport Processes in Nature ...... 3 S Tucker, Graham...... 5 Salemi, Marco...... 19 Turner, Ian ...... 28 Samways, Michael J...... 8 Tyler, P.A...... 28 Sargent, Michael G...... 20 Sayer, Jeffrey...... 11 U Science and Politics of Global Climate Understanding Environmental Pollution.23 Change, The...... 24 Understanding Probability...... 26 Science of Sustainable Development, Underwood, A. J...... 7 The...... 11 Urban Insects and Arachnids...... 14 Seal, Kenneth J...... 24 Usher, Michael...... 2 Seasonality in Primates ...... 19 Seed, J. Richard...... 9 Seed, R...... 28 V Self-organisation and Evolution of van den Bergh, Jeroen C. J. M...... 11 Biological and Social Systems...... 17 van den Broeke, Michiel R...... 27 Sell, Peter ...... 22 van Emden, H. F...... 23 Serreze, Mark C...... 24 van Rijn, P. C. J...... 8 Service, M. W...... 23 van Schaik, Carel P...... 19, 21 Service, Mike...... 14 Vandamme, Anne-Mieke ...... 19 Sexual Segregation in Vertebrates ...... 17 Vatutin, Vladimir A...... 18 Sexual Selection in Primates...... 21 Vaughan, Alan P. M...... 27 Shaping Primate Evolution ...... 19 Vincent, Thomas L...... 18 Shaw, Philip...... 5 Visalberghi, Elisabetta...... 22 Shewry, Michael...... 5 Volcano Adventure Guide, The...... 26 Shrubb, Michael...... 25 Volcanoes and the Environment...... 25 Sibbick, John...... 14 Simmons, Peter J...... 18 W Simulating Human Origins and Wäckers, F. L...... 8 Evolution ...... 19 Waldman, John R...... 10 Singh, Mewa ...... 20 Walters, C. C...... 24 Skinner, J. D...... 12 Walters, Clifford C...... 24 Smithers, R. H. N...... 13 Walters, S. M...... 22 Smith, A. J. E...... 22 Waltner-Toews, David ...... 11 Smith, Alan G...... 26 Walton, David W. H...... 27 Smith, Andrew B...... 29 Wanless, Sarah ...... 4 Smith, R. L...... 26 Webster, Stephen...... 25 Smith, Ruth...... 22 Weishampel, David B...... 14 Soay Sheep...... 9 Wessen, K. P...... 19 Sodhi, Navjot S...... 12 What Makes Biology Unique? ...... 16 Southeast Asian Biodiversity in Crisis.....12 Whitton, Brian A...... 23 Spanger-Siegfried, Erika ...... 12 Wiens, John A...... 3 Spatial Analysis...... 6 Wildt, David...... 8 Spatial Data Analysis ...... 7 Wilkinson, Caroline...... 21 Spatial Ecological-Economic Analysis for Willis, Arthur J...... 22 Wetland Management ...... 11 Wiseman, Julian...... 28 Spellerberg, Ian F...... 6 Woodroffe, Rosie ...... 4 Spencer, T...... 12 World's Largest Wetlands, The...... 10 Stagl, Sigrid ...... 12 Wyatt, Tristram D...... 17 Statistical Analysis of Stochastic Processes in Time...... 26 Sutherland, William J...... 7 Y Swart, Rob...... 11 Yockey, Hubert P...... 18 Systematics and Biodiversity...... 28 Young, David ...... 18 Young, G. A...... 26 Young Owl, Marcus...... 20 Customer Services Cambridge University Press Bookshop Booksellers Cambridge University Press Bookshop For order processing and customer service, please contact: occupies the historic site of 1 Trinity UK and Europe International Street, Cambridge CB2 1SZ, where the complete range of titles is on sale. Catherine Atkins Phone + 44 (0)1223 325566 Sophie Ailyati- Phone + 44 (0)1223 325577 Fax + 44 (0)1223 325959 Singleton Fax + 44 (0)1223 325151 Bookshop Manager: Cathy Ashbee Email [email protected] Email [email protected] Phone + 44 (0)1223 333333 or [email protected] Fax + 44 (0)1223 332954 Your telephone call may be monitored for training purposes. Email [email protected] Account-holding booksellers can order online at www.cambridge.org/booksellers or at www.PubEasy.com

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The evolution and extinction of the DINOSAURS

SECOND EDITION

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