
Conservation by Proxy
by Caro, Tim; Girling, Sheila-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xv |
Introduction | |
Buzzwords in Conservation Biology | p. 1 |
Shortcuts | p. 1 |
Biodiversity | p. 3 |
Usage | p. 3 |
Documentation | p. 8 |
Remarkable species | p. 8 |
Scale | p. 9 |
Surrogate species in systematic conservation | p. 13 |
Taxonomy of surrogate species | p. 15 |
Other terms | p. 16 |
Difficulties in surrogate typology | p. 17 |
Loose definitions | p. 17 |
Lax terminology | p. 22 |
Multiple applications and purpose | p. 23 |
Using the same species for two surrogate tasks | p. 26 |
Hidden agendas and research displacement activities | p. 26 |
Summary | p. 27 |
Distribution of Biodiversity | |
Species Indicators of Biodiversity at a Large Scale | p. 31 |
A big picture | p. 31 |
Congruency of species richness | p. 32 |
Environmental surrogates | p. 36 |
Higher taxa | p. 37 |
Congruency of endemism | p. 39 |
Congruency of rarity | p. 42 |
Congruency of threatened species | p. 43 |
Complementarity and congruency | p. 45 |
Concordance between different measures of biodiversity | p. 50 |
Global scale | p. 50 |
Continental scale | p. 51 |
Complementarity | p. 53 |
Biodiversity distribution and protected areas | p. 53 |
Practical application | p. 57 |
Summary | p. 58 |
Reserve Site Selection | |
Species Indicators of Biodiversity in Reserve Selection | p. 61 |
A smaller scale | p. 61 |
Cross-taxon congruence of species richness | p. 62 |
Within-taxon congruence of species richness | p. 66 |
Taxon subsets | p. 68 |
Higher taxa | p. 68 |
Morphospecies | p. 71 |
Congruency of endemism, congruency of rarity, and congruency of threatened species | p. 72 |
Concordance between measures of biodiversity | p. 74 |
Species richness and endemism | p. 74 |
Species richness and rarity | p. 76 |
Species richness and threatened species | p. 78 |
Biodiversity metrics | p. 78 |
Congruency of complementarity | p. 79 |
Species richness | p. 79 |
Other biodiversity measures | p. 82 |
Persistence | p. 83 |
Higher taxa | p. 84 |
Protected area coverage | p. 86 |
Marine reserve prioritization | p. 89 |
Environmental surrogates | p. 90 |
Combining environmental and taxonomic surrogates | p. 94 |
Practical issues | p. 95 |
Summary | p. 96 |
Reserve Design and Management | |
Umbrella Species and Landscape Species | p. 99 |
Three conservation goals | p. 99 |
Lambeck's insight | p. 102 |
Umbrella species by taxon | p. 103 |
Plants | p. 103 |
Invertebrates | p. 105 |
Mammals | p. 106 |
Birds | p. 108 |
Choosing an appropriate umbrella species | p. 113 |
Problems with umbrella species | p. 117 |
Management implications | p. 119 |
Landscape species | p. 120 |
Summary | p. 125 |
Keystone, Engineering, and Foundation Species | p. 127 |
The keystone species concept | p. 127 |
Classic keystone species | p. 127 |
Wider scope | p. 129 |
Mesopredator release in temperate ecosystems | p. 132 |
Ecological meltdown in the neotropics | p. 134 |
Keystone introductions | p. 136 |
Removing invasive species | p. 138 |
Problems with using keystone species as a conservation tool | p. 139 |
Reasons for continuing to use keystone species | p. 142 |
Ecosystem engineers | p. 143 |
Mechanisms of habitat modification | p. 144 |
Examples of ecosystem engineers | p. 146 |
Difficulties in using ecosystem engineers in conservation | p. 151 |
Advantages of ecosystem engineers | p. 153 |
Foundation species | p. 153 |
Management issues | p. 154 |
Summary | p. 156 |
Species Indicators of Anthropogenic Change | |
Environmental Indicator Species | p. 159 |
Ecosystem health and biological integrity | p. 159 |
Environmental indicators | p. 162 |
Sentinel species | p. 167 |
Examples of the uses of environmental indicator species | p. 169 |
Marine pollution | p. 169 |
Freshwater pollution | p. 171 |
River modification | p. 174 |
Marine fisheries | p. 177 |
Climate change in marine ecosystems | p. 181 |
Proliferation and obfuscation of terms | p. 184 |
Summary | p. 185 |
Ecological-Disturbance Indicator Species | p. 189 |
Effects of disturbance | p. 189 |
Proposed criteria for indicator species | p. 190 |
Single species and species-groups as indicators of disturbance | p. 194 |
Single species | p. 194 |
Species-groups | p. 196 |
Examples of the use of species-groups in documenting effects of land-use change | p. 197 |
Forest fragmentation: BDFFP | p. 197 |
Countryside biogeography | p. 203 |
Tropical plantations | p. 206 |
Exurban USA | p. 209 |
Changes in populations over time | p. 210 |
Determining the number of species-groups | p. 211 |
Management pointers | p. 213 |
Summary | p. 214 |
Cross-Taxon-Response Indicator Species | p. 217 |
Habitat alteration | p. 217 |
Fora for cross-taxon-response indicator species | p. 219 |
Land-use changes | p. 219 |
Agricultural landscapes | p. 224 |
Management areas | p. 227 |
Intraguild-response indicator species | p. 228 |
Population changes | p. 229 |
Management indicator species | p. 230 |
Difficulties with the MIS concept | p. 233 |
Early warnings | p. 234 |
Substitute species | p. 238 |
Problems with cross-taxon-response indicator species | p. 239 |
Summary | p. 242 |
Promoting Conservation | |
Flagship Species | p. 245 |
Characteristics of flagship species | p. 245 |
Multiple objectives | p. 246 |
Are flagship species successful? | p. 249 |
Public awareness | p. 249 |
Raising funds | p. 251 |
Reserve establishment | p. 251 |
Qualities of flagship species | p. 257 |
Iconic species | p. 258 |
What next? | p. 259 |
Summary | p. 260 |
Summary of Concepts and Cost-Effectiveness | |
Surrogate Species in the Real World | p. 263 |
Surrogate categories | p. 263 |
Synopsis | p. 264 |
Multi-surrogacy | p. 268 |
Predictive power of surrogate species | p. 270 |
Distribution of biodiversity | p. 271 |
Reserve site selection | p. 274 |
Reserve design and management | p. 277 |
Species indicators of anthropogenic change | p. 278 |
Promoting conservation | p. 281 |
Wrap-up | p. 283 |
Summary | p. 284 |
References | p. 287 |
Scientific Names of Species Mentioned in the Text | p. 355 |
Subject Index | p. 365 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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