Termin realizacji zamówienia: ok. 10-14 dni roboczych.
Darmowa dostawa!
A global synthesis of the impacts of wildfires and controlled burning on insects, bringing together much hitherto scattered information to provide a guide to improved conservation management practice.
"This book aims to survey current knowledge of the intricate relationships between fire and insect populations and how this knowledge can be applied toward insect management and conservation. ... The well-written book contains numerous graphs, tables, and diagrams, a complete list of references, and a comprehensive index. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals/practitioners in fire ecology." (D. L. Richter, Choice, Vol. 52 (9), May, 2015)
Contents
1 Fire ecology and insect ecology
1.1 Introduction: a perspective of fires
1.2 Fire regimes
1.3 Pyromes
1.4 Plant responses to fire
1.5 Mosaics
1.6 Refuges
1.7 Habitat
1.8 Integration
2 Insect responses to fire
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Impacts and responses
2.3 Pyrophilous insects
2.4 Recovery from fire
2.5 The variety of studies
2.6 Interpreting the outcomes
2.7 Focal groups
3 Sampling and study techniques
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Methods
3.3 Problems with rare species
4 Ecological impacts of fires on insects
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Gradients in herbivory
4.3 Plant vigour
4.4 Interpreting change
4.5 Impacts on freshwater insects
4.6 Climate and scale
4.7 Opportunism: learning from accidents
5 Fires and insect pest management
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Forest pests
5.3 Rangeland pests
5.4 Saproxylic insects
5.5 Invasive ants
6 Fire in threatened species conservation management
6.1 Introduction
6.2 General lessons from examples
6.3 Species: some cases
7 Fire and insect assemblages
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Representative assemblages
7.3 Changes and comparisons
8 Fire as a management component
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Fire in wider management
8.3 Untangling effects
8.4 Fire retardants
8.5 Fire suppression
9 Prospects
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Natural disturbance?
9.3 Prospects for protocols
References
Index
Emeritus Professor Tim New is an entomologist with broad interests in insect systematics, ecology and conservation. For long based at La Trobe University, Melbourne, he has travelled widely to collect and study insects in many parts of the world, and his extensive publications on these topics include about 40 books. He is recognised globally as one of the leading advocates for insect conservation.
This global synthesis of information on impacts of wildfires and prescribed burning on insect species and assemblages brings together examples from many parts of the world, and from many different environments and production systems. It demonstrates the wide variety of insect responses to fire, and the often subtle balance between fire being a severe threat or a valuable management component. Recent increased calls for massively increased fuel reduction burning have drawn attention to details of fire regimes, and how applications of fire may be tailored for greater conservation benefit. Some of the more traditional uses of fire in forestry, grassland succession, and agroecosystems have progressively been modified for greater consideration of wellbeing of sensitive insects and other biota. Increasing understanding of insect responses to fires can indicate factors that may be considered in improved protocols for prescribed burning in the future, and for incorporating fire in management plans for threatened insect species and wider assemblages.