Biological Diversity provides an up to date,
authoritative review of the methods of measuring and
assessing biological diversity, together with their
application. The book's emphasis is on quantifying the
variety, abundance, and occurrence of taxa, and on
providing objective and clear guidance for both
scientists and managers. This is a fast-moving field and
one that is the focus of intense research interest.
However the rapid development of new methods, the
inconsistent and sometimes confusing application of old
ones, and the lack of consensus in the literature about
the best approach, means that there is a real need for a
current synthesis. Biological Diversity covers
fundamental measurement issues such as sampling,
re-examines familiar diversity metrics (including
species richness, diversity statistics, and estimates of
spatial and temporal turnover), discusses species
abundance distributions and how best to fit them,
explores species occurrence and the spatial structure of
biodiversity, and investigates alternative approaches
used to assess trait, phylogenetic, and genetic
diversity.The final section of the book turns to a
selection of contemporary challenges such as measuring
microbial diversity, evaluating the impact of
disturbance, assessing biodiversity in managed
landscapes, measuring diversity in the imperfect fossil
record, and using species density estimates in
management and conservation. |
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