This book presents 12 effective methods to manage wetlands for conservation. It offers a tool box of causal factors that can be used to protect and restore wetlands to enhance biological diversity and other functions. Each causal factor is introduced, briefly explained, and then illuminated with selected examples from around the world.The book provides a prioritized shopping list of methods for protecting and restoring wetlands. The three first and most important causal factors are flooding, fertility, and natural disturbance. Then nine other causal factors are introduced, including herbivory, sedimentation, roads, invasive species, and coarse woody debris. Each causal factor is carefully linked to the scientific literature and explained using the author’s own experience. The same list of 12 causal factors applies around the world—whether you are managing a temperate zone floodplain, a tropical peatland, a freshwater marsh, or a coastal mangrove swamp. Instead of hiring an expensive team of consultants, or pouring through hundreds of scientific papers, here is one concise guide to methods that can be immediately applied to benefit any wetland.Professor Paul Keddy has spent more than 50 years studying wetlands, and writing and lecturing about the environmental factors that control them. He has published more than 150 scholarly papers, and won multiple scientific prizes. His book Wetland Ecology is widely used to teach the principles of wetland science. Causal Factors for Wetland Management: A Concise Guide has a much simpler message: how to protect and enhance wetlands. In this concise guide, he has condensed a lifetime of experience into just 12 principles. The book is aimed at all people who protect or restore wetlands: park managers, wildlife biologists, landscape architects, engineers, environmental consultants, environmental agencies, conservation authorities, and NGOs—as well as landowners and concerned citizens. Causal Factors for Wetland Management: A Concise Guide is essential reading for anyone who cares for wetlands and wild places.
Les mer
This book presents 12 effective methods to manage wetlands for conservation. Causal Factors for Wetland Management: A Concise Guide is essential reading for anyone who cares for wetlands and wild places.
Les mer
Chapter 1. Introduction to Wetlands.- Chapter 2. The Causal Factor Approach to Wetland Ecology.- Chapter 3. Duration of Flooding is the Most Important Causal Factor.- Chapter 4. Flood Pulses.- Chapter 5. Fertility.- Chapter 6. Natural Disturbance.- Chapter 7. Competition.-  Chapter 8. Herbivory.- Chapter 9. Burial.- Chapter 10. Salinity.- Chapter 11. Roads.- Chapter 12. Coarse Woody Debris.- Chapter 13. Invasive Species are an Emerging Causal Factor.- Chapter 14. Human Population Size.- Chapter 15. The Global Context for Wetland Protection and Restoration.- Chapter 16. Some Review Questions for Managers.
Les mer
This book presents 12 effective methods to manage wetlands for conservation. It offers a tool box of causal factors that can be used to protect and restore wetlands to enhance biological diversity and other functions. Each causal factor is introduced, briefly explained, and then illuminated with selected examples from around the world.The book provides a prioritized shopping list of methods for protecting and restoring wetlands. The three first and most important causal factors are flooding, fertility, and natural disturbance. Then nine other causal factors are introduced, including herbivory, sedimentation, roads, invasive species, and coarse woody debris. Each causal factor is carefully linked to the scientific literature and explained using the author’s own experience. The same list of 12 causal factors applies around the world—whether you are managing a temperate zone floodplain, a tropical peatland, a freshwater marsh, or a coastal mangrove swamp. Instead of hiring an expensive team of consultants, or pouring through hundreds of scientific papers, here is one concise guide to methods that can be immediately applied to benefit any wetland.Professor Paul Keddy has spent more than 50 years studying wetlands, and writing and lecturing about the environmental factors that control them. He has published more than 150 scholarly papers, and won multiple scientific prizes. His book Wetland Ecology is widely used to teach the principles of wetland science. Causal Factors for Wetland Management: A Concise Guide has a much simpler message: how to protect and enhance wetlands. In this concise guide, he has condensed a lifetime of experience into just 12 principles.The book is aimed at all people who protect or restore wetlands: park managers, wildlife biologists, landscape architects, engineers, environmental consultants, environmental agencies, conservation authorities, and NGOs—as well as landowners and concerned citizens. Causal Factors for Wetland Management: A Concise Guide is essential reading for anyone who cares for wetlands and wild places.
Les mer
Contributes to the UN decade for ecosystem restoration Offers a focused, fresh, and direct approach to the causal factors that create wetlands Immediately applicable to conservation and restoration of wetlands
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031217876
Publisert
2023-02-08
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer International Publishing AG
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Professional/practitioner, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Paul A. Keddy has been a professor of ecology for more than 40 years and has published over 150 scholarly papers and six books. His awards include a National Wetlands Award for Science Research from the Environmental Law Institute, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Wetland Scientists, and a Meritorious Service Medal from the Governor General of Canada. Dr. Keddy’s Wetland Ecology: Principles and Conservation, now entering its third edition, has won a Merit Award from SWS. Dr. Keddy lives within a nature reserve in Canada, where he continues research, writing, and public lectures. He has served as a volunteer to organizations such as NSF, NSERC, World Wildlife Fund, and The Nature Conservancy. His work in theoretical ecology includes A Framework for Community Ecology, co-authored with Daniel Laughlin. His applied work has covered protection of wetlands and forests in areas including Nova Scotia, Louisiana, and Ontario.