PREFACE 1. A NEW ERA FOR ECOLOGISTS: INCORPORATING CLIMATE CHANGE INTO NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PART I. KEY CHANGES IN CLIMATE AND LIFE 2. CLIMATE CHANGE FROM THE GLOBE TO CALIFORNIA 3. CLIMATIC INFLUENCES ON ECOSYSTEMS PART II. LEARNING FROM CASE STUDIES AND DIALOGUES BETWEEN SCIENTISTS AND RESOURCE MANAGERS 4. MODELING KRILL IN THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT: A 2005 CASE STUDY 5. SHIFTS IN MARINE BIOGEOGRAPHIC RANGES 6. INTEGRATING GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE AND CONSERVATION: A KLAMATH RIVER CASE STUDY 7. POLLINATORS AND MEADOW RESTORATION 8. ELEVATIONAL SHIFTS IN BREEDING BIRDS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA DESERT REGION 9. CONSERVING CALIFORNIA GRASSLANDS INTO AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE 10. SPECIES INVASIONS: LINKING CHANGES IN PLANT COMPOSITION TO CHANGES IN CLIMATE PART III. PERSPECTIVES FOR FRAMING BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF RAPID CLIMATE CHANGE 11. EVOLUTIONARY CONSERVATION UNDER CLIMATE CHANGE 12. FOSSILS PREDICT BIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE 13. HISTORICAL DATA ON SPECIES OCCURRENCE: BRIDGING THE PAST TO THE FUTURE GLOSSARY INDEX
Terry L. Root is Senior Fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment, and Professor, by courtesy, in the Department of Biology at Stanford University. Kimberly R. Hall is a Climate Change Ecologist with The Nature Conservancy and Adjunct Assistant Professor at Michigan State University. Mark P. Herzog is Quantitative Ecologist and Wildlife Biologist at the USGS Western Ecological Research Center. Christine A. Howell is the Regional Wildlife Ecologist for the Pacific Southwest Region of the U.S. Forest Service.
"This is a well-edited book on the implications of climate change for management and conservation in California. Its value ranges beyond California in part because of the diversity of ecosystems is greater than in any other state, and because the generalities derived and questions raised are applicable beyond the third largest of the 50 states." The Quarterly Review of Biology
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |