Preface vii
Acknowledgements ix
Companion website and CD-ROM x
1 Introduction: the role of science in conservation 1
Part I Basic concepts in scientific investigations for conservation 7
2 Using models in conservation biology 9
3 Models of population dynamics 15
4 Applying population models to conservation 32
5 Basics of study design and analysis 47
Part II Conservation studies and monitoring programs 71
6 General principles of estimation 73
7 Occupancy (presence–absence) analysis 81
8 Sample counts for abundance estimation 101
9 Distance sampling for estimating density and abundance 115
10 Capture–mark–recapture studies for estimating abundance and density 135
11 Estimation of survival from radiotelemetry, nesting success studies, and age distributions 160
12 Mark–recapture for estimating survival, recruitment, abundance, and movement rates 189
13 Analysis of habitat 219
14 Estimation of species richness and other community parameters 230
Part III Integrating modeling and monitoring for conservation 251
15 Elements of conservation decision making 253
16 Accounting for uncertainty in conservation decisions 265
17 Learning and adaptive management 274
18 Case study: decision modeling and adaptive management for declining grassland birds in the southeastern USA 289
19 Summary and recommendations 303
Literature cited 307
Glossary 314
Appendix A: Statistical and modeling programs available on the worldwide web 324
Appendix B: Other internet resources 326
Appendix C: Modeling and statistical notation 328
Appendix D: Key to abundance and parameter estimation 331
Index 337
DR MICHAEL J. CONROY has nearly 30 years of experience in developing sampling approaches, statistical estimation methods, and modeling for a wide variety of natural resource management problems. He is the author of numerous publications in applied quantitative approaches, and is coauthor on the widely acclaimed volume by Williams et al. (2002). He is currently Adjunct Professor of Wildlife Ecology and Management at the University of Georgia, and Assistant Unit Leader of the Georgia Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. He is literate in Spanish and has taught short courses on quantitative methods in the US, Spain, India, and Latin America.
DR JOHN P. CARROLL has been researching conservation issues relative to the Galliformes for more than 20 years. He is Chair of the World Pheasant Association/BirdLife/IUCN Species Survival Commission Partridge, Quail, and Francolin Specialist Group. He is author of numerous publications on the biology and conservation of Galliformes and the effects of agricultural practices on wildlife. He is currently Professor of Wildlife Ecology and Management in the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia. He has taught short courses on ??? eld research methods and techniques in Malaysia, China, Nepal, and India.
"Overall, this would be a plausible book for an upper-division
course in which students would learn, rather painlessly, the
necessary combination of observation and mathematics necessary to
make important conservation decisions." (CHOICE, December 2009)
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