|
Timber Production and Biodiversity Conservation in Tropical Rain Forests
Andrew Grieser Johns with a Foreword by Jeffrey Burley
Cambridge University Press
1997
Paperback 247pp ISBN 0521607620
£21.00
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes The hardback edition is not longer available. This paperback will be available in July 2005.
This book, published as one of the series Cambridge Studies in Applied Ecology and
Resource Management series, is based on the premise that timber production is often
the most economic form of land use in areas of tropical forest: forest preservation is rarely so.
The area of tropical forest reserved for timber production exceeds that of National Parks and
other preserved areas by a ratio of at least 8:1. Although often poorly managed to date,
production forests have the potential to support a high percentage of natural forest biodiversity.
They have a vital role to play in conservation strategies. This book attempts to bridge the current
gap between conservation requirements and commercial interests, indicating the possibilities for
integrated management of tropical forests. The aim, expressed in the following chapters, is to
develop a justification and practical approach for the management of production forest as a
supplement to totally-protected forest in the conservation of tropical biodiversity:
- The issues
- The history and development of tropical forestry
- Changes in the physical environment
- Forest regeneration and gap dynamics
- Responses of individual animal species
- Responses of species assemblages
- Using ecological data in forest management planning
- Intervention to maintain biodiversity
- Field procedures
- The future
- Bibliography
- Index.
To find similar publications, click on a keyword below:
Cambridge University Press
: agriculture & forestry
: biodiversity
: bioproducts
: ecology
: environmental protection
: environmental science
: non-food crops
: raw materials
: trees and timber
|