Image for Bird Population Studies

Bird Population Studies : Relevance to Conservation and Management

Part of the Oxford ornithology series series
See all formats and editions

There are more than one-thousand species of threatened birds in the world, while many others are valued for sport and some are serious pests.

All these bird populations require management of one kind or another.

This volume reviews our current understanding of avian population dynamics and explores ways in which population studies can contribute to effective conservation and management. The earlier chapters review general questions such as estimation of demographic parameters, the role of mathematical modelling, and the special problems of island populations and seabird populations.

The specific chapters are devoted to great tits, snow geese, white storks, puffins, flamingos, grey partridge, red grouse, common terns, herring gulls, lesser black-backed gulls, ducks, Florida scrub jays, and northern spotted owls.

The emphasis throughout is on how bird populations are regulated under various constraints and conditions and on what changes we might expect under varying environmental regimes.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£64.60 Save 5.00%
RRP £68.00
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0198540825 / 9780198540823
Paperback / softback
24/06/1993
United Kingdom
700 pages, numerous line figures, tables
163 x 232 mm, 1167 grams