Synopses & Reviews
As the need increases for sound estimates of impending rates of animal and plant species extinction, scientists must have a firm grounding in the qualitative and quantitative methods required to make the best possible predictions. Extinction Rates offers the most wide-ranging and practical introduction to those methods available. With contributions from an international cast of leading experts, the book combines cutting-edge information on recent and past extinction rates with treatments of underlying ecological and evolutionary causes. Throughout, it highlights apparent differences in extinction rates among taxonomic groups and places, aiming to identify unresolved issues and important questions. Written with advanced undergraduate and graduate students in mind, Extinction Rates will also prove invaluable to researchers in ecology, conservation biology, and the earth and environmental sciences.
Review
"This timely work derives from a 1993 conference that focused on the estimation of extinction rates. The papers are data-driven contributions that focus on all aspects of ongoing extinction rates without ignoring the fossil record. . . .Excellent chapters on how to assess extinction rates, the role of pollinator and disperser failure in plant extinctions, and extinction-rate estimation from molecular phylogenies add much-needed methodological background to the outer chapters. In general, the book is oriented towards a conservation-conscious audience, and it does its job well." --Choice
Synopsis
There is increasing need for good estimates of impending rates of extinction of plant and animal species, based on an understanding of extinction rates in the recent and far past, and on the underlying ecological and evolutionary causes. This book provides a more wide-ranging and data-driven treatment of current and likely future extinction rates than has previously been drawn together in one place. It is directed broadly at senior undergraduates, postgraduate students, and research workers in the general fields of ecology, conservation biology, and the environmental sciences. The authors highlight apparent differences in extinction rates among taxonomic groups and places, aiming to identify unresolved issues and important questions.
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Assessing Extinction Rates
2. Extinctions in the Fossil Record
3. Constancy and Change of Life in the Sea
4. Insect Faunas in Ice Age Environments: Why So Little Extinction?
5. Bird Extinctions in the Central Pacific
6. Extinctions in Mediterranean Areas
7. Recent Past and Future Extinctions in Birds
8. Rates and Patterns of Extinction Among British Invertebrates
9. Assessing the Risk of Plant Extinction Due to Pollinator and Disperser Failure
10. Population Dynamic Principles
11. Estimating Extinction from Molecular Phylogenies
12. Biological Models for Monitoring Species Decline: The Construction and Use of Databases
13. Classification of Species and Its Role in Conservation Planning
14. The Scale of the Human Enterprise and Biodiversity Loss
Author Index
Subject Index