The Importance of Species : : Perspectives on Expendability and Triage / / ed. by Simon A. Levin, Peter Kareiva.

A great many species are threatened by the expanding human population. Though the public generally favors environmental protection, conservation does not come without sacrifice and cost. Many decision makers wonder if every species is worth the trouble. Of what consequence would the extinction of, s...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Princeton University Press eBook-Package Backlist 2000-2013
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Princeton, NJ : : Princeton University Press, , [2015]
©2003
Year of Publication:2015
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (440 p.) :; 22 tables. 1 halftone. 69 line illus.
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • Contributors
  • Preface
  • Foreword
  • Part I. Using Experimental Removals of Species to Reveal the Consequences of Biodiversity Depletion
  • Introduction
  • 1. Native Thistles: Expendable or Integral to Ecosystem Resistance to Invasion?
  • 2. The Overriding Importance of Environmental Context in Determining the Outcome of Species-Deletion Experiments
  • 3. Species Importance and Context: Spatial and Temporal Variation in Species Interactions
  • 4. Effects of Removing a Vertebrate versus an Invertebrate Predator on a Food Web, and What Is Their Relative Importance?
  • 5. Understanding the Effects of Reduced Biodiversity: A Comparison of Two Approaches
  • Part II. The Anthropogenic Perspective
  • Introduction
  • 6 . Models of Ecosystem Reliability and Their Implications for the Question of Expendability
  • 7. Predicting the Effects of Species Loss on Community Stability
  • 8. One Fish, Two Fish, Old Fish, New Fish: Which Invasions Matter?
  • 9. Ecological Gambling: Expendable Extinctions Versus Acceptable Invasions
  • 10. Rarity and Functional Importance in a Phytoplankton Community
  • 11. Community and Ecosystem Impacts of Single-Species Extinctions
  • Part III. Linkages and Externalities
  • Introduction
  • 12. Social Conflict, Biological Ignorance, and Trying to Agree Which Species Are Expendable
  • 13. Which Mutualists Are Most Essential? Buffering of Plant Reproduction against the Extinction of Pollinators
  • 14.The Expendability of Species: A Test Case Based on the Caterpillars on Goldenrods
  • 15. An Evolutionary Perspective on the Importance of Species: Why Ecologists Care about Evolution
  • 16. Recovering Species of Conservation Concern-Are Populations Expendable?
  • 17. Virus Specificity in Disease Systems: Are Species Redundant?
  • Conclusion: Bob Paine's Contributions to the Science of Assessing Species Importance: Past, Present, and Future?
  • References
  • Index