Historical environmental variation in conservation and natural resource management /

In North America, concepts of Historical Range of Variability are being employed in land-management planning for properties of private organizations and multiple government agencies. The National Park Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, and The...

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Bibliographic Details
Group Author: Wiens, John A.
Published:
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
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Online Access: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/book/10.1002/9781118329726
Summary: In North America, concepts of Historical Range of Variability are being employed in land-management planning for properties of private organizations and multiple government agencies. The National Park Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, and The Nature Conservancy all include elements of historical ecology in their planning processes. Similar approaches are part of land management and conservation in Europe and Australia. Each of these user groups must struggle with the added complication of rapid climate change, rapid land-use change, and tech.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN: 9781118329757 ( ePub)
1118329759 ( ePub)
9781118329733 (MobiPocket)
1118329732 (MobiPocket)
9781118329740 (AdobePDF)
1118329740 (AdobePDF)
9781118329726 (electronic bk.)
1118329724 (electronic bk.)
1444337920 (cloth)
9781444337921 (cloth)
9781444337938 (pbk.)
1444337939 (pbk.)
9781283542418 (MyiLibrary)
1283542412 (MyiLibrary)
Access: Online full text is restricted to subscribers.
Index Number: QH541
CLC: X171
Contents: Front Matter -- Supplemental Images -- Section 1: Background and History. Part Introduction -- Setting the Stage: Theoretical and Conceptual Background of Historical Range of Variation / William H Romme, John A Wiens, Hugh D Safford -- Development of Historical Ecology Concepts and their Application to Resource Management and Conservation / Wayne Padgett, Barbara Schrader, Mary Manning, Timothy Tear -- Section 2: Issues and Challenges. Part Introduction -- Challenges in the Application of Historical Range of Variation to Conservation and Land Management / Gregory D Hayward, Thomas T Veblen, Lowell H Suring, Bob Davis -- Historical Ecology, Climate Change, and Resource Management: Can the Past Still Inform the Future? / Hugh D Safford, Gregory D Hayward, Nicole E Heller, John A Wiens -- What is the Scope of 3History4 in Historical Ecology? Issues of Scale in Management and Conservation / John A Wiens, Hugh D Safford, Kevin McGarigal, William H Romme, Mary Manning -- Native Americans, Ecosystem Development, and Historical Range of Variation / Gregory J Nowacki, Douglas W MacCleery, Frank K Lake -- Conservation and Resource Management in a Changing World: Extending Historical Range of Variation Beyond the Baseline / Stephen T Jackson -- Section 3: Modeling Historic Variation and Its Application for Understanding Future Variability. Part Introduction -- Creating Historical Range of Variation (HRV) Time Series Using Landscape Modeling: Overview and Issues / Robert E Keane -- Modeling Historical Range of Variability at a Range of Scales: an Example Application / Kevin McGarigal, William H Romme -- Section 4: Case Studies of Applications. Part Introduction -- Regional Application of Historical Ecology at Ecologically Defined Scales: Forest Ecosystems in the Colorado Front Range / Thomas T Veblen, William H Romme, Claudia Regan -- Incorporating Concepts of Historical Range of Variation in Ecosystem-Based Management of British Columbia's Coastal Temperate Rainforest / Andy MacKinnon, Sari C Saunders -- Incorporating HRV in Minnesota National Forest Land and Resource Management Plans: a Practitioner's Story / Mary Shedd, Jim Gallagher, Michael Jim̌nez, Duane Lula -- Applying historical fi re-regime concepts to forest management in the western United States: three case studies / Thomas E DeMeo, Frederick J Swanson, Edward B Smith, Steven C Buttrick, Jane Kertis, Jeanne Rice, Christopher D Ringo, Amy Waltz, Chris Zanger, Cheryl A Friesen, John H Cissel -- Using Historical Ecology to Inform Wildlife Conservation, Restoration, and Management / Beth A Hahn, John L Curnutt -- River Floodplain Restoration Experiments Offer a Window into the Past / Ramona O Swenson, Richard J Reiner, Mark Reynolds, Jaymee Marty -- Streams Past and Future: Fluvial Responses to Rapid Environmental Change in the Context of Historical Variation / Daniel A Auerbach, N Leroy Poff, Ryan R McShane, David M Merritt, Matthew I Pyne, Thomas K Wilding -- A Framework for Applying the Historical Range of Variation Concept to Ecosystem Management / William H Romme, Gregory D Hayward, Claudia Regan -- Section 5: Global Perspectives. Part Introduction -- Ecological History Guides the Future of Conservation: Lessons from Africa / A R E Sinclair -- Ecological History has Present and Future Ecological Consequences 6 Case Studies from Australia / David Lindenmayer -- A View from the Past to the Future / Keith J Kirby -- Is the Historical Range of Variation Relevant to Rangeland Management? / Brandon T Bestelmeyer -- Knowing the Fennoscandian Taiga: Ecohistorical Lessons / Yrj̲ Haila -- Section 6: Challenges for the Future. Reflections on the Relevance of History in a Nonstationary World / Julio L Betancourt -- The Growing Importance of the Past in Managing Ecosystems of the Future / Hugh D Safford, John A Wiens, And Gregory D Hayward -- Index.