Forestry and biodiversity learning how to sustain biodiversity in managed forests

Sustainable management is a problem of countries that depend on natural resources. Forests contain much of the world's biodiversity and offer significant renewable resources with a potentially small ecological and carbon footprint. Yet as global demand for forest products increases, conserving biodiversity has become more urgent and challenging. Forestry and Biodiversity makes the case for adaptive management - a structured approach to learning by doing - to sustain biodiversity in managed forests. It draws on the theory and principles of conservation biology and forest ecology and illustrates them, and the challenges they pose, through a practical, real-world study of a 1.1 million hectare commercial operation in a coastal temperate rainforest. Accessible and innovative, this book describes a program for sustaining biodiversity that will be of interest to those who plan, or hope to influence, forest practices and to those who are concerned with wildlife, climate change, and the environment.

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bunnell, Fred L. 1942- editor, Dunsworth, Glen B. 1952- editor/a
Formato: Texto biblioteca
Idioma:eng
Publicado: Vancouver, BC University of British Columbia Press c200
Materias:Conservación de bosques, Ordenación forestal, Gestión de recursos, Selva lluviosa, Conservación de la diversidad biológica, Ecología forestal, Estudio de casos,
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Descripción
Sumario:Sustainable management is a problem of countries that depend on natural resources. Forests contain much of the world's biodiversity and offer significant renewable resources with a potentially small ecological and carbon footprint. Yet as global demand for forest products increases, conserving biodiversity has become more urgent and challenging. Forestry and Biodiversity makes the case for adaptive management - a structured approach to learning by doing - to sustain biodiversity in managed forests. It draws on the theory and principles of conservation biology and forest ecology and illustrates them, and the challenges they pose, through a practical, real-world study of a 1.1 million hectare commercial operation in a coastal temperate rainforest. Accessible and innovative, this book describes a program for sustaining biodiversity that will be of interest to those who plan, or hope to influence, forest practices and to those who are concerned with wildlife, climate change, and the environment.