Biodiversity II: Understanding and Protecting Our Biological Resources

Front Cover
Joseph Henry Press, Oct 16, 1996 - Science - 560 pages

"The book before you...carries the urgent warning that we are rapidly altering and destroying the environments that have fostered the diversity of life forms for more than a billion years."

With those words, Edward O. Wilson opened the landmark volume Biodiversity (National Academy Press, 1988). Despite this and other such alarms, species continue to vanish at a rapid rate, taking with them their genetic legacy and potential benefits. Many disappear before they can even be identified.

Biodiversity II is a renewed call for urgency. This volume updates readers on how much we already know and how much remains to be identified scientifically. It explores new strategies for quantifying, understanding, and protecting biodiversity, including:

  • New approaches to the integration of electronic data, including a proposal for a U.S. National Biodiversity Information Center.
  • Application of techniques developed in the human genome project to species identification and classification.
  • The Gap Analysis Program of the National Biological Survey, which uses layered satellite, climatic, and biological data to assess distribution and better manage biodiversity.
  • The significant contribution of museum collections to identifying and categorizing species, which is essential for understanding ecological function and for targeting organisms and regions at risk.

The book describes our growing understanding of how megacenters of diversity (e.g., rainforest insects, coral reefs) are formed, maintained, and lost; what can be learned from mounting bird extinctions; and how conservation efforts for neotropical primates have fared. It also explores ecosystem restoration, sustainable development, and agricultural impact.

Biodiversity II reinforces the idea that the conservation of our biological resources is within reach as long as we pool resources; better coordinate the efforts of existing institutionsâ€"museums, universities, and government agenciesâ€"already dedicated to this goal; and enhance support for research, collections, and training. This volume will be important to environmentalists, biologists, ecologists, educators, students, and concerned individuals.

 

Contents

Contents
1
What Is It?
7
Why Is It Important?
15
Tropical Forest Beetles
27
Measuring Global Biodiversity and Its Decline
41
27
67
Protecting Our Biological Resources
68
Butterfly Diversity and a Preliminary Comparison with Bird
69
Rita R Colwell
279
of Evolution and Biodiversity
289
Initial Assessment of Character Sets from Five Nuclear
301
Gap Analysis for Biodiversity Survey and Maintenance
321
Conservation of Biodiversity in Neotropical Primates
341
Conservation Priorities
357
William R Jordan III
371
Patrick Kangas
389

A Comparison
83
9
125
David W Steadman
139
Copyright National Academy of Sciences All rights reserved
161
of the PaleoceneEocene Boundary
163
Implications for Climatic Change and Biodiversity
187
F Christian Thompson
199
Ruth Patrick
213
Unraveling the Taxonomic Diversity
231
as Keystones in Biogeography and Ecology
243
Bowerbirds and the Evolution of BowerBuilding
263
163
408
Daniel H Janzen
411
INSTITUTIONAL HUMAN AND INFORMATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
435
29
447
Challenges of Assessing Microbial Biodiversity
467
A Proposed
491
Santa Rosalia the Turning of the Century and a New
507
Copyright National Academy of Sciences All rights reserved
525
187
529
213
541
475
546

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information