<p><p></p><p></p><p>The first broad overview of conservation needs of Australia’s largely endemic freshwater insects, drawing on examples and information from many parts of the world to illustrate and develop needs and practical prospects for conservation in inland water environments. The wide varie
Insect Conservation and Australia’s Grasslands
✍ Scribed by Tim R. New
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 278
- Edition
- 1st ed. 2019
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Australia’s varied grasslands have suffered massive losses and changes since European settlement, and those changes continue under increasingly intensive human pressures for development and agricultural production. The values of native grasslands for conservation of endemic native biodiversity, both flora and fauna, have led to strong interests in the protection of remaining fragments, especially near urban centres, and documentation of the insects and other inhabitants of grasslands spanning tropical to cool temperate parts of the country. Attention to conservation of grassland insects in Australia is relatively recent, but it is increasingly apparent that grasslands harbour many localised and ecologically specialised endemic species. Their conservation necessarily advances from very incomplete documentation, and draws heavily on lessons from the far better-documented grasslands elsewhere, most notably in the northern hemisphere, and undertaken over far longer periods. From those cases, and the extensive background to grassland management to harmonise conservation with production and amenity values through honing use of processes such as grazing, mowing and fire, the needs and priorities for Australia can become clearer, together with needs for grassland restoration at a variety of scales.
This book is a broad overview of conservation needs of grassland insects in Australia, drawing on the background provided elsewhere in the world on the responses to disturbances, and the ecological importance, of some key insect groups (notably Orthoptera, Hemiptera and Lepidoptera) to suggest how insect conservation in native, pastoral and urban grasslands may be advanced. The substantial references given for each chapter facilitate entry for non-entomologist grassland managers and stewards to appreciate the diversity and importance of Australia’s grassland insects, their vulnerabilities to changes, and the possibilities for conserving them and the wider ecological roles in which they participate.
✦ Table of Contents
Front Matter ....Pages i-xv
Introduction to Grasses and Grasslands (Tim R. New)....Pages 1-35
Australian Grasslands – Variety and Extent (Tim R. New)....Pages 37-57
Agents of Change – Management and Succession (Tim R. New)....Pages 59-69
Intricacies of Grassland Management for Conservation (Tim R. New)....Pages 71-88
Urban Grasslands (Tim R. New)....Pages 89-97
Insects in Grasslands: The Key Groups for Understanding (Tim R. New)....Pages 99-141
Flagship Insect Species in Australia’s Grasslands (Tim R. New)....Pages 143-151
Pasture Pests (Tim R. New)....Pages 153-165
Maintaining Ecological Integrity and Processes (Tim R. New)....Pages 167-178
Grassland Management for Insect Conservation: Grazing, Mowing, and Fire (Tim R. New)....Pages 179-234
Grassland Management for Insect Conservation: Restoration (Tim R. New)....Pages 235-256
Back Matter ....Pages 257-272
✦ Subjects
Life Sciences; Entomology; Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning; Conservation Biology/Ecology; Applied Ecology; Biodiversity; Community & Population Ecology
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