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Description:
One of the most striking and persistent ways
humans dominate Earth is by changing land-cover as we
settle a region. Much of our ecological understanding
about this process comes from studies of birds, yet
the existing literature is scattered, mostly decades
old, and rarely synthesized or standardized. The twenty-seven
contributions authored by leaders in the fields of avian
and urban ecology present a unique summary of current
research on birds in settled environments ranging from
wildlands to exurban, rural to urban. Ecologists, land
managers, wildlife managers, evolutionary ecologists,
urban planners, landscape architects, and conservation
biologists will find our information useful because
we address the conservation and evolutionary implications
of urban life from an ecological and planning perspective.
Graduate students in these fields also will find the
volume to be a useful summary and synthesis of current
research, extant literature, and prescriptions for future
work. All interested in human-driven land-cover changes
will benefit from a perusal of this book because we
present high altitude photographs of each study area.
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