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Problem-Solving in Conservation Biology and Wildlife Management

Exercises for Class, Field, and Laboratory

by James P. Gibbs, Malcolm L. Hunter, Jr., and Eleanor J. Sterling

Published in 1998 by Blackwell Science, Inc. Cost: $19.95
To order, see:
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/


This website and an Instructor's Manual both accompany the book Problem-Solving in Conservation Biology and Wildlife Management. They present information useful for making each of the book's exercises succeed. The Instructor's Manual can be obtained from the Publisher or in electronic form from the authors (see below). The website provides updates on each exercise, Internet links useful to each exercise, and downloads of the software needed to complete several exercises.

Note to instructors: Because the exercises Fragment, Disperse and Bandcoot are now Java applets and not executable downloads, the answers that students get will differ slightly from the answers in the instructors manual.


Table of Contents


Introduction

Exercise 1. Natural Resource Management and Conservation Biology

Exercise 2. Conservation Values

Exercise 3. Regional Biodiversity


Populations

Exercise 4. Population Viability Analysis

Exercise 5. Life Table Analysis

Exercise 6. Harvesting Populations

Exercise 7. Ecological Monitoring

Exercise 8. Habitat Loss and Fragmentation

Exercise 9. Dispersal

Exercise 10. Population Genetics

Exercise 11. Genetic Drift


Species

Exercise 12. Taxonomy and Conservation

Exercise 13. Natural History Study

Exercise 14. Designing a Zoo

Exercise 15. Exotic Species

Exercise 16. Plant Reintroductions


Ecosystems

Exercise 17. Gap Analysis

Exercise 18. Island Biogeography

Exercise 19. Forest Harvesting

Exercise 20. Edge Effects

Exercise 21. Ecological Surveys

Exercise 22. Restoration Ecology

Exercise 23. Land Use Planning


Policy

Exercise 24. Overpopulation and Overconsumption

Exercise 25. Adversarial Proceedings

Exercise 26. An International Debate

Exercise 27. Conservation Policy


Last updated on July 29, 2008 by Tony Alexander

Please send any comments or suggestions to help us improve these exercises. Or submit an exercise that you have developed for possible inclusion in future editions of this book. To do so, send e-mail or regular mail to:

James P. Gibbs, State University of New York, College of Environmental Science and Forestry
350 Illick Hall, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA (e-mail: jpgibbs@syr.edu)

Thank you!