---- OR ----
 
 


Online Payments by SecureTrading
Acceptance Mark

Search Result:

Image not yet available
Title: Raptors at Risk
Sub-title: proceedings of the V World Conference on Birds of Prey and Owls
By (author): RD Chancellor, BU Meyburg
ISBN10-13: 0888394780 : 9780888394781
Format: Paperback
Size: 215x140mm
Pages: 880
Weight: 1.202 Kg.
Published: Hancock House - May   2000
List Price: 25.99 Pounds Sterling
Availability: In Stock   Qty Available: 1
Subjects: Natural history
Proceedings of the V World Conference on Birds of Prey and Owls. There are still few studies of the long-term dynamics of a complete raptor community, least of all in the tropics. In Africa, the pioneering population monitoring of eagles in Kenya by Brown and in Zimbabwe by Gargett are noteworthy. Furthermore, the consequences of habitat fragmentation and isolation on bird communities, currently a deep concern, have been thoroughly analyzed in temperate forests, as well as in tropical forests but rarely in Africa and never specifically on a raptor community. Reserves that protect natural habitat patches are often bound to become isolated within a matrix of initially similar but soon degraded habitat increasingly unsuitable for at least some species that eventually survive only in the reserve. Moreover, edge effects add their negative consequences to those of isolation and further imperil the survival of small population. This process, well known in forest fragments, may also occur in grasslands. Raptors are highly sensitive to prey availability, vegetation structure pollution and human disturbance and thus are good indicators of environmental changes.
Basket (0)
Delivery is chargeable
Click here for catalogues
 
Follow us on:
Find us on Google+