Ecology and Conservation Books Catalogue 2020 - Cambridge University Press

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ECOLOGY

and

Conservation www.cambridge.org/econs


This catalogue contains a selection of our most recent publishing in Ecology and Conservation. Please visit our website for a full and searchable listing of all our titles in print and also an extensive range of news, features and resources. Our online ordering service is secure and easy to use. Prices and publication dates are correct at the time of going to press but are subject to alteration without notice. Cambridge University Press advances knowledge, learning and research worldwide.

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Contents Highlights

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Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

5

Ecological Reviews

8

Conservation Biology

13

Systematics Association Special Volume Series 14 Ecology & Conservation

15

Evolution

20

Plant Sciences

21

Professional Development

24

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HIGHLIGHTS Shepherding Nature The Challenge of Conservation Reliance J. Michael Scott University of Idaho

John A. Wiens Colorado State University

Beatrice Van Horne US Forest Service

and Dale D. Goble University of Idaho

Those concerned about the future of imperiled species will appreciate the compelling case studies and explanations this book offers. Readers will gain an understanding of the challenge of conserving a growing number of conservation-reliant species with limited resources and the importance of collaboration among people with diverse interests. • Acknowledges the validity of multiple perspectives and concerns, and the importance of including these in conservation and management activities • Describes how legal approaches and conservation prioritizations need to change to accommodate conservation reliance • Discusses the current and future prevalence of conservation reliance and associated costs and tradeoffs ‘Long-term commitments and careful attention to relationships with human societies are going to be critical for the successful preservation of many species in coming decades. This book, written by leading practitioners, provides timely and expert guidance for conservation planning.’ Georgina Mace, University College London 2020 228 x 152 mm 396pp 62 b/w illus. 57 colour illus. 978-1-108-42182-9 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-43433-1 Paperback £29.99 / US$39.99 For all formats available, see

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The Biology of Reproduction Giuseppe Fusco Università degli Studi di Padova, Italy

and Alessandro Minelli Università degli Studi di Padova, Italy

Offering insights into the biology of reproduction through the whole tree of life, this book is rigorous yet accessible. The integrated approach enables readers from different disciplines to access the commonalities across phenomena. It is ideal for students and researchers in biology, and those looking for an entry point to deeper study. • Encourages interdisciplinary dialogue between researchers working on different taxonomic groups, promoting a more inclusive perspective on organismal biology • A flexible and informative text that can be used as a college textbook, a reference book with two complementary entry keys (by problem and by taxonomic group), or as an effective entry point for deeper study on specific topics, through specialist literature references • Inspires an integrated and broad attitude to biological concepts, and clearly presents generalisations that do not obscure the diversity of reproductive phenomena in different groups of organisms ‘Fusco’s and Minelli’s The Biology of Reproduction is impressive in scope. ...In an easily accessible style and exemplified through a wide range of illustrations, it offers the reader a great stepping stone to more in-depth comparative studies. ’ Jan Baedke, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany 2019 247 x 174 mm 490pp 200 b/w illus. 163 colour illus. 978-1-108-49985-9 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-1-108-73171-3 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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Highlights

TEXTBOOK

21st Century Guidebook to Fungi Second edition David Moore Geoffrey D. Robson and Anthony P. J. Trinci University of Manchester

A comprehensive new edition that provides mycology students with an interdisciplinary view of the kingdom fungi. Chapters range from ecology and evolution, diversity and taxonomy, cell biology and biochemistry, to genetics and genomics, biotechnology and bioinformatics. Includes updated explanatory figures, colour illustrations and online material.

FOURTH EDITION

Anatomy of Flowering Plants An Introduction to Plant Structure and Development

Paula J. Rudall

• Combines classical mycology with advances in fungal genome analyses and computational biology, ensuring students acquire an up-todate, comprehensive understanding of the field • A unique systems biology approach helps students to appreciate fungi as critical components of wider ecosystems • References point students to interactive resources on a complementary website ‘21st Century Guidebook to Fungi describes the fungal story with art and excellence. This guidebook is authored by three recognized fungal experts to whom I was privileged to meet. It has everything one wants to find in a book; it is easy to read, it has informative headings, wellorganized tables and illustrative figures, and it contains all one wants to know about the matter. Definitely, this is an invaluable book that all those passionate about fungi must have!’ Carmen Sánchez, Autonomous University of Tlaxcala, Mexico 2020 280 x 216 mm 610pp 170 b/w illus. 160 colour illus. 49 tables 978-1-108-74568-0 Paperback £49.99 / US$64.99 For all formats available, see

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Anatomy of Flowering Plants A Beginner’s Guide to Plant Structure and Development Fourth edition Paula Rudall Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

Well-illustrated fourth edition, representing a clear and succinct text for students, researchers and anyone interested in plant form. Describes the internal structure of flowering plants, using a magnification range from the simple hand-lens to the electron microscope. Covers all plant organs, including stem, root, leaf, flower, seed and fruit. • Updated and expanded previous edition including new ideas on plant structure • Relevant to wide range of current student courses, and can usefully function as the only plant anatomy book possessed by non-specialist botanists • It incorporates an updated evolutionaryphylogenetic context for plant names 2020 216 x 138 mm c.200pp 73 b/w illus. 978-1-108-74912-1 Paperback c. £24.99 / c. US$34.99 Publication September 2020 For all formats available, see

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ECOLOGY, BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION Comparative Plant Succession among Terrestrial Biomes of the World

Curious about Nature

Karel Prach

Scottish Natural Heritage

University of South Bohemia, Czech Republic

and Lawrence R. Walker University of Nevada, Las Vegas

This book provides the first global synthesis comparing plant succession across all major terrestrial biomes and disturbances. Students and researchers in ecology, restoration ecology and conservation biology will benefit from insights into general patterns, and restorationists can utilize succession concepts in a rapidly changing world. • Provides the first authoritative overview of successional dynamics following all disturbances in all terrestrial biomes • A comparative summary of key mechanisms driving succession encourages readers to decipher whether generalizations exist • Enables practitioners of restoration, especially from little-studied biomes, to better understand and address challenges from damaged environments and climate change

Contents: Part I. Plant Succession and Biomes; Part II. Succession by Disturbance Type; Part III. Synthesis. Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

2020 228 x 152 mm 412pp 91 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47276-0 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-46024-8 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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A Passion for Fieldwork Edited by Tim Burt Durham University

and Des Thompson

Field studies form the backbone of research, teaching, policy and advisory work. For the first time, a single textbook provides an overview of the diversity, impacts and importance of field work. The authors capture the spirit of enjoying fieldwork, and the many benefits it brings to society. • Reviews the history of fieldwork across the biological and geographical sciences • Provides evidence of the importance of taking students out of the classroom • Forty contributors provide a wide range of examples, all extolling the importance of being in the field ‘This book amply delivers its strapline ‘passion for fieldwork’. With its informal yet informed writing, this eclectic collection of practitioners and research findings provides something for everyone. There is no denying its central message, that field studies inspire and ignite curiosity and remain central to our guardianship of the planet.’ Gill Miller, President of The Geographical Association, 2019–20

Contents: Part I. Getting Curious about Nature; Part II. Inspiring Fieldwork; Part III. Reflections and where next for field studies. Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

2020 228 x 152 mm 412pp 139 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42804-0 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-44864-2 Paperback £29.99 / US$39.99 For all formats available, see

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Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

Ecological-Economic Modelling for Biodiversity Conservation Martin Drechsler Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, UFZ, Leipzig

Essential reading for researchers and graduate students from the fields of ecology, economics or mathematical modeling who are interested in biodiversity conservation and wish to learn about the respective other discipline(s) to build integrated ecological-economic models. This book takes an intermediate level between concepts and mathematics. • Provides an overview on state-of-the-art concepts and approaches to ecologicaleconomic modelling • Contains many examples from the literature that illustrate the presented concepts and approaches and facilitate understanding of the respective other discipline(s) • Presents a pragmatic problem-oriented approach to modelling in the field of biodiversity economics

Contents: Part I. Modelling; Part II. Ecological Modelling; Part III. Economic Modelling; Part IV. Ecological-Economic Modelling. Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

2020 228 x 152 mm 312pp 51 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49376-5 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-72551-4 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108493765

Freshwater Biodiversity Status, Threats and Conservation David Dudgeon The University of Hong Kong

Intended for readers interested in ecology conservation and natural history, this book describes the threats humans pose to freshwater animals, making them more endangered than their land and sea counterparts. The consequences of human activities on freshwater ecosystems, and how to mitigate them, is a recurring theme. • Provides an integrated account of the manifold threats to freshwater biodiversity on a global scale • Offers a broad taxonomic coverage, including both invertebrates and vertebrates, with a strong emphasis on fishes that are used to emphasize the need to protect these animals ‘in their own right’ but also because of their value in supporting human livelihoods • Presents a broad geographic coverage, incorporating biodiversity in lakes and rivers, with strong emphasis on the tropics Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

2020 228 x 152 mm 514pp 10 b/w illus. 25 colour illus. 14 tables 978-0-521-76803-0 Hardback £69.99 / c. US$89.99 978-0-521-74519-2 Paperback £34.99 / c. US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

Joint Species Distribution Modelling

Soil Fauna Assemblages

With Applications in R Otso Ovaskainen and Nerea Abrego

Global to Local Scales Uffe N. Nielsen

University of Helsinki

This book equips students, early career researchers and those new to soil ecology with an introduction to the soil fauna, their contributions to ecosystem function, and the mechanisms that structure soil fauna assemblages. More experienced soil ecologists can use the book as an essential compendium on soil fauna ecology.

Western Sydney University

Joint Species Distribution Modelling is for graduate students and researchers interested in analysing data on community ecology and placing their results in the context of modern ecological theory. With the help of example R-scripts, readers will learn how to conduct and interpret statistical analyses. • Presents a conceptual, theoretical and historical background to community ecology, enabling readers to link statistical methods and results of statistical analyses to community ecology theory • Develops the joint species distribution model of Hierarchical Modelling of Species Communities step-by-step and in great detail, encouraging readers with a limited statistical background to connect mathematical equations with their intuitive interpretations, and providing readers with statistical expertise with full technical details • Includes an extensive set of examples and illustrations of joint species distribution modelling, implemented through the R-package HMSC-R, allowing readers to connect the theoretical parts of the book to practical implementations, and to modify the example R-scripts to analyse their own data

Contents: Part I. Introduction to Community Ecology; Part II. Building a Joint Species Distribution Model Step by Step; Part III. Applications and Perspectives.

• Provides an approachable reference volume for a broad range of readers, from general ecology enthusiasts to students and early career researchers to well established soil ecologists • Outlines contemporary knowledge and identifies key knowledge gaps to guide future work • Promotes the interest in soil fauna and their significant contributions to ecosystem function Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

2019 228 x 152 mm 378pp 52 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-107-19148-8 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-316-64210-8 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107191488

Ecology, Biodiversity and Conservation

2020 228 x 152 mm 388pp 117 b/w illus. 17 colour illus. 978-1-108-49246-1 Hardback £89.99 / c. US$124.99 978-1-108-71678-9 Paperback £34.99 / c. US$49.99 For all formats available, see

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ECOLOGICAL REVIEWS AVAILABLE OPEN ACCESS

Conservation Research, Policy and Practice Edited by William J. Sutherland University of Cambridge

Peter N. M. Brotherton Natural England

Zoe G. Davies Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology (DICE), University of Kent

Nancy Ockendon University of Cambridge

Nathalie Pettorelli Zoological Society of London

and Juliet A. Vickery Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Bedfordshire

Developed following the success of an international symposium, this book examines how to make conservation more effective through strengthening links between science research, policy and practice. Ideal for practitioners, researchers, graduate students and policymakers. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. • Contributions from experienced and wellrenowned academics and practitioners provide an honest, critical overview of the successes and challenges of linking science and policy • Breaks down the components of policy making and testing, empowering ecologists and conservationists to help develop scientifically informed policy, and understand the outcomes of policies when they are implemented • Includes colour illustrations, which help readers to understand decision-making and policy formation strategies, and various modelling approaches • This book is also available as Open Access

‘Conservation Research, Policy and Practice is an excellent handbook on how to conduct research in conservation and then translate it into an impactful outcome. It explores the complexity of horizon scanning and interacting with policy, while providing clear guidance on how to develop a Theory of Change. This book will aid anyone wishing for their research to have an impact, particularly in conservation but also any interdisciplinary pursuit.’ Dr Grant Hill-Cawthorne, Head of the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology

Contents: Part I. Identifying Priorities and Collating the Evidence; Part II. Influencing and Making Decisions; Part III. Communicating the Message. Ecological Reviews

2020 247 x 174 mm 368pp 37 b/w illus. 20 colour illus. 978-1-108-71458-7 Paperback £39.99 / US$49.99 For all formats available, see

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Life in Extreme Environments Insights in Biological Capability Edited by Guido di Prisco National Research Council of Italy

Howell G. M. Edwards University of Bradford

Josef Elster University of South Bohemia, Czech Republic

and Ad H. L. Huiskes Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research

From the geographical poles to outer space, this book provides a multidisciplinary account of the adaptations and responses of biota living in extreme environments, and these systems’ susceptibility and resilience to change. A must-read for


Ecological Reviews

graduate students and researchers in conservation, marine biology, evolutionary biology, and astrobiology. • Strong connections between themes and emphasis of their relevance to important contemporary challenges, both scientific and societal, helps readers to understand the impacts of climate change and the need to defend biodiversity • A diverse team of contributors provide a variety of answers to the question of how life forms are limited by extreme external biotic and abiotic factors, and how they have been able to adapt • Examples of interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary science in action shows readers the benefits of collaboration and knowledge exchange between disciplines

Contents: Part I. Extreme Environments; Part II. Biodiversity, Bioenergetic Processes, and Biotic and Abiotic Interactions; Part III. Life in Extreme Environments and the Responses to Change; Part IV. Life and Habitability. Ecological Reviews

2020 244 x 170 mm c.450pp 978-1-108-49856-2 Hardback c. £99.99 / c. US$139.99 978-1-108-72420-3 Paperback c. £39.99 / c. US$54.99 Publication October 2020 For all formats available, see

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Microbiomes of Soils, Plants and Animals An Integrated Approach Edited by Rachael E. Antwis University of Salford

Xavier A. Harrison University of Exeter

and Michael J. Cox University of Birmingham

Covering the breadth of topics in microbiome research, this book explores the interdependence between microbiomes and plant, animal and human hosts, across a range of ecosystems. Leading contributors draw parallels and contrasts, and discuss how microbiomes influence everything from the food we eat, to organismal health and ecosystem functioning. • Covers the breadth of microbiome research across plant and animal hosts, representing the full spectrum of fields of hostassociated microbiome research • Interdisciplinary collaboration between authors draws out commonalities and contrasts between hosts across different environments • Includes plenty of examples of practical and analytical studies, demonstrating best practice and novel approaches for researchers in, or new to, the field Ecological Reviews

2020 247 x 174 mm 248pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47371-2 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-46248-8 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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Ecological Reviews

Grasslands and Climate Change Edited by David J. Gibson Southern Illinois University, Carbondale

and Jonathan A. Newman University of Guelph, Ontario

Grasslands are extremely important for forage, biodiversity, and ecosystem services across the globe. Climate change is affecting this biome in ways we are only starting to understand, and this book documents the current state of knowledge, drawing on research from an international team of grassland ecology experts. • Brings together a wide-ranging, diverse, and international group of experts to interrogate how grassland ecology and climate change interact in the Anthropocene era • Identifies vital research and conservation needs to ensure grassland ecosystems remain environmentally sustainable under climate change, and highlights how ecologists can contribute to climate change mitigation • Summarising current knowledge, this book is for anyone working in grassland ecology, climate change and conservation, from graduate students and academics to researchers and managers ‘Grasslands and Climate Change highlights the many uncertainties around changes we will witness. This book points out … [that] there have been many botched policy decisions for traditional grassland, and these must be understood if climate related interventions are to succeed.’ Rebecca Nesbit, The Biologist

Contents: Part I. Grassland Dynamics and Climate Change; Part II. Species Traits, Functional Groups, and Evolutionary Change; Part III. Dealing with Climate Change Effects. Ecological Reviews

2019 247 x 174 mm 376pp 46 b/w illus. 18 tables 978-1-107-19526-4 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-316-64677-9 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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Rewilding Edited by Nathalie Pettorelli Institute of Zoology, London

Sarah M. Durant Institute of Zoology, London

and Johan T. du Toit Utah State University

A pioneering work that addresses rewilding with a global and interdisciplinary perspective, summarizing current thinking on this topic. It provides a comprehensive introduction to this conservation approach, outlining key concepts and detailing informative case studies, while considering the benefits, risks and social realities of rewilding. • An interdisciplinary volume with chapters covering ecology, conservation biology, sociology, psychology, aesthetics, economics and history, and which considers the human dimensions of rewilding • Includes concrete examples and detailed case studies to expose the reader to both theoretical and practical considerations in rewilding • Provides a comprehensive and thorough overview of current thinking on this new and growing conservation approach ‘Rewilding is the first book to be published solely to explore the concepts, benefits and risks of rewilding in depth, and it will be a key resource for stakeholders and on undergraduate and graduate courses.’ Susan Alexander, The Biologist Ecological Reviews

2019 247 x 174 mm 460pp 39 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47267-8 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00 978-1-108-46012-5 Paperback £37.99 / US$49.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108472678


Ecological Reviews

Agricultural Resilience Perspectives from Ecology and Economics Edited by Sarah M. Gardner GardnerLoboAssociates

Stephen J. Ramsden University of Nottingham

and Rosemary S. Hails The National Trust

Drawing on ecology, economics and social sciences to explore resilience in agriculture, this book provides an interdisciplinary perspective on approaches needed to foster adaptability. It will interest researchers, policy-makers and students seeking to build sustainable farming systems amidst the uncertainties of climate change and market volatility. • Presents an interdisciplinary approach which combines terminology from economics, ecology and the social sciences to promote shared understanding and, crucially, more effective decision making • Provides information and tools for those seeking to build a sustainable farming industry, a hugely topical concern under the threat of climate change and economic volatility • Authored by a series of internationally leading specialists on the interface of ecological and economical thinking in the topic of sustainable agriculture ‘The 36 contributors from various institutions have produced a valuable text that is a vital reminder of the multifaceted nature of agriculture at a time when a warming world is changing rapidly and the global population is increasing.’ A. M. Mannion, The Biologist

Contents: Part I. Biodiversity, Ecosystem Services and Resilience in Agricultural Systems; Part II. Integrating Biodiversity and Building Resilience into Agricultural Systems. Ecological Reviews

2019 247 x 174 mm 362pp 59 b/w illus. 11 tables 978-1-107-06762-2 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 978-1-107-66587-3 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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Ecological Reviews

Wildlife Disease Ecology Linking Theory to Data and Application Edited by Kenneth Wilson Lancaster University

Andy Fenton University of Liverpool

and Dan Tompkins Predator Free 2050 Ltd

Infectious diseases in animals and plants can threaten biodiversity. This book explores wildlife diseases in detail, demonstrating how theoretical considerations can shed light on their evolution, spread and management. A valuable introduction for students and a key text that provides novel insights for researchers, professionals and policymakers. • Integrates theory and application of wildlife disease ecology, enabling readers to gain a deep understanding of the subject in real world examples • Using key case studies in the field, the book illustrates the development and testing of important epidemiological and evolutionary theories • Extensively illustrated and written in an engaging style, the book provides an valuable introduction to students new to the field, as well as delivering novel insights for researchers, managers and policymakers ‘Overall, this is a fascinating collection of studies that showcases why wildlife diseases are worthy of study and how combining field observations, experiments, mathematical models and the latest in genomic and molecular research provides not only research insight, but also contributes to effective conservation and management efforts.’ Rob Robinson, British Trust for Ornithology

Contents: Part I. Understanding Within-Host Processes; Part II. Understanding Between-Host Processes; Part III. Understanding Wildlife Disease Ecology at the Community and Landscape Level. Ecological Reviews

2019 247 x 174 mm 690pp 284 b/w illus. 978-1-107-13656-4 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-316-50190-0 Paperback £44.99 / US$59.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781107136564


CONSERVATION BIOLOGY Human–Wildlife Interactions Turning Conflict into Coexistence Edited by Beatrice Frank Capital Regional District of Victoria Regional Parks

Jenny A. Glikman Institute for Conservation Research, San Diego Zoo Global

and Silvio Marchini Universidade de São Paulo

Human-wildlife conflict is an urgent challenge for conservation. Framing humanwildlife interactions strictly as conflict, however, limits the array of solutions. With a broader perspective that emphasises tolerance and coexistence, this book presents solutions to turn conflict into coexistence. • Describes a variety of new perspectives and solutions focusing on coexistence rather than conflict, and intends to catalyse a paradigm shift in wildlife management and conservation from human-wildlife conflict to human-wildlife interactions and coexistence • Presents a newly developed concept to foster the inclusion of tolerance and coexistence in human-wildlife research: the conflict-to-coexistence continuum • Case studies illustrate frameworks on coexisting with urban wildlife, explore governance for long distance migration, discuss effectiveness and acceptability of interventions for coexistence, and define the place wildlife holds in different landscapes ‘The authors collectively have expertise in ecology and in the social sciences.’ Amanda Hardy, The Biologist Conservation Biology, 23

2019 228 x 152 mm c.476pp 48 b/w illus. 978-1-108-41606-1 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-40258-3 Paperback £34.99 / US$44.99 For all formats available, see

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SYSTEMATICS ASSOCIATION SPECIAL VOLUME SERIES Endophytes for a Growing World

Interactions in the Marine Benthos

Edited by Trevor R. Hodkinson

Global Patterns and Processes Edited by Stephen J. Hawkins

Trinity College Dublin

Fiona M. Doohan University College Dublin

Matthew J. Saunders Trinity College Dublin

and Brian R. Murphy

Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, Plymouth

Katrin Bohn Natural England

Louise B. Firth University of Plymouth

Trinity College Dublin

and Gray A. Williams

Outlines the core challenges to agriculture and food security and describes how endophytes can contribute to more sustainable agriculture with fewer chemical inputs. Invaluable to researchers working on endophytes in issues of food security, forestry, sustainability, plant pathology, microbiology and plant protection.

The University of Hong Kong

• Focuses on the core themes of manipulating the plant microbiome for sustainable plant production in a changing world • Summarises the general application of endophytes to agriculture, forestry and medicine • Describes the role of endophytes in issues of food security, forestry, sustainability and health

Contents: Part I. Introduction; Part II. Role of Endophytes in Growth and Biotic and Abiotic Stress Resistance; Part III. Diversity and Community Ecology of Endophytes; Part IV. Endophytes for Novel Biomolecules and In Vitro Methods; Part V. Application and Commercialisation of Endophytes in Crop Production. 2019 246 x 189 mm 444pp 45 b/w illus. 8 colour illus. 978-1-108-47176-3 Hardback £110.00 / US$140.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108471763

Taking a global and regional approach, this book considers how abiotic and biotic interactions shape ecosystem functioning and patterns of marine biodiversity, and the impact phylogeographic processes and biogeographic interactions have on coastal systems. It is aimed at researchers, graduate students, academics, and conservation practitioners. • The synthesis of the Aquatic Biodiversity and Ecosystems Conference (ABEC) 2015, this book provides a comprehensive update on work in the field over the twenty-five years since the 1992 publication of PlantAnimal Interactions in the Marine Benthos • Includes less-studied regions to stimulate further work in areas of high biodiversity but low investment in scientific research, incorporating a global approach • Takes a regional and habitat perspective, considering abiotic and biotic interactions in different regions to examine and compare community structuring processes ‘… this book includes contributions by over 100 investigators on the benthic ecology of coasts of North America, Europe, the Mediterranean, South Africa, Chile, Argentina, Southeast Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. The editors have produced a meticulously organized, well-crafted volume that summarizes benthic interactions and references extensive literature for the areas of interest.’ F. T. Manheim, Choice Systematics Association Special Volume Series, 87

2019 246 x 189 mm 534pp 114 b/w illus. 12 colour illus. 978-1-108-41608-5 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 For all formats available, see

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ECOLOGY & CONSERVATION The Kestrel Ecology, Behaviour and Conservation of an Open-Land Predator David Costantini Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris

Giacomo Dell’Omo Ornis italica

The common kestrel is the bird of prey most of us are more familiar with. It has been an excellent study species to monitor environmental quality and to test evolutionary theories. This book will be an important reference for professional and amateur ornithologists, as well as undergraduate and graduate students. • Discusses all findings on common kestrels using a comparative approach including biological similarities and differences of kestrels • Provides examples of all aspects of kestrels’ biology using an inter-disciplinary approach • Identifies weak points of previous studies and gaps in the present knowledge on kestrels’ biology 2020 244 x 170 mm c.350pp 71 b/w illus. 9 colour illus. 7 tables 978-1-108-47062-9 Hardback c. £49.99 / c. US$64.99 @Price With Footer:Publication July 2020 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108470629

The Wicked Problem of Forest Policy A Multidisciplinary Approach to Sustainability in Forest Landscapes Edited by William Nikolakis University of British Columbia, Vancouver

and John Innes University of British Columbia, Vancouver

Given the interdisciplinary nature of the book’s subject matter, it will be of interest to social and natural scientists and researchers who engage in forestry and forestry-related disciplines. It has broader appeal to a global and nonacademic audience, which can help advance policy discussions through more accessible language. • A global analysis of wicked forest policies that draws on and synthesizes theory and practice from a diverse range of disciplines • Provides rich insight into addressing deforestation and development issues, highlighting the importance of forests and their fundamental role in planetary health • Written by the leading forest policy experts from across the globe, it raises awareness for helping tame wicked forest policy problems

Contents: Part I. Wicked Problems and Policies; Part II. Tools to Address Wicked Problems. 2020 228 x 152 mm c.418pp 25 b/w illus. 9 tables 978-1-108-47140-4 Hardback £64.99 / US$84.99 Publication July 2020 For all formats available, see

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Ecology & Conservation

Trees and Global Warming

Scientific Foundations of Zoos and Aquariums

The Role of Forests in Cooling and Warming the Atmosphere William J. Manning

Their Role in Conservation and Research Edited by Allison B. Kaufman

University of Massachusetts, Amherst

University of Connecticut

Tree planting is seen as one way that people can directly influence and hopefully reduce global warming now and in the future. This book provides a detailed analysis of how and where forests influence global warming. It will appeal to anyone interested in climate change, ecology and conservation.

Meredith J. Bashaw

• Covers ozone and ozone/CO2 interactions at ambient and elevated temperatures, experiments with air and soil warming and tree growth, and applied predictive models that have been developed to assess the effects of forests on global warming • Provides a comprehensive review about forests and how they affect global warming • Describes the effectiveness of tree planting 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-47178-7 Hardback £49.99 / US$64.99 @Price With Footer:Publication June 2020 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108471787

Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania

and Terry L. Maple Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens

Accredited zoos and aquariums worldwide conduct groundbreaking animal research. This book explores the breadth and impact of zoo programs and facilitates communication by sharing first-person tales of field and lab work. It also features conservation approaches in projects ranging from community education to population growth to rehabilitation. • Highlights the extensive research, education, and conservation programs in zoos and aquariums around the world which often do not reach the media or public awareness • Explores the breadth of science conducted by and in zoos, from breeding to education to reproductive science to field research, with technical information presented in an accessible manner • Features first-hand accounts of scientists working with a variety of animals, including primates, marine mammals, birds and amphibians

Contents: Part I. Programs and Initiatives; Part II. Captive Care and Management; Part III. Saving Species; Part IV. Basic Research. 2018 228 x 152 mm 684pp 978-1-107-19919-4 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-316-64865-0 Paperback £38.99 / US$49.99 For all formats available, see

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Ecology & Conservation

Towns, Ecology, and the Land Richard T. T. Forman Harvard University, Massachusetts

Highlighting towns and villages as dynamic environmental places, this pioneering book uses an ecology lens to explore the strong connections and effects on surrounding farmland, forest, and arid land. Key flows of water, soil, air and human systems are spatially linked to habitats, wildlife, plants, and biodiversity patterns around towns. • Opens up a new frontier in ecology and geography to intrigue students and researchers, and inform professionals in crafting better, more ecologically sustainable towns

Extremes Edited by Duncan Needham University of Cambridge

and Julius Weitzdörfer University of Cambridge

Arising from the 2017 Darwin College Lectures, leading intellectuals and public figures explore a range of ‘extreme’ events, environments, and achievements. Topics include the 2008 financial crisis, President Trump’s election, Brexit, the war in Syria, climate change, medical advances, ocean exploration, and cosmology. • Features contributions from renowned intellectuals and public figures • Provides a fascinating spectrum of viewpoints on the theme of extremes

• Written by a leader in both landscape ecology and urban ecology, this book synthesizes patterns and provides concrete examples, models, and principles

• Challenges the reader’s perception of normality, giving a greater insight into the nature of ‘extremes’

• Well-illustrated and with global application, it features towns of 2,000 to 30,000 residents plus villages, highlighting ecological, spatial, and cultural dimensions

2019 247 x 174 mm 186pp 7 b/w illus. 44 colour illus. 5 tables 978-1-108-45700-2 Paperback £14.99 / US$19.99

‘This book provides valuable insights, through many and varied examples, to show the way.’ A. M. Mannion, The Biologist

Darwin College Lectures, 31

For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108457002

Contents: Part I. Town Patterns, Processes, Change; Part II. Ecological Dimensions of Towns; Part III. Town and Land Interactions; Part IV. Town Ecology Principles and Solutions. 2019 247 x 174 mm 598pp 228 b/w illus. 978-1-107-19913-2 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-316-64860-5 Paperback £39.99 / US$51.99 For all formats available, see

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18

Ecology & Conservation

Modelling Nature-based Solutions Integrating Computational and Participatory Scenario Modelling for Environmental Management and Planning Edited by Neil Sang Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

This book joins two domains of knowledge together: modelling and environmental management. It provides readers with an integrated, but modularised, body of knowledge spanning these domains in a single, accessible form. A must-read for students, researchers and practitioners within environmental science and planning related subjects. • Multiple case studies from around the world, and an overview of a range of ecosystem services, enables readers to see the potential of nature-based solutions • A review of models from an applied perspective provides a focus on the model’s relevance to applied contexts, such as availability of data and skills, rather than just the model’s capabilities • A wider perspective on the role of modelling within environmental management and planning helps readers to consider key benefits of models, barriers to their use, what needs to change systemically to encourage their use, and when simpler models can suffice 2020 228 x 152 mm 376pp 47 b/w illus. 24 colour illus. 978-1-108-42893-4 Hardback £44.99 / US$59.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108428934

Conservation Politics The Last Anti-Colonial Battle David Johns Portland State University

Shifting the focus in conservation biology to directly include political efficacy is vital to natural world protection. David Johns argues that the loss of species and healthy ecological systems is best understood as due to human efforts to impose a colonial relationship on the non-human world – one of exploitation and domination. • Provides conservationists with effective tools and strategic approaches for gaining wider and deeper support for their work, including how to create effective and sustained influence on decision making • Advocates a cross disciplinary approach to conservation, combining scientific and political awareness of the causes of biodiversity, wildlands and oceans loss and the central importance of changing institutional behaviour attitudes • Identifies the attributes of successful social movements, such as civil rights in the US and feminism, and details what the conservation movement can learn from these ‘David Johns, a political scientist with a deep interest in popular movements, makes the case that conservation will only return to the forefront of the nation’s agenda when citizens mobilize into a vigorous movement with the energy to elect advocates to positions of political power. His new book offers deep insights into how to achieve this goal.’ John W. Terborgh, Duke University, North Carolina

Contents: Part I. The Problem; Part II. Getting the Questions Right; Part III. Taking the Offensive; Part IV. Culture Change. 2019 228 x 152 mm 398pp 11 b/w illus. 978-1-107-19958-3 Hardback £59.99 / US$79.99 978-1-316-64893-3 Paperback £29.99 / US$39.99 For all formats available, see

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Ecology & Conservation

Sustainable Development Goals: Their Impacts on Forests and People

Bears of the World

Edited by Pia Katila

and Mario Melletti

Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke)

Carol J. Pierce Colfer Cornell University, New York and Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)

Wil de Jong Kyoto University, Japan

Glenn Galloway University of Florida

Pablo Pacheco World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)

and Georg Winkel European Forest Institute (EFI), Germany

A global scientific assessment of the impacts of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) implementation on forests and related socioeconomic systems. It discusses the potential trade-offs among the SDGs, as well as the potential for synergies. An invaluable book for academics, students and decisionmakers interested in links between sustainable development, forests and people. This title is available as Open Access via Cambridge Core. • A systematic assessment encourages readers to think critically about how efforts to achieve the SDGs may affect forests and people • A discussion of policy implications of SDG interactions – including trade-offs and synergies – ensures decision-makers can make informed choices

Ecology, Conservation and Management Edited by Vincenzo Penteriani Spanish Council of Scientific Research (CSIC) AfBIG (African Buffalo Initiative Group), IUCN SSC ASG

This is an unrivalled and invaluable source for researchers, conservation biologists, zoologists, wildlife managers, and students, who are looking for the latest information on ecology, conservation, management and current status of all bears species around the world. • Presents the most extensive synthesis of information on bear species ever collected in a single volume • First comprehensive work on ecology, conservation and management of bears worldwide • Provides new information about all the eight bear species in the world, including taxonomy, ecology, behaviour, distribution, genetic and conservation status

Contents: Part I. Systematic, Ecology and Behaviour; Part II. Species accounts; Part III. Human – Bear Coexistence; Part IV. Conservation and Management. 2020 276 x 219 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-48352-0 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00 Publication November 2020 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108483520

• This title is available as Open Access via Cambridge Core 2019 244 x 170 mm c.644pp 12 b/w illus. 17 colour illus. 978-1-108-48699-6 Hardback £84.00 / US$110.00 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108486996

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20

EVOLUTION Evolutionary Dynamics of Plant-Pathogen Interactions Jeremy J. Burdon Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Canberra

and Anna-Liisa Laine University of Helsinki

Provides a comprehensive overview of the complexity of plant-pathogen associations and forces that shape ongoing contemporary populations and species as they track each other through ecological and evolutionary time and space. It merges information from the fields of agriculture, forestry, ecology, conservation biology and genomics. • Integrates crucial issues of time and space into ecological and evolutionary thinking about host-pathogen interactions • Provides an integrated view of hostpathogen associations from the molecular to the population and community level dynamics • Draws together information from agriculture, forestry, population genetics, ecology, conservation biology and plant genetic resources 2019 228 x 152 mm 392pp 37 b/w illus. 12 colour illus. 978-1-108-47629-4 Hardback £99.99 / US$130.00 978-1-108-70015-3 Paperback £39.99 / US$49.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108476294

The Correspondence of Charles Darwin Volume 27: 1879 Charles Darwin Edited by Frederick Burkhardt American Council of Learned Societies

James A. Secord and The Editors of the Darwin Correspondence Project

This volume of the definitive edition of Charles Darwin’s letters provides texts of more than 650 letters Darwin wrote and received in 1879. Darwin researched and published a biography of his grandfather Erasmus Darwin, and continued working on On the Power of Movement in Plants. • The narrative introduction provides a compact but highly readable account of Darwin’s life in 1879 • Complete transcriptions of more than 650 letters Darwin wrote and received in the year 1879 are of immense value to researchers across a range of disciplines, providing for the first time primary materials on this period of Darwin’s life and work • Clear and concise explanatory notes make the material accessible to both scholars and general readers • A biographical register provides brief biographical notes for people mentioned in the letters The Correspondence of Charles Darwin

2019 234 x 156 mm 298pp 30 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49375-8 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00 For all formats available, see

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PLANT SCIENCES Guttation

Plant Physiology

Fundamentals and Applications Sanjay Singh

Theory and Applications Second edition S. L. Kochhar

University of Gondar, Ethopia

A unique and comprehensive treatment of the guttation process, this book is suitable for a wide audience in the field of plant sciences. It not only discusses the principle, mechanism and applications of guttation, but also emphasises the impact of guttation on soil-plant-animal-environment systems. • Provides the first comprehensive overview of the phenomenon of guttation in plants, including discussion of the principles, mechanism and the chemistry behind the process • Written to be accessible to a broad audience, including those working in plant biology, ecology, agriculture, horticulture, animal husbandry, pharmacology and medicine • Explains complex topics in straight-forward language and uses examples throughout • Includes a chapter exclusively dedicated to the applications of guttation 2020 244 x 170 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-48702-3 Hardback £95.00 / c. US$94.99 Publication June 2020 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108487023

University of Delhi

and Sukhbir Kaur Gujral University of Delhi

This edition provides an accessible overview of plant physiology. The text emphasises the fundamental conceptual framework of the subject throughout. It also interweaves important practical considerations through the inclusion of laboratory exercises, which ensure that theoretical and practical details are brought together in a student-friendly way. • Provides completely reorganised chapters on stress physiology and secondary metabolites with illustrative colour photographs, and an invited article on the molecular mechanism of abiotic and biotic stresses • Includes laboratory experimental exercises throughout, to be conducted by students during their lab classes • Features thought-provoking end-of-unit questions, including some solved numerical questions, to allow students to test their knowledge and reflect on the material covered in each chapter 2020 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-48639-2 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-70771-8 Paperback TBA / TBA Publication June 2020 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108486392

Visit our website at www.cambridge.org/academic

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Plant Sciences

Plant Conservation The Role of Habitat Restoration Sergei Volis Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing

Highlighting the limitations of existing approaches in plant conservation, this book introduces new approaches and links these through ecological theory and available practices. Detailed methodological guidelines are provided for application of these approaches in real settings for students, researchers and conservation practitioners. • Advocates a new paradigm for plant conservation, arguing that ecological restoration is crucial to halting species loss • Provides a thorough and up-to-date overview of the field of plant conservation, serving as a reference point for students, researchers and practitioners • Offers practical methodologies to enable readers to apply the core concepts within the book to real settings in conservation biology and restoration ecology ‘Sergei Volis’ new book is a valuable contribution, especially in light of the extensive and growing threats to plant diversity worldwide. Building on the work of plant conservationists and restorationists over the past three decades, Volis highlights the role of conservation-oriented habitat restoration for the recovery of imperilled plants, including its important links to ex situ, quasi in situ, and in situ approaches to plant population management.’ Robert H. Robichaux, University of Arizona 2019 228 x 152 mm 494pp 128 b/w illus. 29 colour illus. 978-1-108-48037-6 Hardback £89.99 / US$115.00 978-1-108-72733-4 Paperback £37.99 / US$49.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108480376

The Nature of Plant Communities J. Bastow Wilson University of Otago, New Zealand

Andrew D. Q. Agnew Aberystwyth University

and Stephen H. Roxburgh Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Canberra

This book provides a synthesis and critique of our current understanding of plant community assembly and the associated role of species interactions, and brings together for the first time a number of key ecological concepts within a single consistent framework. It will be of particular interest to practising ecologists and students. • Stimulates reader to think deeply about plant community ecology, and to question the current status and direction of the discipline • Identifies gaps in the information available for a general understanding of plant communities • Presents new insights and tools for tackling contemporary problems, such as impacts of global change 2019 247 x 174 mm 370pp 57 b/w illus. 12 tables 978-1-108-48221-9 Hardback £49.99 / US$64.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108482219


Plant Sciences

Major Flowering Trees of Tropical Gardens

Introduction to Plant Fossils

M. S. Swaminathan

Second edition Christopher J. Cleal

M. S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, India

and S. L. Kochhar

National Museum Wales, Cardiff

University of Delhi

and Barry A. Thomas

Different aspects of trees including common and botanical names together with synonyms, taxonomic families, etymology, phenology, their native place and geographical distribution are discussed in detail. Contains more than 700 high resolution coloured photographs, depicting different facets of stem, leaves, flowers and fruits.

University of Wales, Aberystwyth

• Includes more than 700 high resolution coloured photographs • Botanical names adopted are in accordance with the international rules on botanical nomenclature • Includes an exhaustive glossary of botanical and medical terms for the benefits of non-botanists • Discusses a glossary of morphological architecture of leaf forms along with diagrammatic sketches 2019 244 x 170 mm 416pp 978-1-108-48195-3 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108481953

A practical and extensively illustrated guide to studying plant fossils for the non-specialist. Newly revised, it describes how modern research techniques can reveal hidden details of the original plants, and how vegetation has evolved over 500 million years. For students and non-specialists in palaeobotany, palaeontology and plant evolution. • Extensively revised, this second edition brings data on all plant groups, naming approaches using fossil-taxa and information on techniques such as tomography thoroughly up to date with current knowledge in the field • Provides key information on the practicalities of working with and interpreting plant fossils alongside the evolutionary history of plants and vegetation, combining approaches for the undergraduate and non-specialist • Explains modern research techniques to identify commonly-found plant fossils and reveal details of anatomical and reproductive characteristics, highlighting how such methods are employed by palaeobotanists 2019 246 x 189 mm 262pp 202 b/w illus. 17 colour illus. 978-1-108-48344-5 Hardback £94.99 / US$125.00 978-1-108-70502-8 Paperback £38.99 / US$49.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108483445

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PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT What Science Is and How It Really Works

Philosophy of Science for Biologists

James C. Zimring

Edited by Kostas Kampourakis

University of Virginia

Université de Genève

What is the basis of scientific claims? How much confidence should we put in them? What is defined as science and what is not? This timely synthesis conveys the strengths, weaknesses and reality of science to inform the general reader and help professional scientists articulate what they do and why.

and Tobias Uller

• Translates science into lay terms, allowing a broad audience to gain an accurate understanding of the inner workings of scientific fields and debates • Discusses a topic highly relevant to our current political climates, helping readers to distinguish between claims of ‘fact’ and actual evidence, and avoid being manipulated by pseudoscience • Refrains from claims of the intellectual superiority of science – this book simply explains how science works from the building blocks up to its outward public communication ‘Dr Zimring has produced a marvelously cogent and eminently readable book that explains how to recognize good science and know when to question poor ‘scientific’ conclusions. Reading this book places scientists and non-scientists on the same playing field when discussing critical issues and making important decisions. I would feel much better going to the polls if every voter understood the lessons that Zimring effortlessly communicates.’ Brian R. Smith, Yale University, Connecticut

Contents: Part I; Part II; Part III. 2019 228 x 152 mm 402pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-47685-0 Hardback £49.99 / US$64.99 978-1-108-70164-8 Paperback £19.99 / US$25.99 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108476850

Lunds Universitet, Sweden

Written for students and researchers in the life sciences, this is the first book to provide an accessible introduction to philosophy of science with a focus on biology. It draws on contemporary examples to enable biologists to become more philosophically minded and informed, facilitating all aspects of research and communication. • Assumes no previous background or training in philosophy • Presents key philosophical topics using contemporary examples from biology • Includes contributions from authors from a broad range of philosophical backgrounds ‘As a philosopher and a biologist I have been waiting for a long time for a book like this to come out. My students will learn a lot from it.’ Massimo Pigliucci, K.D. Irani Professor of Philosophy, City College of New York 2020 244 x 170 mm c.275pp 1 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-108-49183-9 Hardback £69.99 / US$89.99 978-1-108-74070-8 Paperback £26.99 / US$34.99 Publication August 2020 For all formats available, see

www.cambridge.org/9781108491839


Ecology and Conservation Journals 00253154_99-3_00253154_99-3 27/04/19 3:30 PM Page 1

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forest ecosystem services willing to consider mpacts of payments to local suppliers? a choice experiment in Antananarivo,

Randrianarison and Frank Wätzold

74

Nascimento, L.S., Nogueira Júnior, M., Viana, E.M. and Bersano, J.G.F. Biodiversity of planktonic hydrozoans from a subtropical estuary: evidence of assemblage structure change

82

551

Barragán, Y., Sánchez, C. and Rodríguez, E. Tenactis gen. nov. (Actiniaria, Haloclavidae) a new genus of sea anemones from the

cambridge.org/bci

Gulf of California, Mexico

563

Urra, J., García, T., León, E., Gallardo-Roldán, H., Lozano, M., Rueda, J.L. and Baro, J. Effects of mechanized dredging targeting

EDITOR Nicholas V. C. Polunin

Chamelea gallina, striped venus clams, on the associated discards in the northern Alboran Sea (Western Mediterranean Sea)

575

Guy, C., Smyth, D. and Roberts, D. The importance of population density and inter-individual distance in conserving the

ASSOCIATE EDITORS John Innes, Aaron MacNeil, William J. McShea, Johan Oldekop, Andrew Reeson, Charlie M. Shackleton, Trevor J. Willis

European oyster Ostrea edulis

587

Cunha, C.M. and Simone, L.R.L. Morphological re-description of Aplysia depilans (Gastropoda: Anaspidea): new insights into the anatomy of the anaspideans

595

Barabanova, L., Galkina, S. and Mikhailova, E. Cytogenetic study on the invasive species Gmelinoides fasciatus in the ecosystem of the Gulf of Finland

611

Veglia, A.J., Hammerman, N.M., Rivera Rosaly, C.R., Lucas, M.Q., Estronza, A.G., Corgosinho, P.H. and Schizas, N.V. Characterizing population structure of coral-associated fauna from mesophotic and shallow habitats in the Caribbean

619

Zhu, W., Du, X., Han, Z. and Xu, H. The genetic divergence of Oratosquilla oratoria between the East China Sea and Yellow Sea: physical barrier and possible local adaptation Barroso, D., Fernandes Rodrigues Alves, D. and Hirose, G.L. Testing the resource economic monopolization hypothesis and its consequences for the mating system of Alpheus estuariensis (Decapoda, Caridea, Alpheidae)

639 649

of spotted eagle ray (Aetobatus narinari) and their potential prey in the southern Gulf of Mexico

661

Estupiñán-Montaño, C., Cedeño-Figueroa, L., Estupiñán-Ortiz, J.F., Galván-Magaña, F., Sandoval-Londoño, A., Castañeda-Suarez, D. 673

Gore, M., Abels, L., Wasik, S., Saddler, L. and Ormond, R. Are close-following and breaching behaviours by basking sharks at 681

González-Pestana, A., Acuña-Perales, N., Córdova, F., Coasaca, J., Alfaro, E., Alfaro-Shigueto, J. and Mangel, J.C. Feeding habits of thresher sharks Alopias sp. in northern Peru: predators of Humboldt squid (Dosidicus gigas)

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Weir, C.R., Hodgins, N.K., Dolman, S.J. and Walters, A.E.M. Risso’s dolphins (Grampus griseus) in a proposed Marine Protected Area off east Lewis (Scotland, UK), 2010–2017

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PAGES 551–714

PP. 1 – 96

aggregation sites related to courtship?

MAY 2019

and Polo-Silva, C.J. Feeding habits and trophic level of the smooth hammerhead shark, Sphyrna zygaena (Carcharhiniformes: Sphyrnidae), off Ecuador

Volume 54 · Number 3 May 2020

Reflections on sea turtle conservation, B.J. Godley et al. Briefly Conservation news

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351 359

366

Shifted baselines and the policy placebo effect in conservation, S. Lovell, A.E. Johnson, R. Ramdeen & L. McClenachan Are pioneering coyotes, foxes and jackals alien species? Canid colonists in the changing conservation landscape of the Anthropocene, H. Somsen & A. Trouwborst Determining multi-species site use outside the protected areas of the Maasai Mara, Kenya, using false positive site-occupancy modeling, E.K. Madsen & F. Broekhuis Leopard Panthera pardus density in southern Mozambique: evidence from spatially explicit capture– recapture in Xonghile Game Reserve, P. Strampelli, L. Andresen, K.T. Everatt, M.J. Somers & J.M. Rowcliffe Comparing performance of multiple non-invasive genetic capture–recapture methods for abundance estimation: a case study with the Sonoran pronghorn Antilocapra americana sonoriensis, S.P. Woodruff, P. M. Lukacs & L.P. Waits Status and conservation of the snow leopard Panthera uncia in Api Nampa Conservation Area, Nepal, G. Khanal, L.P. Poudyal, B.P. Devkota, R. Ranabhat & P. Wegge

392

Sea turtle conservation Tracking foraging green turtles in the Republic of the Congo: insights into spatial ecology from a data poor region, K. Metcalfe, N. Bréheret, G. Bal, E. Chauvet, P.D. Doherty, A. Formia et al. Assessing the effect of recreational scallop harvest on the distribution and behaviour of foraging marine turtles, N. Wildermann, C. Sasso, C. Gredzens & M.M.P.B. Fuentes Conservation importance of previously undescribed abundance trends: increase in loggerhead turtle numbers nesting on an Atlantic island, J.-O. Laloë, J. Cozens, B. Renom, A. Taxonera & G.C. Hays Protecting nests of the Critically Endangered South Pacific loggerhead turtle Caretta caretta from goanna Varanus spp. predation, C.A. Madden Hof, G. Shuster, N. Mclachlan, B. Mclachlan, S. Giudice, C. Limpus & T. Eguchi Estimates of marine turtle nesting populations in the south-west Indian Ocean indicate the importance of the Chagos Archipelago, J.A. Mortimer, N. Esteban, A.N. Guzman & G.C. Hays

299

MAY 2019

383

Attitudes and intentions Local attitudes to the proposed translocation of blue sheep Pseudois nayaur to Sagarmatha National Park, Nepal, J.H. Hanson, M. Schutgens, R.P. Lama, A. Aryal & M. Dhakal Underlying social attitudes towards conservation of threatened carnivores in human-dominated landscapes, F. Zorondo-Rodríguez, D. Moreira-Arce & S. Boutin Local knowledge and attitude towards the Vulnerable Bhutan takin Budorcas whitei among residents living within its seasonal range, T. Sangay, R. Rajanathan, K. Vernes & M. Tighe Human–wildlife coexistence: attitudes and behavioural intentions towards predators in the Maasai Mara, Kenya, F. Broekhuis, M. Kaelo, D.K. Sakat & N.B. Elliot

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CONTENTS Published for Fauna & Flora International

Schrödinger’s cat extinction paradox— CORRIGENDUM, D.L. Roberts & M. Fisher

Publication 430 The Snow Leopard Project and Other Adventures in Warzone Conservation Cover Globally, sea turtles are considered threatened throughout their range and conservation practitioners are increasingly investing resources in marine protected areas to protect key life history stages and critical habitats, including foraging grounds, nesting beaches and inter-nesting areas. Empirical data on the distribution of these habitats and/or the spatial ecology and behaviour of individuals of many sea turtle populations are often lacking, undermining conservation efforts, particularly along the Atlantic coast of Africa. Habitat use by tracked green turtles at a foraging ground in Loango Bay, Republic of the Congo, revealed that core areas of habitat use and occupancy for a wide range of size and age classes were restricted to shallow waters adjacent to Pointe Indienne in Loango Bay, where the Congolese government intends to create a marine conservation zone to protect sea turtles. For further details, see pp. 299–306. (Photograph © Chai Seamaker/Shutterstock)

www.oryxthejournal.org

Diet selection is related to breeding status in two frugivorous hornbill species of Central Africa May 2020 · Volume 54 · Number 3 Aaron M. Lamperti, Aaron R. French, Ellen S. Dierenfeld, Mark K. Fogiel, Kenneth D. Whitney, Donald J. Stauffer, Kimberly M. Holbrook, Britta D. Hardesty, Connie J. Clark, John R. Poulsen, Benjamin C. Wang, Thomas B. Smith and V. Thomas Parker

273

Identifying keystone plant resources in an Amazonian forest using a long-term fruit-fall record Zöe Diaz-Martin, Varun Swamy, John Terborgh, Patricia Alvarez-Loayza and Fernando Cornejo

291

Ficus natalensis facilitates the establishment of a montane rain-forest tree in south-east African tropical woodlands Tomohiro Fujita

303

Monodominance of Parashorea chinensis on fertile soils in a Chinese tropical rain forest Nic van der Velden, J. W. Ferry Slik, Yue-Hua Hu, Guoyu Lan, Luxian Lin, XiaoBao Deng and Lourens Poorter

311

Continuous forest has greater taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic plant diversity than an adjacent naturally fragmented forest Miguel A. Munguía-Rosas, Selmy G. Jurado-Dzib, Candy R. Mezeta-Cob, Salvador Montiel, Armando Rojas and Juan M. Pech-Canché

323

Importance of regional diversity and environmental conditions on local species richness of aquatic macro-invertebrates in tropical forested streams Salman Abdo Al-Shami, Che Salmah Md Rawi, Abu Hassan Ahmad, Madziatul Rosemahanie Madrus and Khalid AL Mutairi

335

Foraging ecology and time budgets of non-breeding shorebirds in coastal Cuba Erica Nol, Kate MacCulloch, Lisa Pollock and Laura McKinnon

347

Food resource partitioning in syntopic nectarivorous bats on Puerto Rico J. Angel Soto-Centeno, Donald L. Phillips, Allen Kurta and Keith A. Hobson

359

Plant selection and avoidance by the Bornean elephant (Elephas maximus borneensis) in tropical forest: does plant recovery rate after herbivory influence food choices? Megan English, Graeme Gillespie, Marc Ancrenaz, Sulaiman Ismail, Benoit Goossens, Sen Nathan and Wayne Linklater

371

Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom

375

Distinct positions underpin ecosystem services for poverty alleviation, C. Howe, E. Corbera, B. Vira, D. Brockington & W.M. Adams

VOL. 30 | PART 4 | JULY 2014

Serrano-Flores, F., Pérez-Jiménez, J.C., Méndez-Loeza, I., Bassos-Hull, K. and Ajemian, M.J. Comparison between the feeding habits

NO. 3

March 2017

Abid, N., Laglaoui, A., Arakrak, A. and Bakkali, M. The reproductive biology of swordfish (Xiphias gladius) in the Strait of Gibraltar

www.oryxthejournal.org

VOL. 99, NO. 3

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VOL. 99

Issue 1

s and local costs – The dilemma of tropical vation: A review of the situation in Madagascar dert, Jörg U. Ganzhorn and Frank Wätzold

CONTENTS

ARTICLES

Thematic section. Forest Ecosystem Services

Volume 44

growth to determine the sustainability of e from miombo woodland: a case study ges in Malawi reen, Felix Eigenbrod, Kate Schreckenberg cock

ISSN: 0959-2709

JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM VOLUME 99.3 MAY 2019

Volume 54 · Number 3 · May 2020 · pp. 287–430

vation incentives and deforestation in the mazon nes, Margaret B. Holland, Lisa Naughton-Treves, s, Luis Suarez and Kayla Keenan

The International Journal of Conservation

DECEMBER 2019

JMBA

Bird Conservation International

International Journal of Interdisciplinary Environmental Science

Oryx

nvironmental Science

ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION

JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM

Environmental Conservation

ENTAL ATION

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Rurality and agroecosystem sustainability: a case study at farm-field level in Terceira Island (Portugal) and in Viterbo Province (Italy) Vincenzo Di Felice, Edite Romana de Jesus Soares Bessa Batista, Roberto Mancinelli, João Guilherme Ferreira Batista and Enio Campiglia

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From a conceptual framework to an operational approach for managing grassland functional diversity to obtain targeted ecosystem services: Case studies from French mountains M. Duru, C. Jouany, X. Le Roux, M.L. Navas and P. Cruz

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Comparison of an integrated crop–livestock system with soybean only: Economic and production responses in southern Brazil Carlos Alberto Oliveira de Oliveira, Carolina Bremm, Ibanor Anghinoni, Anibal de Moraes, Taise Robinson Kunrath and Paulo César de Faccio Carvalho

September 2014

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Land use and soils disposal: From competition to territorial governance (examples from land use conflicts in the greater Paris region) André Torre and Ségolène Darly Landscape characterization of integrated crop–livestock systems in three case studies of the tropics Rene Poccard-Chapuis, Livia Navegantes Alves, Marcia Mascarenha Grise, Alassane Bâ, Doubangolo Coulibaly, Laura Angelica Ferreira and Philippe Lecomte

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Special Section: Themed Content: Integrated Crop-Livestock Systems Toward agricultural sustainability through integrated crop–livestock systems. III. Social aspects Alan J. Franzluebbers, Gilles Lemaire, Paulo César de Faccio Carvalho, R. Mark Sulc and Benoît Dedieu

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Ngwira, A. R., Thierfelder, C., Eash, N. and Lambert, D. M. Risk and maize-based cropping systems for smallholder Malawi farmers using conservation agriculture technologies Dass, A. and Chandra, S. Irrigation, spacing and cultivar effects on net photosynthetic rate, dry matter partitioning and productivity of rice under system of rice intensification in mollisols of northern India Ram, H., Singh, Y., Saini, K. S., Kler, D. S. and Timsina, J. Tillage and planting methods effects on yield, water use efficiency and profitability of soybean–wheat system on a loamy sand soil Tang, F. and Xiao, W. Dry matter accumulation and partitioning in various fractions of cotton bolls Jessy, M. D., Prasannakumari, P. and Abraham, J. Carbon and nutrient cycling through fine roots in rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) plantations in India Owusu-Ansah, F., Curnow, R. N. and Adu-Ampomah, Y. Optimal planning of cocoa clonal selection programmes Carr, M. K. V. The water relations and irrigation requirements of passion fruit (Passiflora edulis Sims): A review Carr, M. K. V. The water relations and irrigation requirements of olive (Olea europaea L.): A review

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Phenotypic plasticity in seed germination relates differentially to overwintering and flowering temperatures Fernández-Pascual, E. & Jiménez-Alfaro, B.

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A comprehensive view of epicotyl dormancy in Viburnum furcatum: combining field studies with laboratory studies using temperature sequences Phartyal, S.S., Kondo, T., Fuji, A., Hidayati, S.N. & Walck, J.L

281–292

Two kinds of persistent soil seed banks in an amphi-basicarpic cold-desert annual Lu, J.J., Tan, D.Y., Baskin, J.M. & Baskin, C.C.

293–300

A new type of non-deep physiological dormancy: evidence from three annual Asteraceae species in the cold deserts of Central Asia Nur, M., Baskin, C.C., Lu, J.J., Tan, D.Y. & Baskin, J.M.

301–314

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Thermal time model of Solanum sarrachoides germination del Monte, J.P., Aguado, P.L. & Tarquis, A.M.

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Seed germination and survival of the endangered psammophilous Rouya polygama (Apiaceae) in different light, temperature and NaCl conditions Santo, A., Mattana, E., Hugot, L., Spinosi, P. & Bacchetta, G.

331–339

Identification of reference genes for gene expression studies during seed germination and seedling establishment in Ricinus communis L. Ribeiro, P.R., Dekkers, B.J.W., Fernandez, L.G., de Castro, R.D., Ligterink, W. & Hilhorst, H.W.M.

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The influence of collecting date, temperature and moisture regimes on the germination of epiphytic bromeliads Correa, S. & Zotz, G.

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Symbiont composition of the basidiolichen Lichenomphalia meridionalis varies with altitude in the Iberian Peninsula

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R. MIRANDA-GONZÁLEZ, The identity, ecology and distribution of A. APTROOT, R. LÜCKING, Polypyrenula (Ascomycota: Dothideomycetes): A. FLAKUS, A. BARCENAS-PEÑA a new member of Trypetheliaceae revealed and M. DE LOS by molecular and anatomical data ÁNGELES HERRERA-CAMPOS Huriella flakusii (Teloschistaceae, lichenized Ascomycota), a new species from the Colca Canyon region in Peru

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34 44

Issue 1

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THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST

kimmer (Libellula forensis; Odonata: Libellulidae), perching on a twig near the outflow h pond [Sergeant Bay Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada] lula forensis (Odonata : Libellulidae) posée sur une brindille près de l’écoulement g marécageux [Parc provincial Sergeant Bay dans le sud-ouest de la Colombienada] Giberson] , Cortodera subpilosa (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), 21 June 2016 [Wagonwheel Road, dary, British Columbia, Canada] ortodera subpilosa (Coleoptera : Cerambycidae), 21 juin, 2016 [Wagonwheel Road, dary, Colombie-Britannique, Canada] ake] ge fails—a nymph of the stink bug Palomena prasina (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) zerland] flage échoue—une nymphe de la punaise verte, Palomena prasina (Hemiptera : Délémont, Suisse] e] (Diptera: Bombyliidae) [Kelly Lake, British Columbia, Canada] : Bombyliidae) qui butine [Kelly Lake, Colombie-Britannique, Canada] Roitberg] ptera: Tabanidae) [Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada] (Diptera: Tabanidae) [Parc provincial de Kokanee Glacier en Colombie-Britannique,

15

22

Bulletin of

Volume 110

3

VOLUME 151(3): 273–410

2

1

Research Papers K.-H. Tan Recaptures of feral Bactrocera dorsalis andJUNE B. umbrosa 2019 (Diptera: Tephritidae) males after feeding on methyl eugenol M. Kashkouli, Y. Fathipour and M. Mehrabadi Habitat visualization, acquisition features and necessity of the gammaproteobacterial symbiont of pistachio stink Bug, Acrosternum heegeri (Hem.: Pentatomidae) I. Kot, C. Sempruch, K. Rubinowska and W. Michałek Effect of Neuroterus quercusbaccarum (L.) galls on physiological and biochemical response of Quercus robur leaves Published Bi-monthly by J.W. Hargrove and G.A. Vale Models for the rates of pupal development, Cambridge fat consumption and mortality University Pressin tsetse (Glossina spp) www.cambridge.org H. Su, Y. Gao, Y. Liu, X. Li, Y. Liang, X. Dai, Y. Xu, Y. Zhou and H. Wang Comparative transcriptome profiling reveals candidate genes related to insecticide resistance of Glyphodes pyloalis S. Rocha, M.C. Caldeira, C. Burban, C. Kerdelhué and M. Branco Shifted phenology in the pine processionary moth affects the outcome of tree–insect interaction T. Câmara, X. Arnan, V.S. Barbosa, R. Wirth, L. Iannuzzi and I.R. Leal Disentangling the effects of foliar vs. floral herbivory of leaf-cutting ants on the plant reproductive success of Miconia nervosa (Smith) Triana (Family Melastomataceae) N. Dinarvand, A. Rajabpour, N. Zandi Sohani and M. Farkhari Effect of weedy culture on population densities, spatial distributions and sampling procedures of Spodoptera exigua and Sesamia cretica (Lep., Noctuidae) in corn fields D.A. Passos, C.S.A. Silva-Torres and H.A.A. Siqueira Behavioral response and adaptive cost in resistant and susceptible Plutella xylostella to Chlorantraniliprole I. Ishikawa and M. Iwasa Toxicological effect of ivermectin on the survival, reproduction, and feeding activity of four species of dung beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae and Geotrupidae) in Japan L. Dai, J. Zheng, Y. Wang, Y. Sun and H. Chen Survival physiology and sex ratio of the Chinese white pine beetle Dendroctonus armandi (Coleoptera: Scolytinae) during host colonization and overwintering C.S.E. Guilbaud and M.S. Khudr Disturbance and competition drive diversity effects in cabbage–aphid–onion systems with intra-specific genetic variation K.-N. Kim, Y.-C. Jo, Z.-J. Huang, Hye-Seng Song, K.-H. Ryu, Q.-Y. Huang and C.-L. Lei Influence of green light illumination at night on biological characteristics of the oriental armyworm, Mythimna separata (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) M.A. Navarro-Roldán, D. Bosch, C. Gemeno and M. Siegwart Enzymatic detoxification strategies for neurotoxic insecticides in adults of three tortricid pests M.F. Cingolani, M.F. Roggiero, M.C. Barakat and G.G. Liljesthröm Polyandry and trade-off between fecundity and longevity in female Dichelops furcatus (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) G. Cavaletto, M. Faccoli, L. Marini and L. Mazzon Emergence phenology and temperature effect on the post-diapause egg development in the bush cricket Barbitistes vicetinus (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae) N. Pereyra, P.A. Lobbia and G. Mougabure-Cueto Effects of the infection with Trypanosoma cruzi on the feeding and excretion/defecation patterns of Triatoma infestans

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Editorial

December 2014

Fishing in the gene pool – how useful was the catch? Robert Koebner and Rodomiro Ortiz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .283

Seed banking in the columnar cactus Stenocereus stellatus: distribution, density and longevity of seeds Álvarez-Espino, R., Godínez-Álvarez, H. & De la Torre-Almaráz, R.

Issue 4

PLANT GENETIC RESOURCES: CHARACTERIZATION AND UTILIZATION

Genetic characterization of sunflower breeding resources from Argentina: assessing diversity in key open-pollinated and composite populations M. V. Moreno, V. Nishinakamasu, M. A. Loray, D. Alvarez, J. Gieco, A. Vicario, H. E. Hopp, R. A. Heinz, N. Paniego and V. V. Lia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .238 A baseline study of vicine–convicine levels in faba bean (Vicia faba L.) germplasm Khalil Khamassi, Fayçal Ben Jeddi, Doug Hobbs, Jose Irigoyen, Fred Stoddard, Donal M. O’Sullivan and Huw Jones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .250 Variation in inflorescence architecture associated with yield components in a sorghum germplasm Khaing Pann Witt Hmon, Tariq Shehzad and Kazutoshi Okuno . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .258 Perceptual distinctiveness in Native American maize (Zea mays L.) landraces has practical implications Abdullah A. Jaradat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .266 Microsatellite markers for common lilac (Syringa vulgaris L.) Inka Juntheikki-Palovaara, Kristiina Antonius, Leena Lindén and Helena Korpelainen . . . . . . . . . . . . . .279

Botany 76(3) (pages 311–436):

RESEARCH PAPERS

GENETIC

RESOURCES

Microsatellite analysis to rationalize grape germplasm in India and development of a molecular database Anuradha Upadhyay, Lalitkumar B. Aher, Manisha P. Shinde, Kavita Y. Mundankar, Anuj Datre and G. S. Karibasappa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .225 Climate change and crop wild relatives: can species track their suitable environment, and what do they lose in the process? Marleen M. P. Cobben, Rob van Treuren and Theo J. L. van Hintum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234

Volume 77, No. 1, pp. 1–160 March 2020

diminutive alpine plant Sibbaldia ic Garden Edinburgh’s founders, Garden’s official logo.

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In this Issue Robert Koebner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .187 Genetic variability of phytic acid phosphorus and inorganic phosphorus in cultivated groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) I N T EPoonam R N AA. T IHande, O N ASuvendu L JOU R N AA.L M.OBadigannavar F P L A N Tand S. F. D’Souza . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .190 Mondal, components F1 hybrids of Sorghum bicolor (L.) in Ethiopia: S Y S TMorphology E M A T I and C S fitness AND B I O D of I Vwild E RxScrop ITY implications for survival and introgression of crop genes in the wild pool Asfaw Adugna and Endashaw Bekele . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .196 Association of qLTG3-1 with germination stage cold tolerance in diverse rice germplasm from OLUME the Indian subcontinent Clarissa Challam, Gayle Alisha Kharshing, Julia S. Yumnam, Mayank Rai and Wricha Tyagi . . . . . . . . .206 Introgression of Botrytis grey mould resistance genes from Cicer reticulatum (bgmr1cr ) and C. echinospermum (bgmr1ce ) to chickpea (C. arietinum) D. Ramgopal, R. K. Srivastava, S. Pande, A. Rathore, D. R. Jadhav, M. Sharma, P. M. Gaur and N. Mallikarjuna . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .212 Genebank data-management software incorporating seed-viability test results Masaru Takeya, Fukuhiro Yamasaki, Sachiko Hattori, Chie Oyanagi, Takashi Chibana and Norihiko Tomooka . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .217 NIASGBsnp: integration of single nucleotide polymorphism data of rice (Oryza sativa L.) genetic resources Masaru Takeya, Fukuhiro Yamasaki, Sachiko Hattori and Kaworu Ebana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .221

December 2013

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