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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      April 2023
      April 2023
      ISBN:
      9781108758826
      9781108499828
      9781108731652
      Dimensions:
      (244 x 170 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.9kg, 422 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (244 x 170 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.73kg, 422 Pages
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    Book description

    Since 1970, there has been an overall decline in wildlife populations in the order of 52%. Freshwater species populations have declined by 76%; species populations in Central and South America have declined by 83%; and in the Indo-Pacific by 67%. These are often not complete extinctions, but large declines in the numbers of animals in each species, as well as habitat loss. This presents us with a tremendous opportunity, before it is too late to rescue many species. This book documents the present state of wildlife on a global scale, using a taxonomic approach, and serving as a one stop place for people involved in conservation to be able to find out what is in decline, and the success stories that have occurred to bring back species from the brink of extinction - primarily due to conservation management techniques - as models for what we might achieve in the future.

    Awards

    Winner, 2023 Choice Awards

    Reviews

    ‘Highly recommended.’

    J. Organ Source: Choice

    ‘Matt Hayward provides a devastating critique of the novel ecosystem and compassionate conservation movement approaches that threaten to homogenize global biodiversity, i.e., the inverse of the intended aim of most conservation to maintain or restore biodiversity. This book is a useful compendium and I recommend it particularly for teachers, nongovernmental organizations, and undergraduate conservation courses.’

    Rob Harcourt Source: The Quarterly Review of Biology

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    Contents

    • One - Introduction and the Evolution of Life on Earth
      pp 1-17
    • Four - Terrestrial Mammals
      pp 65-86
    • Six - How Birds Reveal the Scale of the Biodiversity Crisis
      pp 106-131

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