Amphibian Biology, Volume 11, Part 4 - Pelagic Publishing

Amphibian Biology, Volume 11, Part 4

Status of Conservation and Decline of Amphibians: Eastern Hemisphere: Southern Europe & Turkey

  • Addresses the entire range of threats to amphibians
  • Contributions by country experts
  • Provides recommendations for action
    $94.00
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    • This book very usefully compiles under a single cover a large body of information that would otherwise be widely dispersed between specialist journals and regional literature.
      —Richard A. Griffiths, Herpetological Bulletin
    Tags:
    • amphibian
    • amphibians
    • conservation
    • decline
    • ecology
    • herpetofauna
    • herpetology

    Description

    Amphibian species around the world are unusually vulnerable to a variety of threats, by no means all of which are properly understood. Volume 11 in this major series is published in parts devoted to the causes of amphibian decline and to conservation measures in regions of the world. This volume, Part 4 in the series, is concerned with Southern Europe (Italy, Malta, Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Albania, Greece, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey, and Cyprus).

    Each chapter has been written by experts from each country, describing the ecological background and the conservation status of affected species, with an emphasis on native species. As well as infectious diseases and parasites, threats take the form of introduced and invasive species, pollution, destruction and alteration of habitat, and climatic change. These are discussed as they affect each species. All these countries have monitoring schemes and conservation programs, whose origins and activities are described. Recommendations for action are also made.

    Edited by leading scholars in the field, Volume 11, when complete, will provide a definitive survey of the amphibian predicament and a stimulus to further research with the objective of arresting the global decline of an entire class of animal.

    Readership

    Biologists, ecologists, herpetologists, policy-makers

    Table of Contents

    39 The amphibians of the Italian region: A review of conservation status - Franco Andreone
    40 Amphibian conservation and declines in Malta - Patrick J. Schembri
    41 Conservation and declines of amphibians in Croatia - Olga Jovanović and Dušan Jelić
    42 Conservation and declines of amphibians in Slovenia - David Stanković, Martina Lužnik, and Katja Poboljšaj
    43 Conservation and decline of European amphibians: The Republic of Serbia - Jelka Crnobrnja-Isailović and Momir Paunović
    44 Amphibian declines and conservation in Montenegro - Ruža Ćirović
    45 Status of amphibians in Bosnia and Herzegovina - Avdul Adrović
    46 Conservation and protection status of amphibians in Macedonia - Bogoljub Sterijovski
    47 Amphibians of Albania - Idriz Haxhiu
    48 Declines and conservation of amphibians in Greece - Konstantinos Sotiropoulos and Petros Lymberakis
    49 Amphibian conservation and decline in Romania - Dan Cogălniceanu and Laurenţiu Rozylowicz
    50 Conservation and decline of amphibians in Hungary - Judit Vörös, István Kiss, and Miklós Puky
    51 Conservation and declines of amphibians in Bulgaria - Nikolay Dimitrov Tzankov and Georgi Sashev Popgeorgiev
    52 Amphibian conservation and decline in Turkey - Kurtuluş Olgun and Nazan Üzüm
    53 Conservation of amphibians in Cyprus - Petros Lymberakis, Haris Nicolaou, and Konstantinos Sotiropoulos
    Index

    Reviews

    • This book very usefully compiles under a single cover a large body of information that would otherwise be widely dispersed between specialist journals and regional literature. —Richard A. Griffiths, Herpetological Bulletin
    • Overall, this last volume offers a unique collection of information, and can be an important source of data for all people interested to amphibian biology, but also for management agencies. —Gentile Francesco Ficetola, Phyllomedusa

    About the Author

    Harold Heatwole is an ecologist and herpetologist. His first PhD (University of Michigan) dealt with habitat use by amphibians, but then he branched out and studied other taxa, mostly reptiles and amphibians, but also ants, tardigrades, and seabirds. He earned a second PhD in Botany with a dissertation on the dynamics of vegetation on coral cays on the Great Barrier Reef of Australia (University of Queensland). He completed his education with a PhD in Geography (James Cook University) and a DsC (University of New England, Australia). He had faculty appointments at the University of Puerto Rico, University of New England, and currently is Professor of Biology at North Carolina State University and Adjunct Professor of Zoology at the University of New England. He is editor in Chief of the journal Integrative and Comparative Biology. He is a Fellow of the Explorers Club.

    John W. Wilkinson is a conservation biologist specializing in studying and monitoring amphibians and reptiles. He started working with herpetofauna whilst an undergraduate and now nobody will give him a proper job. For eight years he was International Coordinator of the Declining Amphibian Populations Task Force and is currently Science Program Manager for the charity Amphibian and Reptile Conservation. John's PhD thesis was on toad conservation - it just made him realize how much more there is to find out...

    Bibliographic Information

    • 172 pages
    • Colour & b/w figures
    • Tables
    • BISAC SCI070000, SCI020000, SCI008000, NAT011000, NAT037000, NAT028000, NAT010000
    • BIC PSVW3, WNCK, PSVS, RNKH, RNK, PS