Tags: Environmental Engineering
Population-Level Ecological Risk Assessment 1st Edition
TITLE : Population-Level Ecological Risk
Assessment 1st Edition
ISBN : 9781420053326
AUTHOR : Lawrence W.
Barnthouse (Author), Wayne R. Munns Jr. (Author), Mary T.
Sorensen (Author)
PUBLISHER : Taylor
FORMAT: Paperback
PAGES : 376
YEAR PUBLICATIONS : 2007
LANGUAGE: English
SUBJECT: Environmental Engineering
WEIGHT (KG): 0.5
CONDITION: Used - Very Good
DESCRIPTION:
Most ecological risk assessments consider the
risk to individual organisms or organism-level attributes. From a management
perspective, however, risks to population-level attributes and processes are
often more relevant. Despite many published calls for population risk
assessment and the abundance of available scientific research and technical
tools assessing risks to populations, risk assessors worldwide still have
difficulty determining how population level considerations can be integrated
into environmental decision-making.
Population-Level Ecological Risk Assessment
establishes a framework for goals, methods, and data needs for different
assessment applications and for integrating population-level risk assessment
into risk management decisions. Beginning with a summary of legal, regulatory,
business, and other contexts, the book presents population-level ecological
risk assessment as an internationally recognized, science-based tool and offers
specific recommendations for using this tool to support environmental
management decisions. It gives clear, explicit, operational population
assessment definitions and explains the relevance of density dependence,
genetics, and spatial considerations, as well as applicable lessons from
conservation biology and natural resource management.
The
authors provide a "tool box" of empirical and modeling methods and
describe the general approaches, assumptions, data requirements, strengths, and
limitations of each method. They establish a working foundation for designing
and conducting population-level ecological risk assessments consistent with
North American, European, and Japanese risk management approaches. The book
concludes by highlighting key considerations needed to improve the scientific
quality and interpretation of assessments. Detailed appendices include examples
of population-level assessment approaches applicable to specific environmental
management contexts, a modeling case study, and a supplemental reading list.
