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LEADER 00000cam  2200601Ii 4500 
001    ocm52232691  
003    OCoLC 
005    20160518075132.8 
006    m     o  d         
007    cr cn||||||||| 
008    030513s2001    nyuab   ob    001 0 eng d 
019    818856626 
020    0231504799|q(electronic bk.) 
020    9780231504799|q(electronic bk.) 
035    (OCoLC)52232691|z(OCoLC)818856626 
040    N$T|beng|epn|erda|cN$T|dYDXCP|dOCLCQ|dE7B|dTEFOD|dJSTOR
       |dOCLCF|dOCLCQ|dEBLCP|dA8C|dTEFOD|dDEBBG|dOCLCQ 
043    w------ 
049    GTKE 
050  4 QL109|b.C66 2001eb 
082 04 333.95/416/0913|221 
245 04 The cutting edge :|bconserving wildlife in logged tropical
       forest /|cRobert A. Fimbel, Alejandro Grajal, and John G. 
       Robinson, editors. 
264  1 New York :|bColumbia University Press,|c[2001] 
264  4 |c©2001 
300    1 online resource (xxiv, 808 pages) :|billustrations, 
       maps. 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
490 1  Biology and resource management series 
504    Includes bibliographical references (pages 697-776) and 
       index. 
505 0  Foreword; Preface; Contributors; PART I: AN INTRODUCTION 
       TO FORESTRY-WILDLIFE INTERACTIONS IN TROPICAL FORESTS; 
       Chapter 1: LOGGING-WILDLIFE ISSUES IN THE TROPICS: An 
       Overview, Robert A. Fimbel, Alejandro Grajal, and John G. 
       Robinson; Chapter 2: TROPICAL FOREST MANAGEMENT AND 
       WILDLIFE: Silvicultural Effects on Forest Structure, Fruit
       Production, and Locomotion of Arboreal Animals, Francis E.
       Putz, Laura K. Sirot, and Michelle A. Pinard; Chapter 3: 
       LOGGING, SEED DISPERSAL BY VERTEBRATES, AND NATURAL 
       REGENERATION OF TROPICAL TIMBER TREES, Patrick A. Jansen 
       and Pieter A. Zuidema. 
505 8  Part II: WILDLIFE AND CHAINSAWS: DIRECT IMPACTS OF LOGGING
       ON WILDLIFEChapter 4: CHANGES IN PRIMATE COMMUNITIES 
       FOLLOWING LOGGING DISTURBANCE, Andrew J. Plumptre and 
       Andrew Grieser Johns; Chapter 5: THE EFFECTS OF LOGGING ON
       TROPICAL FOREST UNGULATES, Glyn Davies, Matt Heydon, Nigel
       Leader-Williams, John MacKinnon, and Helen Newing; Chapter
       6: THE EFFECTS OF LOGGING ON NONVOLANT SMALL MAMMAL 
       COMMUNITIES IN NEOTROPICAL RAIN FORESTS, José Ochoa G. and
       Pascual J. Soriano. 
505 8  Chapter 7: THE CONSEQUENCES OF TIMBER EXPLOITATION FOR BAT
       COMMUNITIES IN TROPICAL AMERICA, Pascual J. Soriano and 
       José Ochoa G. Chapter 8: TROPICAL FORESTRY AND THE 
       CONSERVATION OF NEOTROPICAL BIRDS, Douglas J. Mason and 
       Jean-Marc Thiollay; Chapter 9: THE EFFECTS OF LOGGING ON 
       BIRDS IN TROPICAL FORESTS OF INDO-AUSTRALIA, Mohamed 
       Zakaria Bin Hussin and Charles M. Francis; Chapter 10: 
       BIRD COMMUNITIES IN LOGGED AND UNLOGGED AFRICAN FORESTS: 
       Lessons from Uganda and Beyond, Andrew Plumptre, Christine
       Dranzoa, and Isaiah Owiunji. 
505 8  Chapter 11: THE EFFECTS OF LOGGING ON REPTILES AND 
       AMPHIBIANS OF TROPICAL FORESTS, Laurie J. Vitt and Janalee
       P. CaldwellChapter 12: THE IMPACTS OF SELECTIVE LOGGING ON
       TROPICAL FOREST INVERTEBRATES, Jaboury Ghazoul and Jane 
       Hill; Chapter 13: SOIL FAUNA IN MANAGED FORESTS, Lessons 
       from the Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico, 
       Gerardo R. Camilo and Xiaoming Zou; Chapter 14: THE 
       EFFECTS OF LOGGING ON TROPICAL RIVER ECOSYSTEMS, Catherine
       M. Pringle and Jonathan P. Benstead; Part III: HUNTING: A 
       MAJOR INDIRECT IMPACT OF LOGGING ON GAME SPECIES. 
505 8  Chapter 15: LOGGING AND HUNTING IN COMMUNITY FORESTS AND 
       CORPORATE CONCESSIONS: Two Contrasting Case Studies in 
       Bolivia, Damián I. Rumiz, Daniel Guinart S., Luciano Solar
       R., and José C. Herrera F. Chapter 16: THE 
       INTERRELATIONSHIPS OF COMMERCIAL LOGGING, HUNTING, AND 
       WILDLIFE IN SARAWAK: Recommendations for Forest Management,
       Elizabeth L. Bennett and Melvin T. Gumal; Chapter 17: 
       DEFAUNATION, NOT DEFORESTATION: Commercial Logging and 
       Market Hunting in Northern Congo, David S. Wilkie, J.G. 
       Sidle, G.C. Boundzanga, P. Auzel, and S. Blake. 
520    Recent decades have seen unprecedented growth in the scale
       and intensity of industrial forestry. Directly and 
       indirectly, it has degraded the wildlife and ecological 
       integrity of these tropical forests, prompting a need to 
       evaluate the impact of current forest management practices
       and reconsider how best to preserve the integrity of the 
       biosphere. Synthesizing the body of knowledge of leading 
       scientists and professionals in tropical forest ecology 
       and management, this book's thirty chapters examine in 
       detail the interplay between timber harvesting and 
       wildlife, from hunted and pr. 
588 0  Print version record. 
650  0 Wildlife conservation|zTropics. 
650  0 Rain forests|xManagement. 
650  7 SCIENCE|xLife Sciences|xBiological Diversity.|2bisacsh 
650  7 NATURE|xAnimals|xWildlife.|2bisacsh 
650  7 SCIENCE|xEnvironmental Science.|2bisacsh 
650  7 Rain forests|xManagement.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01089476 
650  7 Wildlife conservation.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01175253 
651  7 Tropics.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01240674 
700 1  Fimbel, Robert A. 
700 1  Grajal, Alejandro. 
700 1  Robinson, John G. 
776 08 |iPrint version:|tCutting edge.|dNew York : Columbia 
       University Press, ©2001|z0231114540|w(DLC)   00031782
       |w(OCoLC)44046749 
830  0 Biology and resource management in the tropics series. 
914    ocm52232691 
994    93|bGTK 
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