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Books
Urban Wildlife Management
Clark E. Adams, Kieran J. Lindsey & Sara J. Ash
Alright--it's blatant self-promotion but it's also a good book! Urban Wildlife Management provides a basic framework for a
deeper understanding of the factors that promote or prevent the presence of wildlife in urban areas. Examines the changing
landscape of wildlife management, ecological factors that impact urban wildlife, economic, environmental, legal aspects, and
stakeholder issuses.
Urban Wildlife Habitats
Lowell W. Adams
Lowell can be credited with walking the issue of urban wildlife onto the stage with this seminal work. He considers the role
of soils and vegetation; air, water, and noise pollution; and space and human demographics in creating viable urban wildlife
habitats.
Wild Neighbors
The Humane Approach to Living with Wildlife
Lowell can be credited with walking the issue of urban wildlife onto the stage with this seminal work. He considers the role
of soils and vegetation; air, water, and noise pollution; and space and human demographics in creating viable urban wildlife
habitats.
Resolving Human-Wildlife Conflicts
Michael R. Conover
A well-organized overview of an emerging field, this book discusses the issues currently facing wildlife managers and anyone
else who deals with interactions between wildlife and humans. It reviews the literature and stresses the inter-relatedness
of wildlife damage management and the larger discipline of wildlife conservation.
Wildlife and People
The Human Dimension of Wildlife Ecology
Gary G. Gray
Gray maintains that the most fruitful approach to wildlife ecology grants coequality to wild animal population biology, teh
ecology and management of wildlife habitats, and the disciplines that consider wildlife in relation to human culture. He concentrates
on socioeconomic aspects habitat-animal-human interactions including wildlife law, policy, and administration.
Last Child in the Woods
Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder
Richard Louv
Today's kids are increasingly disconnected from the natural world. Instead of passing summer months hiking, swimming and telling
stories around the campfire, children these days are more likely to attend computer camps or weight-loss camps: as a result,
Louv says, they've come to think of nature as more of an abstraction than a reality.
Sustainable Urban Design
Randall Thomas, Editor
The writers focus on the physical aspects of the urban environment - the buildings and their engineering systems, landscaping,
transport systems, energy, water and waste systems and successfully cover all the key elements in one volume together with
fully illustrated examples of best practice.
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