Invasive species [ Livre] : what everyone needs to know / Daniel Simberloff
Langue : anglais.Publication : Oxford (GB) : Oxford university press, Cop 2013.Description : 1 volume de XIV-329 pages : couverture illustrée en couleurs ; 22 cm.ISBN : 9780199922017; 0199922012; 9780199922031; 0199922039.Dewey : 578.62, 23Résumé : Invasive species come in all sizes, from plant pathogens like the chestnut blight in eastern North America, to the red imported fire ant that has spread throughout the South, the predatory Indian mongoose now found in the Caribbean and Hawaii, and the huge Burmese python populating the Florida swamps. And while many invasive species are safe and even beneficial, the more harmful varieties cost the world economy billions of dollars annually, devastate agriculture, spread painful and even lethal diseases, and otherwise diminish our quality of life in myriad surprising ways. In Invasive Species: What Everyone Needs to Know, award-winning biologist Daniel Simberloff offers a wide-ranging and informative survey that sheds light on virtually every aspect of these biological invaders. Filled with case studies of an astonishing array of invasive species, the book covers such topics as how humans introduce these species-sometimes inadvertently, but often deliberately-the areas that have suffered the most biological invasions, the methods we use to keep our borders safe, the policies we currently have in place to manage these species, and future prospects for controlling their spread. An eminent ecologist, Simberloff analyzes the direct and indirect impacts of invasive species on various ecosystems, such as when non-native species out-compete native species for food or light, describes how invasive species (such as the Asian mosquito that is a vector for West Nile virus, itself an invasive species) transmit pathogens, and explains his acclaimed theory of "invasional meltdown" in which two or more introduced species combine to produce a far more devastating impact than any one of them would have caused alone.Sujet - Nom commun: Animaux et plantes nuisiblesType de document | Site actuel | Cote | Statut | Notes | Date de retour prévue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livre | Bibliothèque Universitaire Mohamed Sekkat 1er etage | 578.62 SIM (Parcourir l'étagère) | Disponible | New 2020 |
Survol Bibliothèque Universitaire Mohamed Sekkat Étagères , Localisation : 1er etage Fermer le survol d'étagère
Pas d'image de couverture disponible | Pas d'image de couverture disponible | |||||||
578.012 CAR L'ORIGINE DES ESPÈCES | 578.012 CAR L'ORIGINE DES ESPÈCES | 578.096 4 LEC Biogéographie de la montagne marocaine | 578.62 SIM Invasive species | 578.65 EUZ Grand dictionnaire illustré de parasitologie médicale et vétérinaire | 578.65 GUI Parasitologie sanguine | 578.65 GUI Parasitologie sanguine |
Bibliographie pages 315-320
Invasive species come in all sizes, from plant pathogens like the chestnut blight in eastern North America, to the red imported fire ant that has spread throughout the South, the predatory Indian mongoose now found in the Caribbean and Hawaii, and the huge Burmese python populating the Florida swamps. And while many invasive species are safe and even beneficial, the more harmful varieties cost the world economy billions of dollars annually, devastate agriculture,
spread painful and even lethal diseases, and otherwise diminish our quality of life in myriad surprising ways.
In Invasive Species: What Everyone Needs to Know, award-winning biologist Daniel Simberloff offers a wide-ranging and informative survey that sheds light on virtually every aspect of these biological invaders. Filled with case studies of an astonishing array of invasive species, the book covers such topics as how humans introduce these species-sometimes inadvertently, but often deliberately-the areas that have suffered the most biological invasions, the methods we use to keep our
borders safe, the policies we currently have in place to manage these species, and future prospects for controlling their spread. An eminent ecologist, Simberloff analyzes the direct and indirect impacts of invasive species on various ecosystems, such as when non-native species out-compete native species for food
or light, describes how invasive species (such as the Asian mosquito that is a vector for West Nile virus, itself an invasive species) transmit pathogens, and explains his acclaimed theory of "invasional meltdown" in which two or more introduced species combine to produce a far more devastating impact than any one of them would have caused alone
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