
Practical Field Ecology A Project Guide
by Wheater, C. Philip; Bell, James R.; Cook, Penny A.Buy New
Rent Textbook
Used Textbook
We're Sorry
Sold Out
eTextbook
We're Sorry
Not Available
How Marketplace Works:
- This item is offered by an independent seller and not shipped from our warehouse
- Item details like edition and cover design may differ from our description; see seller's comments before ordering.
- Sellers much confirm and ship within two business days; otherwise, the order will be cancelled and refunded.
- Marketplace purchases cannot be returned to eCampus.com. Contact the seller directly for inquiries; if no response within two days, contact customer service.
- Additional shipping costs apply to Marketplace purchases. Review shipping costs at checkout.
Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Tables | p. xi |
Figures | p. xiii |
Boxes | p. xvii |
Case Studies | p. xix |
Preface | p. xxi |
Acknowledgements | p. xxiii |
Preparation | p. 1 |
Choosing a topic for study | p. 3 |
Ecological research questions | p. 4 |
Monitoring individual species and groups of species | p. 4 |
Monitoring species richness | p. 5 |
Monitoring population sizes and density | p. 5 |
Monitoring community structure | p. 6 |
Monitoring behaviour | p. 6 |
A note of caution | p. 6 |
Creating aims, objectives and hypotheses | p. 7 |
Reviewing the literature | p. 8 |
Primary literature | p. 9 |
Secondary literature | p. 9 |
Other sources of information | p. 9 |
Search terms | p. 10 |
Reading papers | p. 10 |
Practical considerations | p. 11 |
Legal aspects | p. 11 |
Health and safety issues | p. 12 |
Implementation | p. 13 |
Time management | p. 16 |
Project design and data management | p. 18 |
Designing and setting up experiments and surveys | p. 20 |
Types of data | p. 20 |
Sampling designs | p. 22 |
Planning statistical analysis | p. 28 |
Choosing sampling methods | p. 33 |
Summary | p. 34 |
Monitoring site characteristics | p. 35 |
Site selection | p. 35 |
Site characterisation | p. 36 |
Habitat mapping | p. 36 |
Examination of landscape scale | p. 41 |
Measuring microclimatic variables | p. 42 |
Monitoring substrates | p. 45 |
Monitoring water | p. 51 |
Other physical attributes | p. 54 |
Measuring biological attributes | p. 56 |
Identification | p. 58 |
Sampling static organisms | p. 67 |
Sampling techniques for static organisms | p. 70 |
Quadrat sampling | p. 73 |
Pin-frames | p. 83 |
Transects | p. 84 |
Distribution of static organisms | p. 88 |
Forestry techniques | p. 90 |
Sampling mobile organisms | p. 95 |
General issues | p. 96 |
Distribution of mobile organisms | p. 97 |
Direct observation | p. 97 |
Behaviour | p. 98 |
Indirect methods | p. 103 |
Capture techniques | p. 104 |
Marking individuals | p. 106 |
Radio-tracking | p. 108 |
Invertebrates | p. 111 |
Direct observation | p. 112 |
Indirect methods | p. 114 |
Capture techniques | p. 115 |
Marking individuals | p. 117 |
Capturing aquatic invertebrates | p. 121 |
Netting | p. 123 |
Suction sampling | p. 127 |
Benthic coring | p. 128 |
Drags, dredges and grabs | p. 128 |
Wet extraction | p. 129 |
Artificial substrate samplers | p. 131 |
Baited traps | p. 132 |
Capturing soil-living invertebrates | p. 133 |
Dry sieving | p. 133 |
Floatation and phase-separation | p. 134 |
Tullgren funnels as a method of dry extraction | p. 134 |
Chemical extraction | p. 137 |
Electrical extraction | p. 138 |
Capturing ground-active invertebrates | p. 139 |
Pitfall traps | p. 139 |
Suction samplers | p. 148 |
Emergence traps | p. 150 |
Capturing invertebrates from plants | p. 152 |
Pootering | p. 153 |
Sweep netting | p. 154 |
Beating | p. 156 |
Fogging | p. 156 |
Capturing airborne invertebrates | p. 158 |
Sticky traps | p. 161 |
Using attractants | p. 162 |
Refuges | p. 165 |
Flight interception (window and malaise) traps | p. 165 |
Light traps | p. 167 |
Rotary traps | p. 172 |
Water traps | p. 172 |
Fish | p. 174 |
Direct observation | p. 176 |
Indirect methods | p. 176 |
Capture techniques | p. 177 |
Marking individuals | p. 181 |
Amphibians | p. 184 |
Direct observation | p. 186 |
Indirect methods | p. 187 |
Capture techniques | p. 187 |
Marking individuals | p. 192 |
Reptiles | p. 193 |
Direct observation | p. 193 |
Indirect methods | p. 194 |
Capture techniques | p. 195 |
Marking individuals | p. 199 |
Birds | p. 200 |
Direct observation | p. 201 |
Indirect methods | p. 209 |
Capture techniques | p. 211 |
Marking individuals | p. 213 |
Mammals | p. 216 |
Direct observation | p. 217 |
Indirect methods | p. 219 |
Capture techniques | p. 225 |
Marking individuals | p. 233 |
Analysing and interpreting information | p. 235 |
Keys to tests | p. 238 |
Exploring and describing data | p. 244 |
Transforming and screening data | p. 244 |
Spatial and temporal distributions | p. 252 |
Population estimation techniques: densities and population sizes | p. 252 |
Richness and diversity | p. 256 |
Similarity, dissimilarity and distance coefficients | p. 258 |
Recording descriptive statistics | p. 261 |
Testing hypotheses using basic statistical tests and simple general linear models | p. 261 |
Differences between samples | p. 265 |
Relationships between variables | p. 269 |
Associations between frequency distributions | p. 274 |
More advanced general linear models for predictive analysis | p. 276 |
Multiple regression | p. 276 |
Analysis of covariance and multivariate analysis of variance | p. 277 |
Discriminant function analysis | p. 279 |
Generalized linear models | p. 280 |
Extensions of the generalized linear model | p. 285 |
Statistical methods to examine pattern and structure in communities: classification, indicator species and ordination | p. 286 |
Classification | p. 287 |
Indicator species analysis | p. 292 |
Ordination | p. 294 |
Presenting the information | p. 305 |
Structure | p. 306 |
Title | p. 307 |
Abstract | p. 307 |
Acknowledgements | p. 308 |
Contents | p. 308 |
Introduction | p. 309 |
Methods | p. 310 |
Results | p. 311 |
Discussion | p. 316 |
References | p. 317 |
Appendices | p. 321 |
Writing style | p. 321 |
Tense | p. 324 |
Numbers | p. 324 |
Abbreviations | p. 325 |
Punctuation | p. 327 |
Choice of font | p. 328 |
Common mistakes | p. 329 |
Computer files | p. 331 |
Summary | p. 331 |
References | p. 333 |
Glossary of statistical terms | p. 345 |
Index | p. 351 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.