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In North America, concepts of Historical Range of Variability
are being employed in land-management planning for properties
of private organizations and multiple government agencies. The
National Park Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Bureau of
Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, and The Nature
Conservancy all include elements of historical ecology in their
planning processes. Similar approaches are part of land
management and conservation in Europe and Australia. Each of
these user groups must struggle with the added complication of
rapid climate change, rapid land-use change, and technical
issues in order to employ historical ecology effectively.
Historical Environmental Variation in Conservation and
Natural Resource Management explores the utility of
historical ecology in a management and conservation context
and the development of concepts related to understanding
future ranges of variability. It provides guidance and
insights to all those entrusted with managing and conserving
natural resources: land-use planners, ecologists, fire
scientists, natural resource policy makers, conservation
biologists, refuge and preserve managers, and field
practitioners. The book will be particularly timely as
science-based management is once again emphasized in United
States federal land management and as an understanding of the
potential effects of climate change becomes more widespread
among resource managers.
Additional resources for this book can be found at:
www.wiley.com/go/wiens/historicalenvironmentalvariation.
Content:
Chapter 1 Setting the Stage: Theoretical and Conceptual
Background of Historical Range of Variation (pages 3–18):
William H. Romme, John A. Wiens and Hugh D. Safford
Chapter 2 Development of Historical Ecology Concepts and their
Application to Resource Management and Conservation (pages
19–28): Wayne Padgett, Barbara Schrader, Mary Manning and
Timothy Tear
Chapter 3 Challenges in the Application of Historical Range of
Variation to Conservation and Land Management (pages 32–45):
Gregory D. Hayward, Thomas T. Veblen, Lowell H. Suring and Bob
Davis
Chapter 4 Historical Ecology, Climate Change, and Resource
Management: Can the Past Still Inform the Future? (pages
46–62): Hugh D. Safford, Gregory D. Hayward, Nicole E. Heller
and John A. Wiens
Chapter 5 What is the Scope of “History” in Historical Ecology?
Issues of Scale in Management and Conservation (pages 63–75):
John A. Wiens, Hugh D. Safford, Kevin McGarigal, William H.
Romme and Mary Manning
Chapter 6 Native Americans, Ecosystem Development, and
Historical Range of Variation (pages 76–91): Gregory J.
Nowacki, Douglas W. MacCleery and Frank K. Lake
Chapter 7 Conservation and Resource Management in a Changing
World: Extending Historical Range of Variation Beyond the
Baseline (pages 92–109): Stephen T. Jackson
Chapter 8 Creating Historical Range of Variation (HRV) Time
Series Using Landscape Modeling: Overview and Issues (pages
113–127): Robert E. Keane
Chapter 9 Modeling Historical Range of Variability at a Range
of Scales: an Example Application (pages 128–145): Kevin
McGarigal and William H. Romme
Chapter 10 Regional Application of Historical Ecology at
Ecologically Defined Scales: Forest Ecosystems in the Colorado
Front Range (pages 149–165): Thomas T. Veblen, William H. Romme
and Claudia Regan
Chapter 11 Incorporating Concepts of Historical Range of
Variation in Ecosystem?Based Management of British Columbia's
Coastal Temperate Rainforest (pages 166–175): Andy MacKinnon
and Sari C. Saunders
Chapter 12 Incorporating HRV in Minnesota National Forest Land
and Resource Management Plans: a Practitioner's Story (pages
176–193): Mary Shedd, Jim Gallagher, Michael Jimenez and Duane
Lula
Chapter 13 Applying historical fi re?regime concepts to forest
management in the western United States: three case studies
(pages 194–204): Thomas E. DeMeo, Frederick J. Swanson, Edward
B. Smith, Steven C. Buttrick, Jane Kertis, Jeanne Rice,
Christopher D. Ringo, Amy Waltz, Chris Zanger, Cheryl A.
Friesen and John H. Cissel
Chapter 14 Using Historical Ecology to Inform Wildlife
Conservation, Restoration, and Management (pages 205–217): Beth
A. Hahn and John L. Curnutt
Chapter 15 River Floodplain Restoration Experiments Offer a
Window into the Past (pages 218–231): Ramona O. Swenson,
Richard J. Reiner, Mark Reynolds and Jaymee Marty
Chapter 16 Streams Past and Future: Fluvial Responses to Rapid
Environmental Change in the Context of Historical Variation
(pages 232–245): Daniel A. Auerbach, N. Leroy Poff, Ryan R.
McShane, David M. Merritt, Matthew I. Pyne and Thomas K.
Wilding
Chapter 17 A Framework for Applying the Historical Range of
Variation Concept to Ecosystem Management (pages 246–261):
William H. Romme, Gregory D. Hayward and Claudia Regan
Chapter 18 Ecological History Guides the Future of
Conservation: Lessons from Africa (pages 265–272): A. R. E.
Sinclair
Chapter 19 Ecological History has Present and Future Ecological
Consequences – Case Studies from Australia (pages 273–280):
David Lindenmayer
Chapter 20 A View from the Past to the Future (pages 281–288):
Keith J. Kirby
Chapter 21 Is the Historical Range of Variation Relevant to
Rangeland Management? (pages 289–296): Brandon T.
Bestelmeyer
Chapter 22 Knowing the Fennoscandian Taiga: Ecohistorical
Lessons (pages 297–304): Yrjo Haila
Chapter 23 Reflections on the Relevance of History in a
Nonstationary World (pages 305–318): Julio L. Betancourt
Chapter 24 The Growing Importance of the Past in Managing
Ecosystems of the Future (pages 319–327): Hugh D. Safford, John
A. Wiens and And Gregory D. Hayward