Holistic population analysis

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1995-06-01
Authors
Moloney, Kirk
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Moloney, Kirk
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Botany
The Botany Graduate Program offers work for the degrees Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy with a graduate major in Botany, and minor work for students majoring in other departments or graduate programs. Within the Botany Graduate Major, one of the following areas of specialization may be designated: aquatic and wetland ecology, cytology, ecology, morphology, mycology, physiology and molecular biology, or systematics and evolution. Relevant graduate courses that may be counted toward completion of these degrees are offered by the Departments of EEOB and GDCB, and by other departments and programs. The specific requirements for each student’s course distribution and research activities are set by the Program of Study Committee established for each student individually, and must satisfy all requirements of the Graduate College (See Index). GRE (and if necessary, TOEFL) scores are required of all applicants; students are encouraged to contact faculty prior to application.
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Abstract

Biodiversity is a "hot" topic that has recently spawned much interest in the popular and scientific press and in Washington. Part of the reason for this interest has been the fear among scientists and laypersons that we are going to be con- fronted with a mass extinction event driven by human encroachment on the biosphere. The magnitude of the problem, however, is very difficult to assess as it is difficult to deter- mine when and if a particular species, or group of species, is going to go extinct. These considerations provide the back- drop and motivation for Brian Maurer's book Geographical population analysis, which is one of a series of books edited by John Lawton and Gene Likens for Blackwell Scientific Publications entitled Methods in Ecology. The books in this series are intended to provide an overview of new and emerging techniques that can be applied to ecological problems. In the case of Geographical population analysis, this entails analytical techniques for assessing the status of a species by analyzing patterns of distribution and abundance over its en- tire geographic range.

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This is a book review from Ecology 76 (1995): 1363, doi: 10.2307/1940946. Posted with permission.

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Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 1995
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