Henderson / Southwood | Ecological Methods | Buch | 978-1-118-89528-3 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 656 Seiten, Format (B × H): 189 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 1263 g

Henderson / Southwood

Ecological Methods


4th Auflage
ISBN: 978-1-118-89528-3
Verlag: Wiley

Buch, Englisch, 656 Seiten, Format (B × H): 189 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 1263 g

ISBN: 978-1-118-89528-3
Verlag: Wiley


4th edition of this classic Ecology text
- Computational methods have largely been replaced by descriptions of the available software
- Includes procedure information for R software and other freely available software systems
- Now includes web references for equipment, software and detailed methodologies

Henderson / Southwood Ecological Methods jetzt bestellen!

Weitere Infos & Material


Prefaces xiii

About the Companion Website xix

1 Introduction to the Study of Animal Populations 1

1.1 Population estimates 2

1.1.1 Absolute and related estimates 2

1.1.2 Relative estimates 3

1.1.3 Population indices 4

1.2 Errors and confidence 4

References 5

2 The Sampling Programme and the Measurement and Description of Dispersion 7

2.1 Preliminary sampling 7

2.1.1 Planning and fieldwork 7

2.1.2 Statistical aspects 10

2.2 The sampling programme 16

2.2.1 The number of samples per habitat unit (e.g. plant, host or puddle) 16

2.2.2 The sampling unit, its selection, size and shape 20

2.2.3 The number of samples 21

2.2.4 The pattern of sampling 24

2.2.5 The timing of sampling 26

2.3 Dispersion 27

2.3.1 Mathematical distributions that serve as models 28

2.3.2 Biological interpretation of dispersion parameters 40

2.3.3 Nearest-neighbour and related techniques: measures of population size or of the departure from randomness of the distribution 48

2.4 Sequential sampling 51

2.4.1 Sampling numbers 51

2.5 Presence or absence sampling 55

2.6 Sampling a fauna 57

2.7 Biological and other qualitative aspects of sampling 59

2.8 Jack knife and Bootstrap techniques 60

References 62

3 Absolute Population Estimates Using Capture–Recapture Experiments 77

3.1 Capture–recapture methods 78

3.1.1 Assumptions common to most methods 79

3.1.2 Estimating closed populations 86

3.1.3 Estimations for open populations 93

3.2 Methods of marking animals 103

3.2.1 Handling techniques 105

3.2.2 Release 107

3.2.3 Surface marks using paints and solutions of dyes 108

3.2.4 Dyes and fluorescent substances in powder form 112

3.2.5 Pollen 114

3.2.6 Marking formed by feeding on or absorption of dyes 114

3.2.7 Marking by injection, panjet or tattooing 116

3.2.8 External tags 116

3.2.9 Branding 117

3.2.10 Mutilation 118

3.2.11 Natural marks, parasites and genes 118

3.2.12 Rare elements 119

3.2.13 Protein marking 120

3.2.14 Radioactive isotopes 120

3.2.15 Radio and sonic tags 120

References 121

4 Absolute Population Estimates by Sampling a Unit of Habitat – Air, Plants, Plant Products and Vertebrate Hosts 139

4.1 Sampling from the air 139

4.2 Sampling apparatus 140

4.2.1 Exposed cone (Johnson–Taylor) suction trap 140

4.2.2 Enclosed cone types of suction trap including the Rothamsted 12 m trap 141

4.2.3 Rotary and other traps 143

4.3 Comparison and efficiencies of the different types of suction traps 144

4.3.1 Conversion of catch to aerial density 145

4.3.2 Conversion of density to total aerial population 146

4.4 Sampling from plants 146

4.4.1 Assessing the plant 147

4.4.2 Determining the numbers of invertebrates 147

4.4.3 The extraction of animals from herbage and debris 155

4.4.4 Methods for animals in plant tissues 163

4.4.5 Special sampling problems with animals in plant material 165

4.5 Sampling from vertebrate hosts 166

4.5.1 Sampling from living hosts 166

4.5.2 Sampling from dead hosts 169

4.5.3 Sampling from vertebrate ‘homes’ 170

References 171

5 Absolute Population Estimates by Sampling a Unit of Aquatic Habitat 183

5.1 Open water 183

5.1.1 Nets 183

5.1.2 Pumps 187

5.1.3 Water-sampling bottles 187

5.1.4 The Patalas–Schindler volume sampler 187

5.1.5 Particular methods for insects 188

5.2 Vegetation 190

5.2.1 Floating vegetation 191

5.2.2 Emergent vegetation 192

5.2.3 Submerged vegetation 194

5.3 Bottom fauna 195

5.3.1 Hand net sampling of forest litter 196

5.3.2 Sampling from under stones 197

5.3.3 The planting of removable portions of the substrate 199

5.3.4 Cylinders and boxes for delimiting an area 200

5.3.5 Trawls, bottom sledges and dredges 201

5.3.6 Grabs 205

5.3.7 Dendy inverting sampler 208

5.3.8 Box samplers and corers 209

5.3.9 Air-lift and suction devices 211

5.4 Poisons and anaesthetics used for sampling fish in rock pools and small ponds 211

References 213

6 Absolute Population Estimates by Sampling a Unit of Soil or Litter Habitat: Extraction Techniques 221

6.1 Sampling 221

6.2 Bulk staining 224

6.3 Mechanical methods of extraction 224

6.3.1 Dry sieving 224

6.3.2 Wet sieving 225

6.3.3 Soil washing and flotation 226

6.3.4 Flotation separation of plankton, meiofauna and other small animals 229

6.3.5 Separation of plant and insects by differential wetting 231

6.3.6 Centrifugation 233

6.3.7 Sedimentation 233

6.3.8 Elutriation 234

6.3.9 Sectioning 235

6.3.10 Aeration 236

6.4 Behavioural or dynamic methods 236

6.4.1 Dry extractors 237

6.4.2 Wet extractors 243

6.5 Summary of the applicability of the methods 248

References 250

7 Relative Methods of Population Measurement and the Derivation of Absolute Estimates 259

7.1 Factors affecting the size of relative estimates 259

7.1.1 The ‘phase’ of the animal 260

7.1.2 The activity of the animal 261

7.1.3 Differences in the response between species, sexes and individuals 263

7.1.4 The efficiency of the trap or searching method 264

7.2 The uses of relative methods 266

7.2.1 Measures of the availability 266

7.2.2 Indices of absolute population 266

7.2.3 Estimates of absolute population 267

7.2.4 Removal trapping or collecting 268

7.2.5 Collecting 272

7.3 Relative methods: catch per unit effort 272

7.3.1 Observation by radar 272

7.3.2 Hydroacoustic methods 273

7.3.3 Fish counters 274

7.3.4 Electric fishing 274

7.3.5 Aural detection 275

7.3.6 Exposure by plough 276

7.3.7 Collecting with a net or similar device 276

7.3.8 Visual searching and pooting 279

7.4 Relative methods: trapping 280

7.4.1 Interception traps 281

7.4.2 Flight traps combining interception and attraction 290

7.4.3 Light and other visual traps 294

7.5 Traps that attract animals by some natural stimulus or a substitute 304

7.5.1 Shelter traps 304

7.5.2 Trap host plants 305

7.5.3 Baited traps 305

7.5.4 The use of vertebrate hosts or substitutes as bait for insects 308

7.6 Using Sound 314

References 314

8 Estimates of Species Richness and Population Size Based on Signs, Products and Effects 337

8.1 Arthropod products 337

8.1.1 Exuviae 337

8.1.2 Frass 338

8.2 Vertebrate products and effects 341

8.3 Effects due to an individual insect 342

8.4 General effects: plant damage 343

8.4.1 Criteria 344

8.5 Determining the relationship between damage and insect populations 347

References 348

9 Wildlife Population Estimates by Census and Distance Measuring Techniques 355

9.1 Census methods 356

9.2 Point and line survey methods 357

9.2.1 Indices of abundance using transects 357

9.2.2 Methods based on flushing 357

9.2.3 Line transect methods: the Fourier series estimator 360

9.2.4 Point transects 365

9.3 Distance sampling software in R 365

9.4 Spatial distribution and plotless density estimators 367

9.4.1 Closest individual or distance method 367

9.4.2 Nearest-neighbour methods 368

References 369

10 Observational and Experimental Methods for the Estimation of Natality, Mortality and Dispersal 373

10.1 Natality 373

10.1.1 Fertility 373

10.1.2 Numbers entering a stage 375

10.1.3 The birth-rate from mark and recapture data 382


Peter A. Henderson, Director of Pisces Conservation, Southampton, UK.
T. R. E. Southwood, Lecturer, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, UK.


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