Friday, November 17, 2006

New title: Essays in Animal Behaviour

Essays in Animal Behaviour - edited by Jeffrey Lucas and Leigh Simmons

To celebrate the recent 50th anniversary of its publication, the journal Animal Behaviour published a series of essays by prominent behaviorists each presenting a critical and celebratory summary of their own specialties- a roll-call of the most influential names in the field. These contributions are both retrospective and prospective, asking where the field of behavior has been, where we are now and where we are going?

Essays in Animal Behaviour presents revised versions of these 12 original essays - plus seven entirely new ones to offer a glimpse of the study of behavior which looks in all directions. Blending history, present and future, the essays capture the development, the relevance, the excitement and the challenges of a subject that entwines and integrates some of the greatest themes in modern biology.

Unique personal reflections on the history of animal behavior are provided from John Alcock, Stuart and Jeanne Altmann, Steve Arnold, Geoff Parker, and Felicity Huntingford. Gene Robinson discusses the enormous promise of modern molecular biology in studying the genetic basis of social behavior.

The development of behavior is covered by Bennett Galef, Judy Stamps, Patrick Bateson, and Meredith West, Andrew King, and David White.

The adaptive significance of behavior, emphasing sexual selection and animal communication, is addressed by Malte Andersson, Andrew Barnes and Linda Partridge, Patricia Gowaty, Michael Greenfield, Peter Slater, Roswitha and Wolfgang Wiltschko, and Amotz Zahavi.

In the last chapter, Marian Dawkins shows us the importance of studying animal behavior for animal welfare.

This title is available in the CZS-BZ Library collection via SWAN: http://swan.sls.lib.il.us. QL 751.E65 2005

Thursday, November 09, 2006

RFP: Chicago Board of Trade Endangered Species Fund


Chicago Zoological Society
Chicago Board of Trade Endangered Species Fund

The Chicago Zoological Society is soliciting new proposals for the Chicago Board of Trade Endangered Species Fund for the first grant cycle of 2007.
The Committee is looking for projects that will be conducted between June 2007 and February 2008.

Grants are open to SSC Specialist Group Chairs and Officers, AZA/WAZA Chairs and Officers, and all interested researchers. Each group should select and submit only one proposal that has been ranked as the highest funding priority and endorsed by the group.
The Fund will support small projects, usually up to $5,000 (smaller requests will fare better).

For more information or to obtain the grant application format and review criteria,
please contact Courtney Lavery.


Deadline: March 1, 2007 (early submissions welcome)

Proposals should be submitted via e-mail to:
Courtney Lavery
Manager of Library Services
Chicago Zoological Society Brookfield Zoo
E-mail:
colavery@brookfieldzoo.org
www.brookfieldzoo.org

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Global Map & Extinction Risk

The most detailed world map of mammals, birds and amphibians ever produced shows that endangered species from these groups do not inhabit the same geographical areas, says new research published today.

Contrary to conservationists’ previous assumptions, the map shows conclusively that geographical areas with a high concentration of endangered species from one group, do not necessarily have high numbers from the others. This new finding has far-reaching implications for conservation planning by governments and NGOs, and their decisions about where to focus conservation spending. These decisions have typically been based on the assumption that investing in an area known to have a high concentration of endangered birds, for example, will mean that large numbers of endangered mammal and amphibian species will also be protected. The new study shows that basing conservation decisions on just one type of animal can be very misleading.

The study, out in today’s issue of Nature, is the culmination of many decades of work by field biologists and analysts, during which the planet was divided up into 100km x 100km grids, and all mammal, bird and amphibian species within each grid square were counted, using a variety of pre-existing, but never-before combined, records. The result is a comprehensive worldwide map of all species in these groups, on a finer scale than ever before.

Professor Ian Owens, one of the paper’s authors from Imperial College London’s Division of Biology, and the Natural Environment Research Council’s Centre for Population Biology, said: “For the first time ever this global mapping has divided the planet up into small grid squares to obtain a really detailed picture of biodiversity. By looking at the numbers of endangered mammals, birds and amphibians in these squares, we have been able to see how this real picture varies from assumptions that have previously been made about global biodiversity of endangered species.”

Professor Owens adds that this geographical discrepancy in hotspots of endangered species from different groups can be explained by the different factors that threaten mammals, birds and amphibians: “Endangered bird species are often at risk because their habitats are being destroyed. However, different factors entirely may affect mammals such as tigers which are under threat from poachers, and amphibians which are being diminished by diseases brought into their habitat by non-native fish.

“This means that even if a mountainous area has a real problem with endangered amphibians in its creeks and rivers, mammal and bird species in the same area might be flourishing. It’s really important not to assume that there are simply a number of hotspots across the globe where everything living there is endangered – the picture is far more complicated, with mammal, bird and amphibian numbers being threatened by different things, in different locations.”

Examples of geographical locations in which the distribution of endangered species is different include: - New Zealand is a hot spot for threatened birds because of the danger posed by introduced rats and cats. - Mammals are highly threatened across eastern Africa due to hunting and the bush meat trade - The tropical, rainforest-clad mountains of northern Australia are home to many declining frog species, although the precise causes of these declines often remain enigmatic.

Citation: “The global distribution and conservation of rare and threatened vertebrates,” Nature, 2 November, 2006.

Source: Imperial College London