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Whitebark Pine Communities: Ecology and Restoration

By Diana F. Tomback, Stephen F. Arno, Robert E. Keane

List Price: $30.00 hardback; $20.00 softback

Availability: In Stock

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Details

  • Format: Paperback/Hardback, 440 pages.

  • Publisher: Island Press; 1st edition (January, 2001)

  • ISBN: (paperback) 1-55963-718-8
  • ISBN: (hardback) 1-55963-717-X
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  • Product Dimensions:  6 x 9 x 1 inches

Description

Whitebark pine is a dominant feature of western high-mountain regions, offering an important source of food and high-quality habitat for species ranging from Clark's nutcracker to the grizzly bear. But in the northwestern United States and southwestern Canada, much of the whitebark pine is disappearing. Why is a high-mountain species found in places rarely disturbed by humans in trouble? And what can be done about it.

Leading experts in the field explain what is known about whitebark pine communities and their ecological value, examine its precarious situation, and present the state of knowledge concerning restoration alternatives. The book.

  • presents an overview of the ecology and status of whitebark pine communities
  • offers a basic understanding of whitebark pine taxonomy, distribution, and ecology, including environmental tolerances, community disturbance processes, regeneration processes, species interactions, and genetic population structure
  • identifies the threats to whitebark pine communities
  • explains the need for management intervention
  • surveys the extent of impact and losses to date

More importantly, the book clearly shows that the knowledge and management tools are available to restore whitebark pine communities both locally and on a significant scale regionally, and it provides specific information about what actions can and must be taken.

Whitebark Pine Communities offers a detailed portrait of the ecology of whitebark pine communities and the current threats to them. It brings together leading experts to provide in-depth information on research needs, management approaches, and restoration activities, and will be essential reading for ecologists, land managers, and anyone concerned with the health of forest ecosystems in the western United States.

 

Diana F. Tomback is professor of biology at the University of Colorado at Denver.

Stephen F. Arno, now retired, was research forester with the USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station in Missoula, Montana.

Robert E. Keane is research ecologist with the USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station in Missoula, Montana.

 

 

 

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