Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
In: Fish & Fisheries Series 44
Embryo Temperature Has Knock-On Effects on Later Traits in Salmonid Fishes -- Field Observations of Deformed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo Salar) Embryos Incubated in the Hyporheic Zones of Seven Cold Region Rivers -- Environmental Determinants of Spawning Location, and Density and Size of Age-0 Brown Trout Salmo Trutta in a Small Boreal Stream -- Density-Dependent Growth in Salmonids: a Metaanalysis -- The Ghost of Density-Dependence: Environmental (hydrological) Factors Drive the Numerical Changes of Young Migratory Trout Salmo trutta in a Lake District Stream (UK), 1966-1996 -- Long-term Recruitment Patterns of 0+ Brown Trout in the River Maine, Northern Ireland -- Spatial Patterns of Synchrony in Recruitment of Trout among Streams -- The Use of Net Energy Intake Models to Predict Microhabitat Selection by Drift-Feeding Fishes: Are Common Assumptions Warranted? -- Understanding Stream-Resident Salmonid Movements in Groundwater-Fed Streams of the Driftless Area (USA) -- Trophic Flexibility of Stream-Dwelling Salmonids: Disentangling Common Ontogenetic and Seasonal Patterns -- Stream Salmonids on the Cormorant Menu -- Partial Migration in Salmonids: Focusing on Asian Endemic Masu Salmon (Oncorhynchus Masou) and White-Spotted Charr (Salvelinus Leucomaenis) -- The Role of the Soundscape in the Behavioral Ecology of Stream-Dwelling Salmonids -- The Freshwater Pearl Mussel; A Costly Stowaway or an Important Habitat Engineer? -- Habitat Selection and Segregation among Stream Salmonids: The Case of Juvenile Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus Kisutch) and Steelhead Trout (Oncorhynchus Mykiss Irideus) -- Trout under Drought: A Long-term Study of Annual Growth and Condition of Stream-living Coastal Cutthroat Trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii) -- Winter Ecology of Salmonids in Boreal Streams under Climate Change -- Components of Brown Trout Age-Class Density Dynamics -- Salmonids in New Zealand – Old Ways in New Lands -- Application of a Fine-Scale Modeling Approach to Assess Broad-Scale Changes in Stream Salmonid Habitat in a Changing Climate -- Determinants of Productive Capacity for Stream Salmonids -- Determinants and Dynamics of Production Rates of Stream-Dwelling Salmonids: The Importance of Intrinsic Factors -- Influence of Streamflow on Productivity of Stream Type Chinook Salmon Populations in the Salmon River Drainage, Idaho -- The Increasing Threat Posed by Nonnative and Hatchery-Reared Salmonids to Japanese Wild Native Salmonids -- Demographic and Genetic Attributes Of Small, Isolated Populations Of Gila Trout – Prospects For Persistence Under A Shifting Climate Regime -- Ecological Ttraits and Fishery of the Upper Limay River, a Key System for Salmonids in the Andean North Patagonia -- Dynamics of a Warmwater-Coldwater Fish Assemblage in a Wildfire Prone Landscape -- The Future of Salmonids in a Rapidly Changing World -- A Short Reflection on Protecting the Remaining Biodiversity of Salmonid Fishes.
In: The Palgrave Macmillan Animal Ethics Series
1. Introduction: 'caught with ourselves in the net of life and time' -- Part I. Animals as Experiencing Entities, Theories and Perspectives -- 2. Je suis, Je suis – I am, I follow: Formation of Animal Individual and Cultural Selves -- 3. Pain in Context: Indicators and Expressions of Animal Pain -- 4. Critical Animal Historiography, Experiential Subjectivity and Animal Standpoint Theory -- 5. Sensing Life: Intersections of Animal and Sensory Histories -- Part II. Animals' Experiences in Narratives and History -- 6. History According To Cattle -- 7. A Historiography of Great Animal Massacres -- 8. From French Guinea to Florida: Chimpanzees as Multi-Purpose Objects of Research (1920s-1940s) -- 9. Animals And Colonial Indian Archives: Locating Nonhuman Agency and Subjectivities -- 10. Law Through the Eyes of Animals -- 11. Stolen Children of the Endless Night. A Critical Account of the Lives of British PitPonies.
"This fully revised 2nd edition reflects the great expansion in urban ecology research, action and teaching since 2015. Urban ecology provides understanding of urban ecosystems and uses nature-based techniques to enhance habitats and alleviate poor environmental conditions. Already the home to the majority of the world's people, urban areas continue to grow, causing ecological changes throughout the world. To help students of all professions caring for urban areas and the people, animals and plants that live in them, the authors set out the environmental and ecological science of cities; linkages between urban nature and human health and urban food production in cities and how we can value urban nature. . They explore our responsibilities for urban nature and greening, ecological management techniques and the use of nature-based solutions to achieve a better, more sustainable urban future and ensure that cities can climate change and become more beautiful and more sustainable places in which to live. This text provides the student and the practitioner with a critical scientific overview of urban ecology that will be a key source of data and ideas for studies and for sound urban management"--
"Water, soil, plants, and animals are the main pillars that support global food security. Plants grow using nutrients from water and soil resources and then used by animals which affects them consequently. Water is the essential condition of life for all living beings, and soil is its support and a crucial reservoir. The interactions between the Water-Soil-Plant-Animal nexus and climate change are of increasing concern to scholars, decision-makers, and researchers. The impacts of climate change on these resources include water and soil quality degradation, infectious disease, shortage, desertification, and erosion. These impacts are accelerated due to human pressure through over-use and pollution.Water-Soil-Plant-Animal Nexus in the Era of Climate Change includes relevant theoretical approaches, empirical research, and bibliometric and bibliographic methods to bring together affordable methods and techniques to optimize the use of the nexus in the context of climate change. It presents an inventory of techniques and practices in the field, and introduces an opportunity to discuss the strengths and weaknesses of these techniques, making it ideal for scholars, researchers, planners, and decision-makers."--
In: Neue Ökologie
Can friendship as a political practice offer enough traction to imagine a borderless world? The startling contemporary rise in aggressive ethno-nationalism and end-times ecological crises have the same root: an inability to be together with humans as much as the natural world. Matt Hern and Am Johal suggest that porous renditions of being-together animated by friendship can spark a repoliticization of the political to surpass the foreclosures of the state, speak to a freedom of movement, and find renovated relationships with the more-than-human. This volume includes interviews with Jean-Luc Nancy, Leela Gandhi and Leanne Simpson.
Can friendship as a political practice offer enough traction to imagine a borderless world? The startling contemporary rise in aggressive ethno-nationalism and end-times ecological crises have the same root: an inability to be together with humans as much as the natural world. Matt Hern and Am Johal suggest that porous renditions of being-together animated by friendship can spark a repoliticization of the political to surpass the foreclosures of the state, speak to a freedom of movement, and find renovated relationships with the more-than-human. This volume includes interviews with Jean-Luc Nancy, Leela Gandhi and Leanne Simpson.
In: STEM Road Map Curriculum Series
This interdisciplinary, four-lesson module uses project- and problem-based learning to help students act as explorers of climates, plants, and animals locally and around the world, to develop an action plan that encourages preservation of an endangered species.
This book draws on the life stories told by shepherds, farmers, and their families in the Andalusian region in Spain to sketch out the landscapes, actions, and challenges of people who work in pastoralism. Their narratives highlight how local practices interact with regional and European communities and policies, and they help us see a broader role for extensive grazing practices and sustainability.
A Country of Shepherds is timely, reflecting the growing interest in ecological farming methods as well as the Spanish government's recent work with UNESCO to recognise the seasonal movement of herd animals in the Iberian Peninsula as an Intangible Cultural Heritage.
Demonstrating the critical role of tradition, cultural geographies, and sustainability in the Mediterranean, this book will appeal to academicians but also to general readers who seek to understand, in very human terms, the impact of the world-wide environmental crisis we are now experiencing.
Blood Ties: Kinning and killing on Australian heritage breed farms -- Demystifying the promise of sustainability through the China-Pakistan donkey trade -- Of People and Peccaries: Perception and politics in the Texas Hill Country -- Mongolia's Biocultural Landscape: The importance of domestic and wild multispecies diversity -- Cultivating the Ocean: Reflections on desolate life and oyster restoration in Hiroshima -- Entangled (after)lives: Naturalcultural matricides and reproduction in northeastern DR Congo -- Threatened Maize, Threatened Language: Indigenous engagements with biocultural conservation in Yucatan, Mexico -- Ecotones in the Emerald Triangle: Zones of multispecies co-occupation, coexistence, and conflict in the California redwoods -- "Cheese" and "Cheez"? On the relation between plant-based and dairy-based cheeses -- Microbes and Biocultural Diversity in the Ganges: Antibiotic modernity and the revival of phage therapy -- Afterward: Rethinking "Green" energy futures through avian landscapes.
In: Palgrave Studies in Globalization, Culture and Society
Chapter 1. Introduction: Conceptualizing Hinterlands -- PART I Materialities: Extraction, Logistics -- Chapter 2. Belly of the World: Toxicity, Innocence, and Indigestibility in Plastic China -- Chapter 3. Cultivating Hinterland: What Lies Behind Agnes Denes's Wheatfield? -- Chapter 4. Dividing, Connecting, and Complicating the Hinterland: The Lower Orange River/ !Garib -- Chapter 5. The Coast Bouleverses at Kolkata -- Chapter 6. Reclaiming the (Hinter)land: Lake Texcoco and the Airport That Never Was -- Chapter 7. Hinterlands of Extraction, Climate Change, and South African Energy Companies -- PART II Affectivities: Abandonment and Dreaming -- Chapter 8."Washed with Sun": Landscaping South Africa's Hinterlands.-Chapter 9. Swamp Things: The Wetland Roots of American Authoritarianism -- Chapter 10. Ambivalence and Resistance in Contemporary Imaginations of US Capitalist Hinterlands -- Chapter 11. An Arc Beyond Stasis: Activism in the Hinterland-facing Fictions of Alex La Guma and Zoë Wicomb -- Chapter 12. "Reservoirs of the Subconscious of a People": The Local, National, and Global Resonances of a Lost Hinterland -- Chapter 13. Biophilia in the Hinterland: Symbiotic Affects in Robinson in Ruins -- PART III Ecologies: Care, Transformation -- Chapter 14. The Hinterland at Sea -- Chapter 15. Wet and Dry Hinterlands: Pluviality and Drought in J. M. Coetzee's Life and Times of Michael K.-Chapter 16. The Animal Hinterland in Marieke Lucas Rijneveld's My Heavenly Favorite -- Chapter 17. Compound Focalization in the Literary Hinterlands -- Chapter 18. Behind Johannesburg: Plants and Possible Futures in an Industrialized Hinterland -- Chapter 19. Hinterland, Underground.
In: Routledge international handbooks
"The Routledge Handbook of Environmental History presents a cutting-edge overview of the dynamic and ever-expanding field of environmental history. It addresses recent transformations in the field and responses to shifting scholarly, political, and environmental landscapes. The handbook fully and critically engages with recent exciting changes, contextualizes them within longer-term shifts in the field, and charts potential new directions for study. It focuses on five key areas: Theories and concepts related to changing considerations of social justice, including postcolonial, antiracist, and feminist approaches, and the field's growing emphasis on multiple human voices and agencies. The roles of non-humans and the more-than-human in the telling of environmental histories, from animals and plants to insects as vectors of disease and the influences of water and ice, the changing theoretical approaches and the influence of concepts in related areas such as animal and discard studies. How changes in theories and concepts are shaping methods in environmental history and shifting approaches to traditional sources like archives and oral histories as well as experiments by practitioners with new methods and sources. Responses to a range of current complex problems, such as climate change, and how environmental historians can best help mitigate and resolve these problems. Diverse ways in which environmental historians disseminate their research within and beyond academia, including new modes of research dissemination, teaching, and engagements with stakeholders and the policy arena. This is an important resource for environmental historians, researchers and students in the related fields of political ecology, environmental studies, natural resources management and environmental planning"--
Judging the future and the future of judging : the anthropocene judgments project / Nicole Rogers -- Takayna/Tarkine and the EPBC Act : from heritage frameworks to habitat thinking / Brad Jessup and Christine Parker -- Are nonhuman animals entitled to dignity, privacy, and non-exploitation? a smart dairy farm of the future / Natalia Szablewska and Clara Mancini -- The sea casts its net of justice wide : a speculative judgment for what has been left to the waters of despair / Foluke Adebisi -- Swan by her litigation representative Bella Donna of the champions v administrative algorithmic transformer and Minister for immigration and border protection / André Dao -- The doctrine of quantum entanglement / Kate Galloway -- The case of young people v government of Ireland / Aoife Daly and Orla Kelleher -- The truth and reparations commission : climate reparations for the anthropocene / Zoe Nay and Julia Dehm -- How to blow up a coalmine : the Trial of the Waratah / Nicole Rogers -- Piccadilly circus water lilies : a judgment on participation and place experience in future planning decisions / Chiara Armen -- The problem with cooperative action problems : conceptions of agency and the understanding of environmental crises / Oscar Davis, Bindi Bennett, and Kelly Menzel -- A voice, truth, and treaty thought experiment / Robert Cunningham -- The disillusion of international law / Jo Bird and Greta Bird -- Imagining ecocentric bioregional law in Australia / Michelle Maloney -- A bleak future beckons climate refugees / Ayesha Riaz -- How will 2050 forms of artificial intelligence (AI) judge the anthropocene? / Tania Sourdin and ChatGPT -- After the law / Elena Cirkovic -- Former people of planet earth v the world corporate alliance / Susan Bird and Mark Brady -- More-than-human relations on the third rock from the sun / Michelle Lim.
In: Law, justice and ecology
This book critically engages the emerging field of global animal law from the perspective of an intersectional ethical framework. Reconceptualising global animal law, this book argues that global animal law overrepresents views from the west as it does not sufficiently engage views from the Global South, as well as from Indigenous and other marginalised communities. Tracing this imbalance to the early development of animal law's reaction to issues of international trade, the book elicits the anthropocentrism and colonialism that underpin this bias. In response, the book outlines a new, intersectional, second wave of animal ethics. Incorporating marginalised viewpoints, it elevates the field beyond the dominant concern with animal welfare and rights. And, drawing on aspects of decolonial thought, earth jurisprudence, intersectionality theory and posthumanism, it offers a fundamental rethinking of the very basis of global animal law. The book's critical, yet practical, new approach to global animal law will appeal to animal law and environmental law experts, legal theorists, and those working in the areas of animal studies and ecology.