Edited by
Naomi Cappuccino, University of Texas, Austin, U.S.A.
Peter Price, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, U.S.A.
Description
An understanding of the dynamics of populations is critically important to ecologists, evolutionary biologists, wildlife managers, foresters,
and many other biologists. This edited treatise brings together the latest research on how populations fluctuate in size, the factors
that drive these changes, and the theories explaining how populations are regulated. The book also includes specific chapters dealing
with insects of economic importance.
Audience:
Advanced undergraduates, graduate students, faculty and researchers in ecology, forestry, evolutionary biology, and theoretical and mathematical
biology. Institutions with strong programs in these areas are also likely buyers.This book should do well with members of the Ecological
Society of America, and the American Naturalist Society, as well as other groups.