Lecture Notes for Biology of Wildlife Populations
Andrew Tyre
Gabriela Palomo
2019-01-21
Preface
I assume you have installed R and RStudio to run examples shown in each chapter.
I originally set out to write this book because no existing population dynamics texts had the right mix of topics, didn’t address management related questions, or were far too advanced for an undergraduate audience. My educational objectives for the course, and for the curriculum in which it is embedded, are as follows.
- Differentiate between the different terms and concepts in wildlife management, population models, and the law of population dynamics.
- Estimate the abundance of a species within a specific geographical area, and critically evaluate the utility of abundance estimates.
- Evaluate the impacts of habitat change on future population abundance.
- Assess how changes in harvest regulations will affect population abundance.
- Assess the effect of competitors, predators and other species on a focal species.
- Predict the consequences of alternative management actions in a Structured Decision Making (SDM) framework using simple population models.
- Identify the management decision(s) and the decision maker(s) relevant to a wildlife issue.
- Articulate the objectives of stakeholders along a means/ends continuum.
- Enumerate available management actions and assemble alternative strategies.
- Make tradeoffs between competing objectives to select a preferred management strategy in an SDM framework.
Learning Chapter
Objective
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Column names: LO, C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6, C7, C8