The Zoology of the Indo-Australian Archipelago

The Zoology of the Indo-Australian Archipelago
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 32
Release :
ISBN-10 : UOM:39015068597395
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (95 Downloads)

Synopsis The Zoology of the Indo-Australian Archipelago by : Internationale circumpacifische onderzoek-commissie

Feathered Entanglements

Feathered Entanglements
Author :
Publisher : UBC Press
Total Pages : 348
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780774870030
ISBN-13 : 0774870036
Rating : 4/5 (30 Downloads)

Synopsis Feathered Entanglements by : Scott E. Simon

As they migrated across great distances, ancient humans may have used birdsong and bird sightings to find food and water in unseen territory. Today, attending to birds helps scientists track not only avian migration but also environmental change. Birds remain our sentinels. Feathered Entanglements offers a rich tapestry of human-bird relations across the Indo-Pacific. In this era of uncontrolled industrialization, we have grown increasingly disconnected from the natural world. The ways in which birds feature in the daily life, symbolic systems, and material culture of humans, from pigeon keeping on the rooftops of Amman to the rituals of Indigenous peoples in Taiwan, can teach us how to live with other species amid the challenges of the Anthropocene. In a time of intensifying ecological crisis, we need, more than ever, to protect and appreciate non-human lives. Feathered Entanglements embraces the connection between humans, birds, and our shared world.

Ecology of Indonesian Papua Part One

Ecology of Indonesian Papua Part One
Author :
Publisher : Tuttle Publishing
Total Pages : 800
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781462906796
ISBN-13 : 1462906796
Rating : 4/5 (96 Downloads)

Synopsis Ecology of Indonesian Papua Part One by : Andrew J. Marshall

The Ecology of Papua provides a comprehensive review of current scientific knowledge on all aspects of the natural history of western (Indonesian) New Guinea. Designed for students of conservation, environmental workers, and academic researchers, it is a richly detailed text, dense with biogeographical data, historical reference, and fresh insight on this complicated and marvelous region. We hope it will serve to raise awareness of Papua on a global as well as local scale, and to catalyze effective conservation of its most precious natural assets. New Guinea is the largest and highest tropical island, and one of the last great wilderness areas remaining on Earth. Papua, the western half of New Guinea, is noteworthy for its equatorial glaciers, its vast forested floodplains, its imposing central mountain range, its Raja Ampat Archipelago, and its several hundred traditional forest-dwelling societies. One of the wildest places left in the world, Papua possesses extraordinary biological and cultural diversity. Today, Papua’s environment is under threat from growing outside pressures to exploit its expansive forests and to develop large plantations of oil palm and biofuels. It is important that Papua’s leadership balance economic development with good resource management, to ensure the long-term well-being of its culturally diverse populace.

Notodontidae of the Indonesian Archipelago (Lepidoptera)

Notodontidae of the Indonesian Archipelago (Lepidoptera)
Author :
Publisher : BRILL
Total Pages : 457
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9789004354258
ISBN-13 : 9004354255
Rating : 4/5 (58 Downloads)

Synopsis Notodontidae of the Indonesian Archipelago (Lepidoptera) by : Alexander Schintlmeister

A standard work, which deals monographic with all oriental notodontid moths between Australia and the Malayan Peninsula. All species are illustrated as adults in both sexes in colour and in their genitalia. Detailed distribution maps are provided for each species.

Wild Profusion

Wild Profusion
Author :
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Total Pages : 218
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781400849703
ISBN-13 : 1400849705
Rating : 4/5 (03 Downloads)

Synopsis Wild Profusion by : Celia Lowe

Wild Profusion tells the fascinating story of biodiversity conservation in Indonesia in the decade culminating in the great fires of 1997-98--a time when the country's environment became a point of concern for social and environmental activists, scientists, and the many fishermen and farmers nationwide who suffered from degraded environments and faced accusations that they were destroying nature. Celia Lowe argues that biodiversity, in 1990s Indonesia, implied a particular convergence of nature, nation, science, and identity that made Indonesians' mapping of the concept distinct within transnational practices of nature conservation at the time. Lowe recounts the efforts of Indonesian biologists to document the species of the Togean Islands, to "develop" Togean people, and to turn this archipelago off the coast of Sulawesi into a national park. Indonesian scientists aspired to a conservation biology that was both internationally recognizable and politically effective in the Indonesian context. Simultaneously, Lowe describes the experiences of Togean Sama people who had their own understandings of nature and nation. To place Sama and scientist into the same conceptual frame, Lowe studies Sama ideas in the context of transnational thought rather than local knowledge. In tracking the practice of conservation biology in a postcolonial setting, Wild Profusion explores what in nature can count as important and for whom.

The Archaeology of the Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia

The Archaeology of the Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia
Author :
Publisher : ANU E Press
Total Pages : 322
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781921313042
ISBN-13 : 1921313048
Rating : 4/5 (42 Downloads)

Synopsis The Archaeology of the Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia by : Sue O'Connor

This volume describes the results of the first archaeological survey and excavations carried out in the fascinating and remote Aru Islands, Eastern Indonesia between 1995 and 1997. The naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, who stopped here in search of the Birds of Paradise on his voyage through the Indo-Malay Archipelago in the 1850s, was the first to draw attention to the group. The results reveal a complex and fascinating history covering the last 30,000 years from its early settlement by hunter-gatherers, the late Holocene arrival of ceramic producing agriculturalists, later associations with the Bird of Paradise trade and the colonial expansion of the Dutch trading empires. The excavations and finds from two large Pleistocene caves, Liang Lemdubu and Nabulei Lisa, are reported in detail documenting the changing environmental and cultural history of the islands from when they were connected to Greater Australia and used by hunter/gatherers to their formation as islands and use by agriculturalists. The results of the excavation of the late Neolithic - Metal Age midden at Wangil are discussed, as is the mysterious pre-Colonial fort at Ujir and the 350-year old ruins of forts and a church associated with the Dutch garrisons.