This
book offers a comprehensive account of the current state of inland waters in
tropical and subtropical East Asia, exploring a series of case studies of
freshwater fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds, mammals and water bodies at
particular risk.
The
book highlights the rich freshwater biodiversity of tropical East Asia and
draws attention to the various threats it faces due to human activities and
rapid environmental change. It addresses the question of whether the
contributions of these animals and habitats, or biodiversity in general, to
ecosystem functioning and service provision provide sufficient basis for
arguments supporting nature conservation. Drawing on instances from the rivers
and lakes of tropical East Asia, the book also asks whether the benefits
accruing from intact ecosystems are likely to be enough to ensure their
preservation. If the answer to either or both these questions is 'no', then
what are the prospects for freshwater biodiversity in rapidly changing tropical
East Asia?
This
book will be of interest to students and scholars of biodiversity,
conservation, freshwater ecology, ecosystem services and Asian Studies.
Contents:
1.
The global context: fresh waters in peril
2.
The human-modified rivers of tropical East Asia
3.
The prevalence and intensity of threats to regional rivers
4.
The fishes 1: composition and threat status
5.
The fishes II: determinants of threat status and drivers of decline
6.
Amphibians and freshwater reptiles
7.
Freshwater birds and mammals
8.
Vanishing point?