The Environmental Impact of Burrowing Animals and Animal Burrows
The Proceeding of a Symposium held at the Zoological Society of London on 3rd and 4th May 1990
Peter S and Azra Meadows editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:13th Feb '92
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This volume examines the impact of burrowing animals on the environment, over a wide range of taxa - ants, beetles, wood-borers, nematodes, fish, rabbits, badgers, rats - paying equal attention to terrestrial and aquatic habitats. Burrowing activities have significant environmental effects, such as increased soil fertility, changes in plant abundance and distribution, increased chemical interchange across the sediment-water interface, and alterations in soil and sediment stability. The scale and importance of animal burrowing are made clearer than ever before by the contributors to this symposium.
'The scale and importance of animal burrowing are made clearer than ever before by the contributors to this symposium.' Ethology Ecology & Evolution 5: 1993
ISBN: 9780198546801
Dimensions: 237mm x 163mm x 26mm
Weight: 734g
368 pages