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Page 1: Mapping the Conservation Landscape

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Conservation Biology, Page 647Volume 17, No. 2, April 2003

Recently Received BooksJuly–October 2002

Adaptive Herbivore Ecology: from Resources to

Populations in Variable Environments.

Owen-Smith, N. 2002. Cambridge University Press, NewYork, NY. 384 pp. $90.00. ISBN 0–521–81061–2.

Amphibians and Reptiles of Baja California,Including Its Pacific Islands and the Islandsof the Sea of Cortés.

Grismer, L. L. 2002. TheUniversity of California Press, Berkeley. 413 pp.$95.00. ISBN 0–520–22417–5.

Avian Ecology and Conservation in an Ur-banizing World.

Marzluff, J. M., R. Bowman,and R. Donnelly, editors. 2001. Kluwer Aca-demic, Dordrecht, The Netherlands. 598 pp.$159.95. ISBN 0–7923–7458–4.

The Cerrados of Brazil: Ecology and Natural

History of a Neotropical Savanna.

Oliveira,P. S., and R. J. Marquis, editors. 2002. ColumbiaUniversity Press, New York, NY. 406 pp. $74.50

(hardcover). ISBN 0–231–12042–7. $37.50 (paper-back). ISBN 0–231–12043–5.

The Earth’s Biosphere; Evolution, Dynam-ics, and Change.

Smil, V. 2002. The MIT Press,Cambridge, MA. 346 pp. $32.95. ISBN 0–262–19472–4.

Estimating Animal Abundance: Closed Pop-ulations.

Borchers, D. L., S. T. Buckland, and W.Zucchini. 2002. Springer-Verlag, London. 327pp. $69.95. ISBN 1–85233–560–2.

Finding Common Ground: Governance andNatural Resources in the American West.

Brunner, R. D., C. H. Colburn, C. M. Cromley,

R. A. Klein, and E. A. Olson. 2002. Yale Univer-sity Press, New Haven, CT. 303 pp. $17.00 (paper-back) ISBN 0–300–09145–1.

Oceans 2020: Science, Trends, and the Chal-lenge of Sustainability.

Field, J., G. Field, G.Hempel, and C. P. Summerhayes, editors. 2002.Island Press, Washington, D.C. 296 pp. $60.00(hardcover). ISBN 1–55963–469–3. $25.00 (paper-back). ISBN 1–55963–470–7.

Water Follies: Groundwater Pumping andthe Fate of America’s Fresh Waters.

Glennon,R. 2002. Island Press, Washington, D.C. 324 pp.$25.00 ISBN 1–55963–223–2.

Wildlife, Fire & Future Climate: a Forest Eco-system Analysis.

2002. CSIRO Publishing, Col-lingwood, Victoria, Australia. 196 pp. AU$80.00(paperback). ISBN 0–643–06756–6.

In the February 2003 issue (vol. 17, no. 1, p. 116) of

Conservation Biology

, Kent Redford’s email address should havebeen revised by the publisher to read [email protected], and he is affiliated with the Wildlife Conservation Society;only Michael Wright is affiliated with The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. David Olson’s current ad-dress is in Suva, Fiji. Additionally, on page 117, reference to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is incorrect. It shouldread U.S. Forest Service. In Table 1, incorrect reference is made to U.S. Code of Federal Regulation under the column“Organization.” It should read U.S. Forest Service. The authors thank Joseph Dudley for pointing out their mistake. Forthe analysis of the U.S. Forest Service, the authors relied on the National Forest System Land and Resource ManagementPlanning Rule, which was adopted 9 November 2000 (

Federal Register

65:67514). Subsequent to the acceptance ofthe manuscript, the U.S. Forest Service proposed a number of changes to this rule. These proposed changes were pub-lished on 6 December 2002 in the

Federal Register

(67:72770-72816).

Errata

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