This is an important resource for students, professors, researchers, and governmental and non-governmental organizations active in biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation.
Table of Contents
Section I: Deserts1. Antarctica Desert
2. Northern Great Rift Valley: deserts and otherbiomes
3. Ecosystem services in the Atacama region, Chile
4. Chihuahuan Desert
5. Simpson Desert
6. Indian Thar
7. Sahara and other African Deserts
Section II: Insular Biomes
8. Madagascar and Mauritius as Insular Biomes
Section III: Mediterranean
9. Mediterranean Basin
10. An Afromontane biome in South Africa:ecological quality of natural vs transformed habitats
Section IV: Prairies and Steppes
11. Prairies and Steppes: Cradles of GrasslandBiodiversity
12. European steppes and forest-steppes
13. American
Section V: Shrublands
14. Biodiversity and Ecological Dynamics of theFynbos Biome in South Africa
15. Mediterranean Shrublands
16. Xeric Shrublands
Section VI: Savannas
17. Land degradation and its associated eff ects ondung beetle species in African Savanna
18. Asia
19. Australian Savannas
20. American Savanna: A brief review
Section VII: Subterranean
21. Subterranean
Section VIII: Taiga
22. Asia
23. North Europe
Section IX: Temperate Forests
24. Temperate forest of Asia in the wake of climatechange
25. Temperate forests at Southern South America:Challenges for management and conservation to faceclimate change
26. Europe Temperate Forests
27. North America
Section X: Tropical Forests
28. Conservation status of dung beetles(Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae) in African tropical forests
29. The use of phytotelmata by amphibians in theAmazon rainforest: A review and case study
30. Asia’s Ecological Tapestry: NavigatingConservation Challenges in the Era of Global Warming
31. Atlantic Forest
32. Biodiversity, function and change of tropicalrainforests of Borneo
33. Caatinga
Section XI: Tundras
34. Asian Arctic tundra: Vast permafrost ecosystemsunder increasing pressure by climate change and industrialdevelopment
35. The importance of Belarus tundra peat bogs forbiodiversity conservation in global warming condition
36. North American tundras: Imperiled landscapesat a continent’s latitudinal and altitudinal extremes
Authors
Germano Le�o Demolin-Leite Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil.Dr. Germano Le�o Demolin-Leite is a researcher for the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, as well as a full professor in the Institute of Agricultural Sciences at Federal University of Minas Gerais (ICA/UMFG). He currently teaches courses on Animal Biology and Plant Production. Dr. Demolin-Leite's recent research focuses on degraded area recuperation. He has been Coordinator of the Zoology & Entomology Laboratory. and Insectarium G.W.G. Mor�es (Trichogramma sp.). He has published over 230 scholarly journal articles and six books. Dr. Demolin-Leite also serves on the review board for numerous journals and periodicals, including Elsevier's Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety.