SLU news

New book on famous South African wildlife park

Published: 01 March 2017

Centering on South Africa’s Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park, the book “Conserving Africa´s Mega-Diversity in the Anthropocene; the Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park Story” (Cambridge University Press) synthesizes a century of insights from the ecology and conservation management of one of Africa’s oldest protected wildlife areas.

The book is co-authored and edited by SLU researcher Joris Cromsigt.

The park provides important lessons for conservation management, as it has maintained conservation values rivalling those of much larger parks sometimes through, and sometimes despite strong management interventions, including the rescue of the white rhino from extinction.

In addition, the book highlights the ecological science produced in the park, much of which has become widely influential, including the megaherbivore concept, new functional approaches to understanding biomes, and new understandings about the role of consumers in shaping ecosystems. The volume is ideal for researchers and policymakers interested in the conservation of relatively small, isolated, protected areas.

The book is written by researchers Joris Cromsigt (ed.), Sally Archibald, and Norman Owen-Smith.

Contact: Joris Cromsigt, Assoc. Professor in Wildlife Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, ph. +46-(0)70-676 00 97, e-mail joris.cromsigt@slu.se

Publisher: www.cambridge.org


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