Greetings all, please check out our new edited volume entitled:
Sirenian Conservation: Issues and Strategies in Developing Countries
http://www.amazon.com/Sirenian-Conservation-Strategies-Developing-Countries/dp/0813037611
and please review it on Amazon!  Thanks, Ellen

This important scientific volume comprehensively explores the biology and 
ecological status of manatees and dugongs in all of the geographic regions 
where they can be found today, from the Caribbean to Eastern Africa, from 
Arabia to the Amazon, and from Japan through the South Pacific to Australia.
Many of these dwindling populations are situated in developing 
countries--locales that have previously received little attention in the 
scientific literature.
In these areas, people occupying rivers or coastlines still capture sirenians 
for food and other uses (oil, bones for carving, leather). In addition, 
disruption, erosion, or complete loss of sirenian habitat occurs because of 
dredge and fill, coastal run-off, chemical pollution, and damage from boat 
propellers.
Sirenian Conservation features contributions from an international group of 
scientists who are working to address the many challenges to manatee and dugong 
food supply, environment, reproduction, and survival. They share stories of 
programs that rescue, rehabilitate, release, and monitor these animals; offer 
reports on practical, replicable, and cost-effective management techniques; and 
summarize current research strategies.

Ellen Hines, PhD
Professor
Marine & Coastal Conservation and Spatial Planning Lab
Department of Geography and Human Environmental Studies
San Francisco State University
1600 Holloway Ave
San Francisco, CA 94132 USA
1 415 338 1482
Fax: 1 415 338 6243
ehi...@sfsu.edu<mailto:ehi...@sfsu.edu>
gis.sfsu.edu/coastal



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