Recovering Caribbean Nature - James A. Kushlan

Recovering Caribbean Nature

By: James A. Kushlan, Kirsten Hines

Hardcover | 29 October 2024

At a Glance

Hardcover


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  • Around 150 stunning colour photographs featuring close-up views of plants, birds, reptiles, and butterflies as well as more environmental views of plants and habitat. Detailed information is given in the photo captions.
  • The authors are uniquely placed to author this book in terms of knowledge and experience, able to expand their successful work in Florida generally to Caribbean landscapes, particularly at lower elevation sites.
  • The book has a practical thrust, empowering private landowners as well as conservation professionals to restore plant life and thus attract wildlife.
  • Restoration ecology and conservation biology are the overarching disciplines but it also engages such fields and interest areas as wildlife biology, bird conservation, native plants, threatened species, sustainability and resilience, natural resources management, environmental landscape planning, and gardening for wildlife.
  • The book's potential audience covers 50 nations from The Bahamas, through the Greater and Lesser Antilles and the adjacent Caribbean coasts of Central and South America. Its theory and principles are applicable throughout the tropics and more comparatively in the southern tier of the United States.
  • It will be applicable in classes in agriculture, biology, botany, Caribbean studies, environmental conservation, environmental science, resources management, wildlife biology. Also in informal education including gardening, landscaping, community organization, conservation, environmental education, food independence, nature centers, not-for-profit and government programs, park management, resources management.
  • Existing theory and practice of providing habitat for native plants and animals are informed almost entirely by experience in the temperate zone, which translates poorly or not at all to the tropics. This book expands concepts of recovering and restoring nature through landscape and plot-oriented conservation to the tropics with particular reference to the Caribbean.
Industry Reviews

The recovery of nature is one of the most urgent challenges we face, in the Caribbean and around the world. With more than 1 million species threatened with extinction and the specter of climate change and sea level rise upon us the path forward may seem insurmountable. But the good news is that we can all participate in the creation of a new sustainable world, though personal actions in our gardens and landscapes. Recovering Caribbean Nature comes at a perfect time and is a welcome new resource packed with detailed guidance on how to personally contribute to the restoration and recovery of nature.

George D. Gann, Executive Director, The Institute for Regional Conservation and Chair Emeritus, Society for Ecological Restoration.

Recovering Caribbean Nature is a monumental "how to" restore the Caribbean native flora. Decades of research, island reconnaissance, and visits to gardens, nurseries and still intact and pristine habitats, provide the authors with unique insights into a growing imperative to restore the region's native flora. As a conservation practitioner for BirdLife International, it's given me a refreshing perspective on the Caribbean natural history. I even think it is the foundation for a much-needed Caribbean-wide rewilding movement - one garden at a time.

Ian J. Davidson, Director-Americas, BirdLife International.

Jim Kushlan and Kirsten Hines have consolidated knowledge from a range of resources and their own studies over many years to provide Caribbean-specific information on how to protect, restore, and recreate Caribbean nature. I am confident this book will have a tremendous impact on inspiring more people to plant native, thereby providing more high-quality habitats that are needed to support and sustain the incredible diversity of endemic and migratory birds that call the Caribbean home. Present and future generations and locals and visitors alike will enjoy and benefit from a healthier environment flourishing with native plants and abundant birds.

Lisa Sorenson, Executive Director, BirdsCaribbean.

I learned from and enjoyed reading this book, Recovering Caribbean Nature. Its review of the environmental history of the Caribbean and its role in current nature conservation provide valuable examples that can be useful for both a community member and university classes. Recovering Caribbean Nature rightly emphasizes the roles played by gardens in conserving Caribbean birds, as we have discovered in the National Botanic Garden of Cuba. The authors provide accounts of plants suggested for nature recovery and describe the birds and other animals that might use them, information that will now be available to many people in the Caribbean. The book provides both practical advice and reflections on nature restoration that can guide conservation action throughout the Caribbean. Books like this may help the islands of the West Indies to be more resilient and beautiful and at the same time become a better place in the world!

Lourdes Mugica Valdes, PhD, Faculty of Biology, University of Havana.

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