ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
En
viron
me
nta
l Co
nse
rva
tion
Vo
lum
e 4
4 Is
su
e 4
De
ce
mb
er 2
017
PP
. 311 – 4
12
ENVIRONMENTALCONSERVATION
VOLUME 44 ISSUE 4 VOLUME 44 ISSUE 4
THEMATIC SECTION. HUMANS AND ISLAND ENVIRONMENTS
SUBJECT REVIEWSWhat is the importance of islands to environmental conservation?By Christoph Kueffer and Kealohanuiopuna Kinney 311
Island ecology and evolution: challenges in the AnthropoceneBy Natalie R. Graham, Daniel S. Gruner, Jun Y. Lim
and Rosemary G. Gillespie 323
Changing understandings of local knowledge in island environmentsBy Matthew Lauer 336
Island extinctions: processes, patterns, and potential for ecosystem restorationBy Jamie R. Wood, Josep A. Alcover, Tim M. Blackburn,
Pere Bover, Richard P. Duncan, Julian P. Hume, Julien Louys,
Hanneke J.M. Meijer, Juan C. Rando and Janet M. Wilmshurst 348
Invasive alien species on islands: impacts, distribution, interactions and managementBy James C. Russell, Jean-Yves Meyer, Nick D. Holmes
and Shyama Pagad 359
A reappraisal of the role of humans in the biotic disturbance of islandsBy Juan D. Delgado, Rodrigo Riera, Ricardo A. Rodríguez,
Pablo González-Moreno and José María Fernández-Palacios 371
PAPERS Infl uence of sea level rise on discounting, resource use and migration in small-island communities: an agent-based modelling approachBy Adam Douglas Henry, Andreas Egelund Christensen,
Rebecca Hofmann, Ivo Steimanis and Björn Vollan 381
Wildlife species preferences differ among children in continental and island locationsBy Hannah G. Shapiro, M. Nils Peterson, Kathryn T. Stevenson,
Kristin N. Frew and R. Brian Langerhans 389
The nature and extent of terrestrial protected area coverage on the UK’s Overseas TerritoriesBy Nicholas I. Wilkinson, Jonathan G. Hall, Juliet A. Vickery
and Graeme M. Buchanan 397
REPORTHigh sedimentary oxygen consumption indicates that sewage input from small islands drives benthic community shifts on overfi shed reefsBy Amanda K. Ford, Nanne Van Hoytema, Bradley R. Moore,
Lina Pandihau, Christian Wild and Sebastian C. A. Ferse 405
ERRATUMHigh sedimentary oxygen consumption indicates that sewage input from small islands drives benthic community shifts on overfi shed reefs – ERRATUMBy Amanda K. Ford, Nanne Van Hoytema, Bradley R. Moore,
Lina Pandihau, Christian Wild and Sebastian C. A. Ferse 412
Published on behalf of the Foundation for Environmental Conservation
cambridge.org/encMIX
Paper fromresponsible sources
FSC® C007785
®
DECEMBER 2017 DECEMBER 2017
International Journal of Interdisciplinary Environmental Science
EDITORNicholas V. C. Polunin
ASSOCIATE EDITORSJohn Innes, Aaron MacNeil, William J. McShea, Johan Oldekop,
Andrew Reeson, Charlie M. Shackleton, Trevor J. Willis
International Journal of Interdisciplinary Environmental Science
Thematic section. Humans and Island Environments
cambridge.org/enc
Cambridge Core
03768929_44-4.indd 103768929_44-4.indd 1 16/11/17 9:12 AM16/11/17 9:12 AM
https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892917000546Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 65.21.228.167, on 15 Nov 2021 at 04:09:47, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at
SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTSManuscripts may now be submitted via Manuscript CentralTM
Go to http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/envcon.
The Journal’s Instructions for Contributors can be found on the Journal’s
webpage at http://assets.cambridge.org/ENC/ENC_ifc.pdf
SUBSCRIPTIONSEnvironmental Conservation (ISSN 0376-8929) is published four times a year
in March, June, September and December. Four parts form a
volume. The 2017 subscription price (excluding VAT) of a volume, which
includes print and electronic access, is £629 (US$1186 in USA, Canada and
Mexico); £159 (US$292) for individuals, which includes print only, ordering
direct from the publishers and certifying that the journal is for their personal
use. The electronic-only price available to institutional subscribers is £470
(US$886 in USA, Canada and Mexico). Single parts are £176 (US$327 in
USA, Canada and Mexico) plus postage. EU subscribers (outside the UK)
who are not registered for VAT should add VAT at their country’s rate.
VAT registered members should provide their VAT registration number.
Japanese prices for institutions (including ASP delivery) are available from
Kinokuniya Company Ltd, PO Box 55, Chitose, Tokyo 156, Japan. Prices
include delivery by air where appropriate. Periodicals postage is paid at New
York, NY, and at additional mailing offices.
Postmaster: send address changes in the USA, Canada and Mexico to:
Environmental Conservation, Cambridge University Press, 1 Liberty Plaza,
Floor 20, New York, NY 10006, USA. Claims for missing issues should be
made immediately on receipt of the subsequent issue.
ADVERTISINGAdvertising queries for all parts of the world except the USA, Canada and
Mexico to: [email protected]
Address enquiries in the USA, Mexico and Canada only to:
COPYINGThis journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222
Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA (www.copyright.com).
Organizations in the USA who are also registered with CCC may therefore
copy material (beyond the limits permitted by sections 107 and 108 of US
copyright law) subject to payment to CCC. This consent does not extend to
multiple copying for promotional or commercial purposes. ISI Tear Sheet
Service, 3501 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA, is authorized to
supply single copies of separate articles for private use only. Organizations
authorized by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copy material sub-
ject to the usual conditions. For all other use, permission should be sought
from Cambridge or the American Branch of Cambridge University Press.
Environmental Conservation is covered by the major abstracting and indexing
services including: Biological Abstracts, Current Advances in Ecological
Sciences, Current Contents, Ecological Abstracts, Environment Index,
Environmental Abstracts, Environmental Periodicals Bibliography, Excerpta
Medica/EMBASE, Geographical Abstracts, Science Citation Index, World
Agricultural Economics & Rural Sociology Abstracts.
Internet Access
This journal is included in the Cambridge Core service which can be found at
cambridge.org. For further information on other Press titles access cambridge.org
This publication is printed on chlorine-free paper made with 75% recycled
fibres.
This journal issue has been printed on FSC-certified paper and cover board.
FSC is an independent, non-governmental, not-for-profit organization
established to promote the responsible management of the world’s forests.
Please see www.fsc.org for information.
Printed and bound by Bell & Bain Ltd, Glasgow, UK
Environmental Conservation aims to embrace all aspects of its field, including
issues in: human institutions and attitudes; biodiversity, species losses and
introductions; industry, pollution and habitat degradation; movements and
agencies; energy and materials sources; trade and conventions; terrestrial
ecosystems and carrying capacity; dynamics of populations and ecosystems;
atmospheric and oceanic processes; international environmental law; coastal
zone management; and environmental economics.
EDITORNicholas V.C. Polunin
Tel: 44 (0) 191 208 6675
School of Marine Science & Technology, Newcastle University
Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK
E-mail: [email protected]
COPY-EDITORJohn Marr
E-mail: [email protected]
ASSOCIATE EDITORSJohn Innes (Forestry) University of British Columbia, Canada
Aaron MacNeil (Statistical ecology/biodiversity) Dalhousie University, Canada
William J. McShea (Wildlife conservation) Smithsonian
Conservation Biology Institute, USA
Johan Oldekop (Conservation & development) University of Sheffield, UK
Andrew Reeson (Environmental economics) CSIRO Ecosystem
Sciences, Australia
Charlie M. Shackleton (Natural resource sustainability) Rhodes
University, South Africa
Trevor J. Willis (Marine ecology/Comments) University
of Portsmouth, UK
ADVISORY EDITORSProfessor Carl S. Folke (Ecological Economics)
Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics, Sweden
Dr Paul Jepson (Conservation Practice)
University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Professor Gary Kofinas (Resource Management/Ecological Anthropology)
University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA
Professor William F. Laurance (Tropical Conservation Biology/Global
Change Science)
James Cook University, Australia
Dr Timothy R. McClanahan (Marine Ecology)
The Wildlife Conservation Society, Kenya
Professor Herbert H. T. Prins (Wildlife Ecology)
Wageningen University, The Netherlands
Professor Garry W. Trompf (Ethics/Beliefs)
University of Sydney, Australia
Professor Philip H. Warren (Ecological Communities)
University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
© Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2017
[URL http://www.foundationforec.org]
Cambridge University Press, Journals Fulfillment Department, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK.
1 Liberty Plaza, Floor 20, New York, NY 10006, USA
477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, Australia
C/ Orense, 4, planta 13, 28020 Madrid, Spain
Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATIONInternational Journal of Interdisciplinary Environmental Science
Cambridge University Press publishes across the full spectrum of sub-disciplines that comprise the Earth and Environmental Sciences – everything from soil science to space physics and from palaeontology to petroleum geoscience.
We are particularly well known for our comprehensive and world-leading book lists in climate change and solid Earth geophysics.
We publish books ranging in level from undergraduate and graduate textbooks to research monographs, reference volumes, and handbooks for industry practitioners.
We also have an ever-expanding journals portfolio including the prestigious journals of the Paleontological Society from 2015.
For further details visit:
cambridge.org/core-earth-and-environmental
Earth and Environmental Books and Journals from Cambridge University Press
03768929_44-4.indd 203768929_44-4.indd 2 16/11/17 9:12 AM16/11/17 9:12 AM
https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892917000546Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 65.21.228.167, on 15 Nov 2021 at 04:09:47, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at