Phylogeny is a potentially powerful tool for conserving biodiversity.
This book explores how it can be used to tackle questions of great
practical importance and urgency for conservation. Using case studies
from many different taxa and regions of the world, the volume evaluates
how useful phylogeny is in understanding the processes that have
generated today's diversity and the processes that now threaten it. The
urgency with which conservation decisions have to be made as well as the
need for the best possible decisions make this volume of great value to
researchers, practitioners and policy-makers.