Forest wildlife conservation is critically required in many parts of the world today. This book presents a merger between the elements of wildlife conservation and habitat conservation, and explains how these disciplines can be used to promote the conservation of vertebrates in forests around the world. This book focuses on changing forests worldwide, bringing together the knowledge of conservation scientists on the influence of environmental change on forest fauna. - CAB Abstracts; This book highlights the status of key vertebrates inhabiting the world's forests and the past and current effects that environment change exerts upon these populations. - Natural Areas Journal; ...it is up-to-date and dynamic in its approach and offers many suggestions about how things might be approached. This is a useful and timely book and will be well recieved by both ecologists and forest management practitioners. - Journal of Animal Ecology. Change is a dynamic force that is continuously influencing faunal diversity in forests around the world. Therefore, strategies to conserve forest species and habitats are needed in many parts of the world today to integrate predictions of change. This book serves to coalesce the knowledge of conservation scientists with regard to the current influence of environmental change on forest fauna. Forest wildlife conservation is urgently required in many parts of the world today. This book focuses on changing forests worldwide. It highlights the status of the key vertebrates inhabiting these forests and the past and current effects that environmental change exerts on these vertebrate populations. The evidence of changes in forests and forest fauna are presented and issues that are most critical to the conservation of these forested ecosystems are proposed. Ronald I. Miller was Senior Officer in the Species Mapping Section of the World Conservation Monitoring Centre, UK, and is now New England Gap Analysis Research Consultant, Amherst Massachusetts, having also worked for the World Bank and the Nature Conservancy.