Modern Wild Faunal Resource System Management
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The life group concept for the manager recognizes a managerial unit smaller than the species. It goes in the reverse direction of the guild lumper.
The life group is an animal of a species with managerially significant requirements that differ from other life groups of that species. A turkey poult is an insectivore, significantly different in size, shape, behavior, and foraging patterns than an adult. The life group animals are often more different than others in the same species than they differ from other species.
The manager manages the life group, not just the species. To manage for the species is to over generalize.
Examples of life groups are insect instars; eggs, chicks, and adults; salamander life stages; the lactating female deer.
Perhaps life form might have been a better name for the concept but that phrase has been used by others to describe habitat conditions.
Another supportive unit on the topic.
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Last revision January 15, 2004.