David Burslem is Senior Lecturer in Tropical Plant Science at the University of Aberdeen. His current research focuses on tropical forest sites in Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Ecuador.
Michelle Pinard is Lecturer in Tropical Forestry at the University of Aberdeen. Her research focuses on sites in Ghana, Ethiopia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Brazil and Bolivia.
Sue Hartley is Reader in Ecology at the University of Sussex, specialising in the study of plant-animal interactions.
Contributors:
- John J. Ewel
- Ankila Hiremath
- Lourens Poorter
- Jim Dalling
- David Burslem
- Maria Uriarte
- Stephen P. Hubbell
- Robert John
- Roger Condit
- Charles D. Canham
- Drew Purves
- Steve Pacala
- Greg Gilbert
- Ian Alexander
- Lee Su See
- Edward Allen Herre
- Damond Kyllo
- Scott Mangan
- Rebecca Husband
- Luis C. Mejia
- Ahn-Heum Eom
- S. A. Van Bael
- Z. Maynard
- N. Robbins
- J. Bischoff
- A. E. Arnold
- E. Rojas
- R. A. Cordero
- C. Woodward
- Jaboury Ghazoul
- Helene Muller-Landau
- Denise Hardesty
- Joe Fragoso
- Bob Marquis
- Fergus Massey
- Malcolm Press
- Sue Hartley
- Deborah Letourneau
- Lee Dyer
- Doyle McKey
- Laurence Gaume
- Carine Brouat
- Bruno Di Gusto
- Laurence Pascal
- Gabriel Debout
- Ambroise Dalecky
- Martin Heil
- Paulo S. Oliveira
- Kleber Del-Claro
- William F. Laurance
- Saara DeWalt
- Ariel Lugo
- Thomas Brandeis
- R. Sukumar
- H. S. Suresh
- H. S. Dattaraja
- A. Srinidhi
- C. Nath
- Michelle Pinard
Tropical ecosystems house a significant proportion of global biodiversity. To understand how these ecosystems function we need to appreciate not only what plants, animals and microbes they contain, but also how they interact with each other. This volume synthesises the current state of knowledge in this area, with chapters providing reviews or case studies drawn from research conducted in both Old and New World tropics and including biotic interactions among taxa at all trophic levels. In most chapters plants (typically trees) are the starting point, but, taken together, the chapters consider interactions of plants with other plants, with micro-organisms and with animals, and the inter-relationships of human-induced disturbance with interactions among species. An underlying theme of the volume is the attempt to understand the maintenance of high diversity in tropical regions, which remains one of the most significant unexplained observations in ecological studies.
發表於2024-11-02
Biotic Interactions in the Tropics 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
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network thinking~
評分network thinking~
評分network thinking~
評分network thinking~
評分network thinking~
Biotic Interactions in the Tropics 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載