Containing contributions from some of the worlds leading tropical ecologists this book provides a summary of the key issues in the discipline of tropical ecology. INDICE: Preface. Carson, Walter and Schnitzer, Stefan.Foreword. Wright, S.Joseph.SECTION 1. INTRODUCTION.1. Tropical Forest Community Ecology: Scope ofthe Book and Key Contributions. Schnitzer, Stefan and Carson, Walter. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and University of Pittsburgh.SECTION 2. LARGE-SCALEPATTERNS IN TROPICAL COMMUNITIES.2. Spatial Variation in Tree Species Composition across Tropical Forests: Pattern and Process. Chave, Jerome. CNRS, Toulouse, France.3. The Disparity in Tree Species Richness Between Tropical, Temperate and Boreal Biomes: The Geographic Area and Age Hypothesis. Fine, Paul et al. University of Michigan.4. Explaining Geographic Range Size by Species Age: ATest Using Neotropical Piper Species. Paul, John and Tonsor, Stephen. University of Pittsburgh.5. Patterns of Herbivory and Defense in Tropical Dry and Rain Forests. Dirzo, Rodolfo and Karina Boege. Stanford University and Universidad National de Mexico.6. Ecological Organization, Biogeography, and the Phylogenetic Structure of Tropical Forest Tree Communities. Webb, Campbell, Cannon, Charles, and Davies, Stuart. Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Texas TechUniversity, and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Center for Tropical Forest Science.7. Large Tropical Forest Dynamics Plots: Testing Explanations for the Maintenance of Species Diversity. Zimmerman, Jess, Thompson, Jill, Brokaw, Nick University of Puerto Rico.SECTION 3. TESTING THEORIES OF FOREST REGENERATION AND THE MAINTENANCE OF SPECIES DIVERSITY.8. Tropical Forest Ecology: Sterile or Virgin for Theoreticians. Leigh, Egbert. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.9. Functional Basis for Resource Niche Partitioning by Tropical Trees. Kaoru Kitajima and Poorter, Lourens. University of Florida and WageningenUniversity.10. Colonization-Related Tradeoffs in Tropical Forests and Their Role in the Maintenance of Species Diversity. Mueller-Landau, Helene. University of Minnesota.11. Treefall gaps and the maintenance of plant species diversity in tropical forests. Schnitzer, Stefan, Mascaro, Joseph, and Carson, Walter.University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and University of Pittsburgh.12. ChallengesAssociated with Testing and Falsifying the Janzen-Connell Hypothesis: A Review and Critique. Carson, Walter, Anderson, Jill, Leigh Egbert, and Schnitzer, Stefan. University of Pittsburgh, Cornell University, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.13. Seed Limitation and the Coexistence of Pioneer Species. Dalling, James and Robert John. University of Illinois.14. Endophytic Fungi: Hidden Components of Tropical Community Ecology. Arnold, Elizabeth. University of Arizona.SECTION 4. ANIMAL COMMUNITY ECOLOGYAND TROPHIC INTERACTIONS.15. Tropical tri-trophic interactions: Nasty Hosts and Ubiquitous Cascades. Lee Dyer, Tulane University.16. Variation in Tree Seedling and Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Spore Responses to the Exclusion of Terrestrial Vertebrates: Implications for how Vertebrates Structure Tropical Communities. Theimer, Tad and Gehring, Catherine. Northern Arizona University.17. Ecosystem Decay in Closed Forest Fragments. Terborgh, John and Feeley, Kenneth. Duke University.18. Resource Limitation of Insular Animals: Causes and Consequences. Adler, Greg. University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh.19. Tropical arboreal ants: Linking Nutrient to Roles in Rainforest Ecosystems. Davidson, Diane and Cook, Steven. University of Utah.20. Soil Fertility and Arboreal Mammal Biomass in Tropical Forests. Peres, Carlos. University of East Anglia, UK.SECTION 5.SECONDARY FOREST SUCCESSION, DYNAMICS AND INVASION.21. Processes ConstrainingWoody Species Succession on Abandoned Pastures in the Tropics: on the Relevance of Temperate Models of Succession. Peterson, Chris and Carson, Walter. University of Georgia and University of Pittsburgh.22. Chance and Determinism in Tropical Forest Succession. Chazdon, Robin. University of Connecticut.23. Exotic Plant Invasions in Tropical Forests: Patterns and hypotheses. Denslow, Julieand DeWalt, Saara. US Forest Service, Hawaii and Clemson University.SECTION 6. TROPICAL FOREST CONSERVATION.24. Linking Insights from Ecological Research with Bioprospecting to promote Conservation, Enhance Research Capacity and Provide Economic Uses of Biodiversity. Kursar, Thomas, Lissy Coley, et al. University of Utah.25. Tropical Rainforest Conservation: a Global Perspective. Richard Corlett and Richard Primack. University of Hong Kong and Boston University.26. Environmental Promise and Peril in the Amazon. Laurance, William. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.27. Contributions of Ecologists to the Conservation of Tropical Forests. Putz, Jack and Zuidema, Pieter. University of Florida and Utrecht University.SECTION 7. CONCLUSIONS AND SYNTHESIS.28. Conclusions and Synthesis: New Directions for Tropical Forest Ecology. Carson, Walter, Schnitzer, Stefan, and Hubbell, Stephen. University of Pittsburgh, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and University of Georgia.Index
- ISBN: 978-1-4051-1897-2
- Editorial: Blackwell
- Encuadernacion: Rústica
- Páginas: 520
- Fecha Publicación: 11/07/2008
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés