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Soil Ecology in Northern Forests
A Belowground View of a Changing World
Encapsulates soil ecology and functioning in northern forests, focusing on the effects of human activity and climate change.
Martin Lukac (Author), Douglas L. Godbold (Author)
9780521714211, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 7 April 2011
268 pages, 83 b/w illus. 30 tables
24.6 x 17.4 x 1.3 cm, 0.54 kg
'… suitable as a text for advanced undergraduates and beginning graduate students with a strong emphasis on soil classification and properties.' Ecology
Forest soils form the foundation that underpins the existence of all forests. This book encapsulates soil ecology and functioning in northern forests, focusing on the effects of human activity and climate change. The authors introduce the fundamental principles necessary for studying forest soils, and explain the functioning and mutual influence of all parts of a forest soil ecosystem. A chapter is dedicated to each of soil acidity and heavy metal pollution, elevated carbon dioxide, nitrogen deposition and climate change, highlighting the most important anthropogenic factors influencing forest soil functioning and how these soils are likely to respond to environmental change. With its unique view of the functioning of the soils found under temperate and boreal forests in today's rapidly changing world, this book is of interest to anyone studying forestry and forest ecology in European, North American and North Asian contexts.
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Soil properties
3. Forest soil development and classification
4. Soil fungi
5. Soil water
6. Forest carbon cycle
7. Nutrient cycling
8. Northern forests in a high CO2 world
9. Soil acidity and heavy metal pollution
10. Nitrogen
11. Soil functioning and climate change
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Soil science, sedimentology [RBGB], Plant ecology [PSTS], Botany & plant sciences [PST], Biology, life sciences [PS]