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Tropical Ecosystems and Ecological Concepts
Introductory textbook using the entire range of tropical ecosystems - terrestrial, freshwater and marine - to illustrate and explain major ecological concepts.
Patrick L. Osborne (Author)
9780521177344, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 9 February 2012
536 pages, 212 b/w illus. 44 tables
24.5 x 18.8 x 2.4 cm, 1.13 kg
"Where the author pauses to explain topics in detail, the writing is excellent and the charts/graphs are illustrative. Clearly, Osborne is a good teacher who has thought carefully about how to best explain tropical ecology using the entire world as his classroom. Recommended."
G.C. Stevens, Choice Magazine
Tropical habitats cover over one third of the Earth's terrestrial surface and harbor much of its biodiversity, with many areas rich in endemic species. However, these ecosystems are under significant and growing threat from issues such as deforestation, land degradation and ocean acidification. This introductory textbook provides a comprehensive guide to the major tropical biomes. It is unique in its balanced coverage of both aquatic and terrestrial systems and in its international scope. Each chapter is built around a particular tropical ecosystem, with descriptive case studies providing a framework around which ecological concepts and applied ecological topics are presented. This second edition has been thoroughly updated to reflect recent advances in the field and includes a greater focus on the impact of global climate change. The text is supported throughout by boxes containing supplementary material and is illustrated with over 200 clear, simple line diagrams, maps and photographs.
Preface
Abbreviations and units
1. The tropical environment and climate
2. Dry, hot deserts and environmental factors
3. Grasslands and primary production
4. Savanna and population dynamics
5. Lakes, energy flow and biogeochemical cycling
6. Rivers, floodplains and estuaries: the river continuum and flood-pulse concepts
7. Wetlands and succession
8. Tropical rain forests and biodiversity
9. Mountains, zonation and community gradients
10. Mangroves, seagrasses and decomposition
11. Coral reefs and community ecology
12. Islands, archipelagos, biogeography and evolutionary ecology
13. Cities and human ecology
Glossary
References
Index.