The Evolutionary Strategies that Shape Ecosystems

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ISBN-13:
9780470674826
Veröffentl:
2012
Erscheinungsdatum:
10.04.2012
Seiten:
264
Autor:
J Philip Grime
Gewicht:
465 g
Format:
244x170x14 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

"In summary, The Evolutionary Strategies that Shape Ecosystemsis well-written and stimulating, and encourages its readers to think about how all the pieces of ecology might fit together, from the scale of an individual organism to entire ecosystems. It would make a valuable addition to the library of any scientist interested in ecological and evolutionary strategies." (Austral Ecology, 1 October 2013)"Certainly I have found this a useful way to think about conservation Management." (British Ecological Society, 1 April 2013)"The case studies range from microbes to animals, and even palaeontology is included in the mix, making the book a very comprehensive resource for those interested in eco-evolutionary dynamics." (Teaching Biology, 20 December 2012)"I recommend this book to people interested in evolutionary and ecological strategies in ecosystems, to those who think about universal patterns in organism life history tactics and also to those who love the challenge of linking ecology and evolution." (Basic and Applied Ecology, 1 November 2012)"A significant contribution to the field and a must read for ecologists. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above." (Choice, 1 October 2012)
Preface xChapter Summaries xiiAcknowledgements xviiiIntroduction 11 Evolution and Ecology: a Janus Perspective? 3Evolutionary biology 3Ecology 4The emergence of a science of adaptive strategies 6Summary 72 Primary Strategies: the Ideas 8MacArthur's 'blurred vision' 9The mechanism of convergence; trade-offs 10The theory of r- and K-selection 11CSR Theory 12Summary 233 Primary Adaptive Strategies in Plants 25The search for adaptive strategies 26Theoretical work 26Measuring variation in plant traits: screening programmes 28Screening of plant growth rates 29The Integrated Screening Programme 29Further trait screening 34The application of CSR theory 34Virtual plant strategies 36Summary 384 Primary Adaptive Strategies in Organisms Other Than Plants 40The architecture of the tree of life 41r, K and beyond K 42Empirical evidence for three primary strategies in animals 43The universal three-way trade-off 44Mammalia (mammals) 46Aves (avian therapods) 53Squamata (snakes and lizards) (with notes on other extant reptile clades) 56Amphibia (amphibians) 60Osteichthyes (bony fi shes) 61Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fi shes) 65Insecta (insects) 68Aracnida (spiders, scorpions, mites and ticks) 72Crustacea (crustaceans) 74Echinodermata (sea urchins, starfi sh, crinoids, sea cucumbers) 75Mollusca (snails, clams, squids) 77Annelida (segmented worms) 79Cnidaria (corals, sea anemones, jellyfi sh, hydras, sea pens) 81Eumycota (fungi) (including notes on lichens) 83Archaea 84Proteobacteria 86Firmicutes 87Cyanobacteria 88Viruses 90Extinct groups 94Universal adaptive strategy theory - the evolution of CSR and beyond K theories 99First steps towards a universal methodology 100Summary 1035 From Adaptive Strategies to Communities 105Plant communities 106Productive disturbed communities 107Productive undisturbed communities 108Unproductive relatively undisturbed communities 111Plant community composition 111The humped-back model 114Origins 114Formulation 115Independent confi rmation and compatibility with new research 116Species-pools, fi lters and community composition 121Evidence for the action of twin fi lters 128Additional mechanisms promoting diversity 132Genetic diversity, intraspecifi c functional diversity and species diversity 132Microbial communities 136The effects of plant strategies on soil microbial communities 139Facilitation in bacterial communities 141Coexistence in marine surface waters 142Novel techniques for investigating microbial adaptive strategies 142Animal communities 144Primary producers delimit animal diversity/productivity relationships 145Twin fi lters and animal community assembly 150Adaptive radiation and community assembly 154Summary 1606 From Strategies to Ecosystems 163Back to Bayreuth 164The Darwinian basis of ecosystem assembly 167How do primary adaptive strategies drive ecosystem functioning? 168The plant traits that drive ecosystems 169The propagation of trait infl uences through food chains 176Complicating factors 178Ecosystem processes 180Dominance and mass ratio effects 180Fluxes and feedbacks between communities 181Top-down control by herbivores 187Top-down control by carnivores 189The key role of eco-evolutionary dynamics 190Summary 1927 The Path from Evolution to Ecology 194What has been learned? 194What are the implications for conservation and management? 198Research priorities for the next decade 199References 202Organism Index 235Subject Index 241

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