Elements of Ecology / Edition 6

Elements of Ecology / Edition 6

ISBN-10:
0805348301
ISBN-13:
9780805348309
Pub. Date:
10/03/2005
Publisher:
Benjamin Cummings
ISBN-10:
0805348301
ISBN-13:
9780805348309
Pub. Date:
10/03/2005
Publisher:
Benjamin Cummings
Elements of Ecology / Edition 6

Elements of Ecology / Edition 6

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Overview

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Elements of Ecology, Ninth Edition continues to explain ecological processes clearly and concisely, with a greater emphasis on the relevance of ecology to everyday life and the human impact on ecosystems. This dramatically revised edition discusses issues of human ecology throughout the text and provides a greater variety of opportunities for the reader to learn, practice, and develop quantitative and analytical skills. Current research examples and other content updates are supported by more than 200 redesigned, full-color illustrations, graphs, and tables. Elements of Ecology now includes MasteringBiology®, an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program that improves results by helping the reader quickly master concepts both in and outside the classroom.

KEY TOPICS:

The Nature of Ecology; Climate; The Aquatic Environment; The Terrestrial Environment; Adaptation and Natural Selection; Plant Adaptations to the Environment; Animal Adaptations to the Environment;; Properties of Populations; Population Growth; Life History; Intraspecific Population Regulation; Species Interactions, Population Dynamics, and Natural Selection; Interspecific Competition; Predation; Parasitism and Mutualism; Community Structure; Factors Influencing the Structure of Communities; Community; Dynamics; Landscape Dynamics; Ecosystem Energetics; Decomposition and Nutrient Cycling; Biogeochemical Cycles; Terrestrial Ecosystems; Aquatic Ecosystems; Coastal and Wetland Ecosystems; Large-Scale Patterns of Biological Diversity; Global Climate Change

MARKET:

For readers interested in ecological processes with an emphasis on the relevance of ecology to everyday life and the human impact on ecosystems.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780805348309
Publisher: Benjamin Cummings
Publication date: 10/03/2005
Series: Ecology Place Series
Edition description: REV
Pages: 744
Product dimensions: 8.22(w) x 11.00(h) x 0.92(d)

About the Author

Thomas M. Smith, Associate Professor in Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia, received his Ph.D. in ecology from the University of Tennessee in 1982. The main focus of his research over the past two decades has been to develop an individual based theory of community and ecosystems dynamics. As part of this work he has served on numerous national and international panels that have addressed the potential influence of human activities on the global environment. He has authored over 70 publications based on his research, and he has been recognized as one of the most cited scientists in the field of global change research.

Thomas’s work has taken him to over 70 countries and 6 continents. He has served on the faculty of the University of Witwatersrand (Johannesburg, South Africa), Australian National University (Canberra, Australia), as well as the University of Virginia (Charlottesville, VA, USA). In addition, he has held research scientist positions at both Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Oak Ridge, TN, USA) and the Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (Laxenburg, Austria). His has over 20 years of experience teaching the science of ecology to both science and non-science majors.

Robert L. Smith holds a Ph.D. in Wildlife Biology from Cornell University. He is Professor Emeritus of Ecology at West Virginia University. He has spent over 30 years teaching Ecology and conducting field research throughout the world.

His teaching responsibilities have involved mostly undergraduate courses in general ecology and graduate courses in population ecology and wildlife management. His research has included forest-fire related problems in southern West Virginia, vegetational development and succession on abandoned and reclaimed surface mines, the relation between forest vegetational structure and the forest bird community, and forest habitat assessment and habitat evaluation procedures based on vegetational structure.

Smith has served as a consultant to congressional committees, workshops on environmental education and energy and environmental problems, the National Landmarks program of the U.S. Department of Interior, National Research Council Task Forces on wildlife and fisheries issues and ecological classification systems for implementing environmental quality evaluation procedures.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The Nature of Ecology

Chapter 2: Climate

Chapter 3: The Aquatic Environment

Chapter 4: The Terrestrial Environment

Chapter 5: Adaptation and Natural Selection

Chapter 6: Plant Adaptations to the Environment

Chapter 7: Animal Adaptations to the Environment

Chapter 8: Properties of Populations

Chapter 9: Population Growth

Chapter 10: Life History

Chapter 11: Intraspecific Population Regulation

Chapter 12: Species Interactions, Population Dynamics, and Natural Selection

Chapter 13: Interspecific Competition

Chapter 14: Predation

Chapter 15: Parasitism and Mutualism

Chapter 16: Community Structure

Chapter 17: Factors Influencing the Structure of Communities

Chapter 18: Community Dynamics

Chapter 19: Landscape Dynamics

Chapter 20: Ecosystem Energetics

Chapter 21: Decomposition and Nutrient Cycling

Chapter 22: Biogeochemical Cycles

Chapter 23: Terrestrial Ecosystems

Chapter 24: Aquatic Ecosystems

Chapter 25: Coastal and Wetland Ecosystems

Chapter 26: Large-Scale Patterns of Biological Diversity

Chapter 27: Global Climate Change

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