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Book Cover
E-book
Author Wardle, David A., 1963-

Title Communities and ecosystems : linking the aboveground and belowground components / David A Wardle
Published Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, ©2002

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Description 1 online resource (vii, 392 pages) : illustrations
Series Monographs in population biology ; 34
Monographs in population biology ; 34
Contents Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The soil food web : biotic interactions and regulators -- Controls : top down, bottom up, and productivity -- Regulation by resources and predation in soil food webs -- Litter transformers, ecosystem engineers, and mutalisms -- The functionality of soil food webs -- Stability and temoral variability -- Synthesis -- 3. Plant species control of soil biota and processes -- Plant species effects on soil biota -- Links among plantspecies, soil biota, and soil processes -- Temporal and spatial variability -- Plant traits, strategies, and ecophysiological constraints -- Soil biotic responses to vegetation succession -- Synthesis -- 4. Belowground consequences of aboveground food web interactions -- Individual plant effects -- Dung and urine return -- Effects of palatability differences among plant species -- Spatial and temporal variability -- Consequences of predation of herbivores -- Transport of resources by aboveground consumers -- Synthesis
5. Completing the circle : how soil food web effects are manifested aboveground -- The decomposer food web -- Nitrogen transformations -- Microbial associates of plant roots -- Root herbivores -- Physical effects of soil biota -- Soil biota effects on aboveground food webs -- Synthesis -- 6. The regulation and function of biological diversity -- Assessment of soil diversity -- Stress and disturbance as controls of soil diversity -- Biotic controls of diversity -- The enigma of soil diversity -- Diversity of soil organisms over larger spatial scales -- Biodiversity and ecosystem function -- Synthesis -- 7. Global change phenomena in an aboveground-belowground context -- Species losses and gains -- Land use changes -- Carbon dioxide enrichment and nitrogen deposition -- Global climate change -- Synthesis -- 8. Underlying themes -- References -- Index
Summary Most of the earth's terrestrial species live in the soil. These organisms, which include many thousands of species of fungi and nematodes, shape aboveground plant and animal life as well as our climate and atmosphere. Indeed, all terrestrial ecosystems consist of interdependent aboveground and belowground compartments. Despite this, aboveground and belowground ecology have been conducted largely in isolation. This book represents the first major synthesis to focus explicitly on the connections between aboveground and belowground subsystems--and their importance for community structure and e
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 309-386)
Notes In English
Print version record
Subject Soil ecology.
Food chains (Ecology)
Soil
Food Chain
NATURE -- Ecology.
NATURE -- Ecosystems & Habitats -- Wilderness.
SCIENCE -- Environmental Science.
SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Ecology.
SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Biology.
Food chains (Ecology)
Soil ecology
Bodenökologie
Nahrungskette
Ecosystemen.
Biosfeer.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781400847297
140084729X
0691074879
9780691074870