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Ecological Versatility and Community Ecology (Cambridge Studies in Ecology)

Ecological Versatility and Community Ecology (Cambridge Studies in Ecology)

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Ralph MacNally
Cambridge University Press, 8/4/2009
EAN 9780521119269, ISBN10: 052111926X

Paperback, 456 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm
Language: English

This book was first published in 1995, a time when, like today, there were mounting concerns that the management of our natural global heritage was failing to arrest the rapid loss of biodiversity. The problem may be traced to the extinction of enormous numbers of 'specialised' species, especially in the tropics. Tropical species either have highly particular resource requirements, such as food or nesting hollows, or specific needs for certain types of habitat, such as wetlands, making them vulnerable to changing global conditions. This book is about specialisation and generalisation in the use of resources and habitats. The author uses a broad ecological perspective to address three main questions. How do ecologists study variation in resource and habitat use, and what do we know from these studies? How well does theory account for observations, and what are the common threads between disciplines? Finally, what is the relationship between resource and habitat use? This book provides a comprehensive analysis of ecological versatility.

Preface
1. An introduction to ecological versatility
2. Defining and measuring versatility
3. Studies of versatility in natural populations
4. The influence of interspecific interactions on versatility
5. The influence of population structure on versatility
6. Ecological versatility and population dynamics
7. Versatility and interspecific competition
8. Ubiquity or habitat diversity
9. Recapitulation and commentary
Glossary of terms
Appendices
References.

' ... probably the first book devoted to this field and it contains some valuable work.' Brian S. Rushton, The Times Higher Education Supplement