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Forest ecology / Daniel M. Kashian, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA, Donald R. Zak, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA, Burton V. Barnes (deceased), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA, Stephen H. Spurr (deceased), University of Texas at Austin, Austin, USA.
Holman Biotech Commons QK938.F6 F635 2023
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Kashian, Daniel M., author.
- Zak, Donald R., author.
- Barnes, Burton Verne, 1930-2014, author.
- Spurr, Stephen H., 1918-1990, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Forest ecology.
- Physical Description:
- xxiv, 757 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 26 cm
- Edition:
- Fifth edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., 2023.
- Summary:
- "The 5th edition of Forest Ecology re-discovers the readability and accessibility of the previous editions. Much of the material covered in the 4th edition is just as relevant in the field today as it was almost 20 years ago. This new edition includes additional topical material that has surfaced in the field, such as climate change, invasive species, and the application of landscape ecology in forest management. Advances in our understanding of climate change impacts has grown exponentially over the last two decades, as has our exposure and experience with invasive species and their impacts of forests. The field of forest ecology in general is trending towards an understanding of site-species relationships as well as broad-scale ecological variability -- trends astutely sensed by Dr. Barnes in the 1990s. The field is demanding that students and researchers think at multiple scales. As such, the book fills a niche utilized by no other forest ecology text on the market"-- Provided by publisher.
- Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: pt. 1 Forest Ecology and Landscape Ecosystems
- 1. Concepts of Forest Ecology
- Ecology
- Landscape Ecosystems
- Landscape Ecosystem and Community
- Ecosystem Structure and Function
- Examples of Landscape Ecosystems
- An Approach to The Study of Forest Ecology
- Applicability to Forest Management
- Suggested Readings
- 2. Landscape Ecosystems at Multiple Scales
- Overview of Spatial and Temporal Scales
- Spatial Scales of Hierarchical Landscape Ecosystems
- Climatic Classification
- Physiography
- Vegetation Types and Biomes
- Distinguishing and Mapping Landscape Ecosystems at Multiple Spatial Scales
- Regional Landscape Ecosystems
- Regional Landscape Ecosystems of Michigan
- Local Landscape Ecosystems
- Local Landscape Ecosystems in Upper Michigan
- pt. 2 The Forest Tree
- 3. Forest Tree Variation
- Components of Phenotypic Variation
- Plasticity of the Phenotype
- Sources of Variation
- The Evolutionary Sequence
- Sexual and Asexual Systems
- Genetic Diversity of Woody Species
- Genecology
- Patterns of Genecological Differentiation
- Genecological Categories
- Factors Eliciting Genecological Differentiation
- Growth Cessation
- Growth Resumption
- Examples of Genecological Differentiation
- Eastern North American Species
- Scots Pine
- Wide-Ranging Western North American Conifers
- Ponderosa pine
- Douglas-fir
- Local Genecological Differentiation
- Factors Affecting Differentiation: Gene Flow and Selection Pressure
- Ecological Considerations at the Species Level
- Niche
- Hybridization
- Polyploidy
- The Fitness
- Flexibility Compromise
- Epigenetics
- 4. Regeneration Ecology
- Regeneration
- Sexual Reproduction
- Maturation and the Ability to Flower
- Increasing Seed Production
- Reproductive Cycles
- Pollination
- Periodicity of Seed Crops
- Effects of Reproduction on Vegetative Growth
- Dispersal
- Seed Bank, Dormancy, and Germination
- Establishment Following Sexual Reproduction
- Post-Establishment Development
- Vegetative Reproduction
- 5. Tree Structure and Growth
- Tree Form
- Architectural Models
- Short and Long Shoots
- Patterns of Intermittent Growth
- Sylleptic and Proleptic Shoots
- Roots
- Kinds, Forms, and Occurrence
- Fine Root Relations
- Horizontal and Vertical Root Development
- Periodicity of Primary Root Growth
- Root Grafting
- Specialized Roots and Buttresses
- Stems
- Xylem Cells and Growth Rings
- Periodicity and Control of Secondary Growth
- Control of Earlywood and Latewood Formation
- Winter Freezing and Water Transport
- Water Deficits and Tree Growth
- pt. 3 The Physical Environment
- Forest Environment
- Site Factors
- Organization of Site Factors
- Interrelationships Among Site Factors
- Importance of Site in Forest Ecology
- 6. Light
- Distribution of Light Reaching the Ecosphere
- Plant Interception of Radiation
- Canopy Structure and Leaf Area
- Light Quality Beneath the Forest Canopy
- Sunflecks
- Light and Growth of Trees
- Light and Seedling Survival and Growth
- Light and Tree Morphology and Anatomy
- Light and Epicormic Sprouting
- Photocontrol of Plant Response
- Light and Ecosystem Change
- 7. Temperature
- Geographical Patterns of Temperature
- Temperatures at the Soil Surface
- Temperature within the Forest
- Temperature Variation with Local Topography
- Temperature and Plant Growth
- Cold Injury to Plants
- Dormancy
- Frost Hardiness and Cold Resistance
- Thermotropic Movements in Rhododendrons
- Winter Chilling and Growth Resumption
- Natural Plant Distributions and Cold Hardiness
- Deciduousness and Temperature
- 8. Physiography
- Concepts and Terms
- Characteristics of Physiography and their Significance
- Physiographic Setting
- Specific Landforms
- Elevation
- Form of Landforms
- Level Terrain
- Sloping Terrain
- Slope Characteristics
- Position on slope
- Aspect
- Slope inclination
- Parent Material in Relation to Landform
- Position of Landform in the Landscape
- Multiple Roles of Physiography
- Physiographic Diversity, Landscape Ecosystems, and Vegetation
- Mountainous Physiography
- Mountainous Terrain of California and the Pacific Northwest
- Physiography and Forests of the Central Appalachians
- Flatlands
- The Great Plains
- Pine Savannas of the Western Great Lakes Region
- Till Plains of the Midwest
- Southeastern and Southern Coastal Plain
- Floodplains
- Physiography and Firebreaks
- Microlandforms and Microtopography
- Tree Uprooting and Pit-and-Mound Microtopography
- Microtopography and Regeneration in Hardwood Swamps
- 9. Soil
- Parent Material
- Soil Formation
- Soil Profile Development
- Physical Properties of Soil
- Soil Texture
- Soil Structure
- Soil Color
- Soil Water
- Physical Properties of Water
- Soil Water Potential
- Chemical Properties of Soil
- Clay Mineralogy
- Cation Exchange and the Supply of Nutrients
- Soil Acidity
- Soil Organic Matter
- Soil Classification
- Landform, Soil, and Forest Vegetation: Landscape Relationships
- 10. Fire
- Fire and the Forest Tree
- Causes
- Fire Regime
- Fire Types, Frequency, and Severity
- Fire Adaptations and Key Characteristics
- Strategies of Species Persistence
- Closed-Cone Pines
- Fire and the Forest Site
- Indirect Effects
- Direct Effects
- Organic Matter and Erosion
- Beneficial Effects of Fire
- 11. Site Quality and Ecosystem Evaluation and Classification
- Direct Measurement of Forest Productivity
- Tree Height as a Measure of Site
- Site-Index Curves
- Comparisons Between Species
- Advantages and Limitations
- Vegetation as an Indicator of Site Quality
- Species Groups of Ground Cover
- Indicator Plants of Coastal British Columbia
- Ecological Species Groups
- Plant Associations and Habitat Types in the Western United States
- Operational Site Classification Based on Vegetation
- Applications and Limitations of Vegetation
- Environmental Factors as a Measure of Site
- Climatic Factors
- Physiographic Land Classification
- Physiographic and Soil Factors: Soil-Site Studies
- Soil Surveys
- Multiple-Factor Methods of Site and Ecosystem Classification
- Ecosystem Classification and Mapping in Baden-Wurttemberg
- Applications of Multi-Factor Methods in the United States and Canada
- Ecosystem Classification and Mapping in Michigan
- Ecosystem Classification in the Southeastern United States
- Ecosystem Classification in the Southwestern United States
- National Classification Systems in the United States
- Ecological Land Classification in Canada
- Hills' physiographic approach
- Other approaches used in Canada
- pt. 4 Forest Communities
- 12. Animals in Forest Ecosystems
- Plant Defense
- Investment in Plant Defense
- Plant Defense Against Insects
- Examples of Injury and Plant Defense
- Nutrition
- Plant Hybrid Zones as Reservoirs for Insect Diversity
- Plant Defense Against Mammals
- Roles of Animals in Plant Life History
- Seed Dispersal
- Fish and Reptiles
- Birds
- Mammals
- Germination and Establishment
- Decomposition, Mineral Cycling, and Soil Improvement
- Damage and Death
- Influence of Livestock on Forest Ecosystems
- 13. Forest Communities
- Community Concept
- Grounding Communities
- Florida Keys
- Interior Alaska
- Southern Illinois
- View from the Past: Community Concepts
- Schools and Terminology
- Concepts of Clements and Gleason
- Phytosociology in Europe
- Continuum Concept
- Community as a Landscape Ecosystem Property
- Examples of Spatial Variation in Forest Communities
- Discrete Forest Communities
- Coastal California: Giant and Pygmy Forests
- Forest-Grassland Ecotone
- Alpine Tree Lines
- Merging Forest Communities
- Eastern Deciduous Forest
- -Southern Appalachians
- New England
- Competition and Niche Differentiation
- Interactions Among Organisms
- Mutualisms in Forest Ecosystems
- Symbiotic Mutualisms
- -Mycorrhizae
- Nonsymbiotic Mutualisms
- Competition
- Forest Community Structure and Composition
- Vertical Structure
- Stand Density
- Competition and Overstory Composition
- Competition in the Understory
- Understory Tolerance
- Characteristics of Understory-Tolerant and - Intolerant Species
- Tolerance Ratings of Tree Species
- Examples of Understory Tolerance in Forest Ecosystems
- Nature of Understory Tolerance
- Environmental Factors Relating to Understory Tolerance
- Physiological Processes Relating to Tolerance
- 14. Diversity in Forests
- Concepts of Biological and Ecosystem Diversity
- The Value of Species Diversity
- Value of Biodiversity
- Common Threats to Diversity
- Measuring Diversity
- Levels of Diversity
- Measurement
- Inventory Diversity: Alpha Diversity
- Differentiation or Beta Diversity
- Diversity of Landscape Ecosystems
- Examples of Diversity
- Ground-Cover Species Diversity in Northern Lower Michigan
- Ecosystem Groups
- Ecosystem Types
- Ecosystem Diversity
- Causes of Species Diversity
- Diversity at Continental and Subcontinental Scales
- Contents note continued: Paleogeography and Continental Relationships
- Glaciation
- Latitude and Elevation
- Diversity at Local Scales
- Physiography and Soil
- Community Composition and Structure
- Disturbance and Succession
- Focal Species in Conserving Diversity
- Foundation Species
- Keystone Species
- Endemics and Rare and Endangered Species
- Diversity and the Functioning of Ecosystems
- Biodiversity-Productivity Relationship
- The Role of Biodiversity in Ecosystem Stability
- Forest Management and Diversity
- Effects of Traditional Forest Management on Diversity
- Preserving Diversity in Managed Forests
- Ecological Forestry: Incorporating Biodiversity into Forest Management
- Variable-Retention Harvest System
- Designing a Variable-Retention Harvest System
- How Well Does Variable Retention Conserve Biodiversity?
- Epilog: Conserving Ecosystem and Biological Diversity
- pt. 5 Forest Ecosystem Dynamics
- 15. Long-Term Forest Ecosystem and Vegetation Change
- Change Before the Pleistocene Age
- Pleistocene Glaciations
- Ecosystem and Vegetational Change Since the Last Glacial Maximum
- Eastern North America
- Overall Migration Sequence and Patterns
- Ecosystem Change in the Southern Appalachians
- Western North America
- Patterns of Tree Genera and Species Migrations
- Migration Irregularities and Disturbance
- Migration From Glacial Microrefugia
- Independent Migration and Similarity of Communities Through Time
- 16. Disturbance
- Concepts of Disturbance
- Defining a Disturbance
- Disturbance as an Ecosystem Process
- Sources of Disturbance
- Major Disturbances in Forest Ecosystems
- Fire
- Roles of Fire in Forest Ecosystems
- Pines in New England and the Lake States
- Western Pines and Trembling Aspen
- Southern Pines
- Douglas-Fir in the Pacific Northwest
- Giant Sequoia
- Fire History and Behavior
- Northern Lake States
- Boreal Forest and Taiga
- Northern Rocky Mountains
- Fire Suppression and Exclusion
- Wind
- Widespread and Local Effects
- Principles of Wind Damage
- Broadscale Disturbance by Hurricanes
- Gulf and Southern Atlantic Coasts
- New England
- -1938 Hurricane
- Wave-Regenerated Fir Species
- Floodwater and Ice Storms
- Insects and Disease
- Catastrophic and Local Land Movements
- Logging
- Land Clearing
- Disturbance Interactions
- Biotic Composition Changes
- Elimination of Species
- Addition of Species
- 17. Forest Succession
- Basic Concepts of Succession
- Primary and Secondary Succession
- Biological Legacies
- Successional Pathways, Mechanisms, and Models
- Autogenic and Allogenic Succession
- How is Succession Determined?
- Evolution of the Concept of Forest Succession
- Formal Ecological Theory
- How Does Succession Work?
- Clementsian Succession
- Stages of Succession
- Primary Succession
- Secondary Succession
- Successional Causes, Mechanisms, and Models
- Key Characteristics and Regeneration Strategies
- Availability and Arrival Sequence of Species
- Facilitation, Tolerance, and Inhibition
- Change in Ecosystems
- End Point of Succession?
- Succession as an Ecosystem Process
- Examples of Forest Succession
- Primary Succession on Recently Deglaciated Terrain
- Succession Following the Eruption of Mount St. Helens
- Secondary Succession Following Fire in Ponderosa Pine Forests of Western Montana
- Secondary Succession and Gap Dynamics
- Gap Specialists: American Beech and Sugar Maple
- Fire and Oak Dominance
- -Oaks at Risk
- 18. Carbon Balance of Trees and Ecosystems
- Carbon Balance of Trees
- Photosynthesis, Dark Respiration, and Leaf C Gain
- Light and Leaf C Gain
- Temperature and Leaf C Gain
- Water and Leaf C Gain
- Soil Nitrogen Availability and Leaf C Gain
- Construction and Maintenance Respiration
- Allocation to Structure, Storage, and Defense
- Light and C Allocation
- Soil Nitrogen Availability and C Allocation
- Carbon Balance of Ecosystems
- Biomass and Productivity of Forest Ecosystems
- Measurement of Biomass and Productivity
- Climate and Productivity
- Soil Properties, Forest Biomass, and ANPP
- Biomass Accumulation During Ecosystem Development
- Soil N Availability and Belowground Net Primary Productivity
- 19. Nutrient Cycling
- Nutrient Additions to Forest Ecosystems
- Mineral Weathering
- Atmospheric Deposition
- Biological Fixation of Nitrogen
- Nutrient Cycling within Forest Ecosystems
- Nutrient Transport to Roots
- Nutrient Uptake and Assimilation by Roots
- Root Architecture, Mycorrhizae, and Nutrient Acquisition
- Root Architecture
- Mycorrhizae
- Plant Litter and the Return of Nutrients to Forest Floor and Soil
- Leaf and Root Litter Production
- Nutrient Retranslocation
- Nutrients in the Forest Floor
- Organic Matter Decomposition and Nutrient Mineralization
- Biochemical Constituents of Plant Litter
- Dynamics of Decomposition
- Nitrogen Immobilization and Mineralization
- Nitrogen Availability in Forest Ecosystems
- Nitrification
- Nutrient Loss From Forest Ecosystems
- Nutrient Leaching from Forest Ecosystems
- Denitrification
- The Cycling and Storage of Nutrients in Forest Ecosystems
- Nutrient Storage in Boreal, Temperate, and Tropical Forests
- The Nitrogen and Calcium Cycle of a Temperate Forest Ecosystem
- Ecosystem C Balance and the Retention and Loss of Nutrients
- Forest Harvesting and Nutrient Loss
- pt. 6 Forests of the Future
- 20. Climate Change and Forest Ecosystems
- Climate Change Concepts
- Effects on Temperature
- Effects on Precipitation
- Climate Change Effects on the Forest Tree
- Tree Growth and Mortality
- Phenology
- Climate Change Effects on Tree Species Distributions
- Observed Range Shifts
- Projected Changes in Tree Species Distributions
- Projected Changes in Forest Type Distributions
- Climate Change Effects on Forest Disturbances
- Fires
- Insects and Pathogens
- Climate Change Effects on Forest Carbon
- Climate Change Effects on Carbon Gain: Primary Productivity
- Climate Change Effects on Carbon Loss: Heterotrophic Respiration
- Feedbacks Among Disturbance, Climate Change, and Carbon in Forests
- Fire, Carbon, and Climate Change in Forests of Yellowstone National Park
- Adapting to Climate Change Effects on Forests
- Assisted Migration
- Refugia
- Forest Carbon Management
- 21. Invasive Species in Forest Ecosystems
- Concepts of Invasive Species
- Definition of Invasive Species
- Characteristic Traits of Invasive Plant Species
- Non-Plant Invasive Species in Forests
- Impacts of Invasive Species on Forests
- Impacts of Invasive Plants on Forests
- Altered Fire Regimes
- Carbon and Nutrient Cycling
- Impacts of Invasive Insects and Pathogens on Forests
- Chestnut Blight, Dutch Elm Disease, and Forest Succession
- Impacts of Invasive Animals on Forests
- A Primer of Invasive Species Management in Forests
- Early Intervention Strategies
- Management Approaches for Established Invasive Species
- Novel Ecosystems and Invasive Species
- 22. Forest Landscape Ecology
- Concepts of Landscape Ecology
- Forest Fragmentation and Connectivity
- Patches in Forest Ecology
- Forest Fragmentation
- Ecological Effects
- Connectivity
- Disturbances on Landscapes
- Effects of Heterogeneity on Disturbances
- Hurricanes in New England
- Landscape Pattern Effects on Disturbance Spread
- Effects of Disturbances on Heterogeneity
- Stand-Replacing Wildfires in Yellowstone National Park
- Historical Range of Variability
- Interactions of Landscape Patterns and Ecological Processes
- Leaf Area and Productivity
- Forest Carbon Dynamics
- Nutrient Dynamics
- 23. Sustainability of Forest Ecosystems
- Concepts of Sustainability
- The Prevalence of Human Values in Forest Ecology
- Historical Perspective of Sustainability in Forests
- Ecosystem Services
- Toward a Definition of Sustainability
- Where Do We Go From Here?
- Epilog: Earth as a Metaphor for Life
- Suggested Readings.
- Notes:
- Preceded by: Forest ecology / Burton V. Barnes ... [et al.]. 4th ed. c1998.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Other Format:
- Online version: Kashian, Daniel M. Forest ecology
- ISBN:
- 9781119476085
- 1119476089
- OCLC:
- 1031448522
- Publisher Number:
- 99993182140
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