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Food webs [[electronic resource] /] / Kevin S. McCann



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Autore: McCann Kevin S (Kevin Shear), <1964-> Visualizza persona
Titolo: Food webs [[electronic resource] /] / Kevin S. McCann Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Princeton, NJ, : Princeton University Press, 2012
Edizione: Course Book
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (389 p.)
Disciplina: 577/.16
Soggetto topico: Food chains (Ecology)
Biotic communities
Soggetto non controllato: Canadian Shield
Gershgorin discs
Hopf bifurcation
Robert Holt
adaptive behavior
alternative stable states
aquatic microcosm
asynchrony
bifurcation
bird feeder effect
body size
competition
consumers
consumerвesource dynamics
consumerвesource interactions
consumerвesource models
consumerвesource theory
continuous logistic growth models
detritus
diamond food web
discrete equations
dynamical systems theory
dynamical systems
ecological instability
ecological stability
ecological systems
ecosystem collapse
ecosystem dynamics
ecosystem size
ecosystem stability
ecosystems
eigenvalue
equilibrium steady state
equilibrium
excitable interactions
food chains
food web structure
food web theory
food webs
foraging
generalism
generalists
grazing
habitat
human impacts
interaction strength
intraguild predation model
lags
lake trout
local stability analysis
matrix theory
microcosm experiments
mobile adaptive predators
modular theory
module
motif
natural ecosystems
nature
nonequilibrium dynamics
nonequilibrium steady state
nonexcitable interactions
nutrient decomposition
nutrient recycling
nutrients
omnivory
oscillation
oscillatory decay
phase space
population dynamics
population growth
population models
population structure
populations
resources
space
species
stage structure
stage-structured lags
subsidies
subsystems
sustainability
time series
trade-offs
traits
whole-community approach
whole-system matrix
Classificazione: SCI020000SCI008000
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Nota di contenuto: Front matter -- Contents -- Preface -- Part 1. The Problem and the Approach -- CHAPTER ONE. The Balance of Nature: What Is It and Why Care? -- CHAPTER TWO. A Primer for Dynamical Systems -- CHAPTER THREE. Of Modules, Motifs, and Whole Webs -- Part 2. Food Web Modules: From Populations to Small Food Webs -- CHAPTER FOUR. Excitable and Nonexcitable Population Dynamics -- CHAPTER FIVE. Consumer-Resource Dynamics: Building Consumptive Food Webs -- CHAPTER SIX. Lagged Consumer-Resource Dynamics -- CHAPTER SEVEN. Food Chains and Omnivory -- CHAPTER EIGHT. More Modules -- Part 3. Toward Whole Systems -- CHAPTER NINE. Coupling Modules in Space: A Landscape Theory -- CHAPTER TEN. Classic Food Web Theory -- CHAPTER ELEVEN. Adding the Ecosystem -- CHAPTER TWELVE. Food Webs as Complex Adaptive Systems -- Bibliography -- Index
Sommario/riassunto: Human impacts are dramatically altering our natural ecosystems but the exact repercussions on ecological sustainability and function remain unclear. As a result, food web theory has experienced a proliferation of research seeking to address these critical areas. Arguing that the various recent and classical food web theories can be looked at collectively and in a highly consistent and testable way, Food Webs synthesizes and reconciles modern and classical perspectives into a general unified theory. Kevin McCann brings together outcomes from population-, community-, and ecosystem-level approaches under the common currency of energy or material fluxes. He shows that these approaches--often studied in isolation--all have the same general implications in terms of population dynamic stability. Specifically, increased fluxes of energy or material tend to destabilize populations, communities, and whole ecosystems. With this understanding, stabilizing structures at different levels of the ecological hierarchy can be identified and any population-, community-, or ecosystem-level structures that mute energy or material flow also stabilize systems dynamics. McCann uses this powerful general framework to discuss the effects of human impact on the stability and sustainability of ecological systems, and he demonstrates that there is clear empirical evidence that the structures supporting ecological systems have been dangerously eroded. Uniting the latest research on food webs with classical theories, this book will be a standard source in the understanding of natural food web functions.
Titolo autorizzato: Food webs  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-283-29071-5
9786613290717
1-4008-4068-6
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910789719303321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Serie: Monographs in population biology.