| Autore |
Bradshaw Richard
|
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa |
Chichester, England : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2014
|
| Descrizione fisica |
1 online resource (335 p.)
|
| Disciplina |
574.5
|
| Soggetto topico |
Ecology
Biotic communities
|
| Soggetto genere / forma |
Electronic books.
|
| ISBN |
1-118-52521-3
1-118-52519-1
1-118-52520-5
|
| Formato |
Materiale a stampa  |
| Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione |
eng
|
| Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgements; About the companion website; Chapter 1 Where Are We and How Did We Arrive Here?; 1.1 Why this book?; 1.2 Ecosystems in crisis; 1.3 Relevance of the past; 1.4 Forecasting the future; 1.5 Chapter details and logic; 1.6 For whom is the book intended?; 1.7 Four key questions and the links to policy; Chapter 2 Modelling; 2.1 Introduction; 2.1.1 How did these models develop?; 2.1.2 Climate data, climate and earth system models; 2.2 Background ecosystem, vegetation and species models; 2.2.1 Vegetation models; 2.2.2 Species-level modelling
2.2.3 Equilibrium physiologically-based modelling of species2.2.4 Statistical equilibrium modelling of species; 2.2.5 Some uncertainties and assumptions that apply generally to bioclimatic models; 2.2.6 Models of intermediate complexity; 2.2.7 Biogeochemistry integrated into equilibrium biome models; 2.2.8 Integrating biome and NPP models; 2.3 Dynamic modelling; 2.3.1 Local to landscape scales: forest gap modelling; 2.3.2 Regional to global scales: dynamic global vegetation modelling; 2.4 Integrating models; 2.4.1 Earth system models; 2.4.2 Integrated assessment models
2.4.3 Agent-based models2.5 Further reading; Chapter 3 Data; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Which data are relevant?; 3.3 Ecosystem dynamics: direct observation; 3.3.1 Phenology; 3.3.2 Biological monitoring; 3.4 Ecosystem dynamics: indirect measurement or proxy data; 3.4.1 Historical ecology; 3.4.2 Palaeoecology; 3.4.3 Pollen analysis; 3.4.4 Charcoal and fire scars; 3.5 Drivers of ecosystem dynamics; 3.5.1 Palaeoclimates and greenhouse gases; 3.5.2 Human impact on ecosystem dynamics; 3.6 Databases; 3.7 Gaps in available data and approaches
Chapter 4 Climate Change and Millennial Ecosystem Dynamics: A Complex Relationship4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Reconstructing climate from biological data; 4.3 The very long records of vegetation dynamics; 4.4 Holocene records; 4.5 Modelling of Holocene vegetation dynamics to help understand pollen data; 4.5.1 Climate or people? The Tilia-Fagus transition in Draved Forest, Denmark; 4.5.2 Climate or migration biology? The late-Holocene spread of Picea into southern Fennoscandia; 4.5.3 Fagus in Europe; 4.6 Simulating Fennoscandian Holocene forest dynamics; 4.6.1 Holocene dynamics of the Sahara
4.7 Climate and megafaunal extinction4.7.1 Recent range shifts; 4.8 So how important is climate change for future millennial ecosystem dynamics?; Chapter 5 The Role of Episodic Events in Millennial Ecosystem Dynamics: Where the Wild Strawberries Grow; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Fire; 5.2.1 Past to present fire; 5.2.2 Present to future fire; 5.2.3 Modelling fire; 5.2.4 Modelling ignition; 5.2.5 Modelling fire spread; 5.2.6 Data-model comparison; 5.3 Forest pathogens during the Holocene; 5.4 Hurricanes and wind damage; 5.5 Conclusion
Chapter 6 The Impact of Past and Future Human Exploitation on Terrestrial Ecosystem Dynamics
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| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910140269303321 |