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About this book
Plant interactions are an important set of processes that structure plant communities and regulate diversity. Positive interactions among plants have traditionally received little attention from both theoretical and experimental points of view, but there is now a growing body of evidence showing the effects of positive interactions between higher plant species.
This book gives a timely summary of current understanding of the field, with particular emphasis on positive interactions and spatial and temporal gradients. Written by international experts, the text addresses key issues in plant ecology and anthropogenic impacts through reviews, syntheses, and the proposition of new concepts.
Contents
Plant Interactions and Community Dynamics: An Introduction. Do Positive Interactions Among Plants Matter? Quantitative Tools in Plant Interactions Analysis. Large and Small Scale Consequences of Facilitation on Species Diversity in Terrestrial Plant Communities. Biotic Interactions, Biodiversity an Ecosystem Functioning. Mycorrhiza and Facilitation. Plant Communities, Plant-Plant Interactions and Climate Change. Synthetic Analysis of the Stress Gradient Hypothesis.
Customer Reviews
Biography
Aria Zones Experiment Station, CSIC, Almeira, Spain
Edited By: Francisco I Pugnaire
176 pages, illus, tabs
In short, the quality and timeliness of this book's contents make it an indispensable tool for PhD students and researchers interested in the organization, functioning and evolution of plant communities and in their conservation and restoration, which cannot be achieved without understanding the biotic interactions that shape ecosystems. -- S. Rodriguez-Echeverria, University of Coimbra, Portugal writing in Ecosistemas 19 (1): 100-102. 2010 (translated from Spanish) a