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El. knyga: Trait-Mediated Indirect Interactions: Ecological and Evolutionary Perspectives

Edited by (Kyoto University, Japan), Edited by (Yale University, Connecticut), Edited by (University of Florida)
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Ecological Reviews
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Dec-2012
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139853712
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Ecological Reviews
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Dec-2012
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139853712

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There is increasing evidence that the structure and functioning of ecological communities and ecosystems are strongly influenced by flexible traits of individuals within species. A deep understanding of how trait flexibility alters direct and indirect species interactions is crucial for addressing key issues in basic and applied ecology. This book provides an integrated perspective on the ecological and evolutionary consequences of interactions mediated by flexible species traits across a wide range of systems. It is the first volume synthesizing the rapidly expanding research field of trait-mediated indirect effects and highlights how the conceptual framework of these effects can aid the understanding of evolutionary processes, population dynamics, community structure and stability, and ecosystem function. It not only brings out the importance of this emerging field for basic ecological questions, but also explores the implications of trait-mediated interactions for the conservation of biodiversity and the response of ecosystems to anthropogenic environmental changes.

Recenzijos

' the overall excellence of this volume makes it worthwhile for ecologists in a variety of fields.' The Quarterly Review of Biology

Daugiau informacijos

This book reviews state-of-the-art research into trait-based effects and their importance in community and ecosystem ecology.
List of contributors
viii
Foreword xiii
Peter W. Price
Preface xv
1 Introduction
1(6)
Takayuki Ohgushi
Oswald J. Schmitz
Robert D. Holt
PART I COMMUNITY
7(198)
2 Perspective: kinds of trait-mediated indirect effects in ecological communities. A synthesis
9(19)
Thomas W. Schoener
David A. Spiller
3 Consequences of trait changes in host-parasitoid interactions in insect communities
28(19)
F.J. Frank van Veen
H. Charles Godfray
4 The impact of trait-mediated indirect interactions in marine communities
47(22)
Jeremy D. Long
Mark E. Hay
5 Trait-mediated indirect interactions in size-structured populations: causes and consequences for species interactions and community dynamics
69(20)
Volker H.W. Rudolf
6 Trait-mediated effects, density dependence and the dynamic stability of ecological systems
89(18)
Robert D. Holt
Michael Barfield
7 Plant effects on herbivore-enemy interactions in natural systems
107(24)
Kailen A. Mooney
Michael S. Singer
8 The implications of adaptive prey behaviour for ecological communities: a review of current theory
131(30)
Scott D. Peacor
Clayton E. Cressler
9 Community consequences of phenotypic plasticity of terrestrial plants: herbivore-initiated bottom-up trophic cascades
161(25)
Takayuki Ohgushi
10 Model-based, response-surface approaches to quantifying indirect interactions
186(19)
Toshinori Okuyama
Benjamin M. Bolker
PART II COEVOLUTION
205(88)
11 Perspective: trait-mediated indirect interactions and the revolutionary process
207(14)
Benjamin J. Ridenhour
Scott L. Nuismer
12 Evolutionary indirect effects: examples from introduced plant and herbivore interactions
221(23)
Jennifer A. Lau
13 Indirect evolutionary interactions in a multitrophic system
244(13)
Timothy P. Craig
Joanne K. Itami
Michael Dixon
Terry R. Hams
14 The role of trait-mediated indirect interactions for multispecies plant-animal mutualisms
257(21)
Rebecca E. Irwin
15 Consequences of trait evolution in a multispecies system
278(15)
Craig W. Benkman
Adam M. Siepielski
Julie W. Smith
PART III ECOSYSTEM
293(140)
16 Perspective: interspecific indirect genetic effects (IIGEs). Linking genetics and genomics to community ecology and ecosystem processes
295(29)
Gerard J. Allan
Stephen M. Shuster
Scott Woolbright
Faith Walker
Nashelly Meneses
Arthur Keith
Joseph K. Bailey
Thomas G. Whitham
17 Species functional traits, trophic control and the ecosystem consequences of adaptive foraging in the middle of food chains
324(15)
Geoffrey C. Trussell
Oswald J. Schmitz
18 Effects of herbivores on terrestrial ecosystem processes: the role of trait-mediated indirect effects
339(32)
Mark D. Hunter
Barbara C. Reynolds
Myra C. Hall
Christopher J. Frost
19 Functional and heritable consequences of plant genotype on community composition and ecosystem processes
371(20)
Jennifer A. Schweitzer
Joseph K. Bailey
Dylan G. Fischer
Carri J. LeRoy
Thomas G. Whitham
Stephen C. Hart
20 Microbial mutualists and biodiversity in ecosystems
391(23)
Jennifer A. Rudgers
Keith Clay
21 Integrating trait-mediated effects and non-trophic interactions in the study of biodiversity and ecosystem functioning
414(19)
Alexandra Goudard
Michel Loreau
PART IV APPLIED ECOLOGY
433(97)
22 Perspective: consequences of trait-mediated indirect interactions for biological control of plant pests
435(15)
Maurice W. Sabelis
Arne Janssen
Izabela Lesna
23 Natural enemy functional identity, trait-mediated interactions and biological control
450(16)
Tobin D. Northfield
David W. Crowder
Randa Jabbour
William E. Snyder
24 Trait-mediated effects modify patch-size density relationships in insect herbivores and parasitoids
466(23)
Peter A. Hamback
Petter Andersson
Tibor Bukovinszky
25 Plasticity and trait-mediated indirect interactions among plants
489(19)
Erik T. Aschehoug
Ragan M. Callaway
26 Climate change, phenology and the nature of consumer-resource interactions: advancing the match/mismatch hypothesis
508(18)
Jeffrey T. Kerby
Christopher C. Wilmers
Eric Post
27 Coda
526(4)
Takayuki Ohgushi
Oswald J. Schmitz
Robert D. Holt
Index 530
Takayuki Ohgushi is a Professor at the Center for Ecological Research at Kyoto University. His research focus is on population biology of insect herbivores, plant-herbivore interactions, multi-trophic interactions and the linkage from gene to ecosystem. In particular, he is interested in how trait-mediated indirect effects create ecological communities and biodiversity. Oswald Schmitz is the Oastler Professor of Population and Community Ecology, in the Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. He studies the linkage between two important components of natural systems: biodiversity and ecosystem services, using field experimentation guided by formal mathematical theory of trait-based species interactions. Robert D. Holt is Arthur R. Marshall, Jr Chair in Ecology and Eminent Scholar, in the Department of Biology at the University of Florida. He is an evolutionary and community ecologist whose contributions are principally theoretical, but always tied to concrete processes in the natural world. He has received the International Ecology Institute Prize in Terrestrial Ecology and the Sewall Wright Award from the American Society of Naturalists.