Ecosystem Function in Heterogeneous Landscapes

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Springer Science & Business Media, Dec 15, 2005 - Business & Economics - 489 pages
Among the most dif?cult problems in the life sciences is the challenge to understand the details of how ecosystems/watersheds/landscapes function. Yet,the welfare of all life,not just the human species,depends upon the s- cessful functioning of diverse and complicated ecosystems, each with va- ous dimensions and compositions. Central to this “working” is the dominance, and to a major extent control, of ecosystems by organisms, which means that these systems are constantly changing as the component organisms change and evolve. Such changes increase the challenge to understand the functioning of ecosystems and landscapes. Moreover,und- standing the interactions among the myriad components of these systems is mind-boggling as there are scores of biotic (probably many thousands of species when the microbial components are fully enumerated through genomics) and countless abiotic (ions, molecules, and compounds) entities, all simultaneously interacting and responding to diverse external factors to produce functional or dysfunctional environments for life. This book focuses on the problems of connectedness and ecosystem fu- tioning. It is dif?cult enough to understand how an ecosystem functions when it is considered in isolation, but all ecosystems are open and c- nected to everything else. Clearly, the inputs to any ecosystem are the o- puts from others and vice versa, and as such the ?uxes represent major, if not critical, points for managing or changing the overall functioning of an ecosystem or landscape. A major challenge is to ?nd appropriate conceptual frameworks to address these complicated problems.
 

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Contents

Ecosystem Function in Heterogeneous Landscapes
1
Challenges and Conceptual Approaches
5
Editors Introduction to Section I
7
Causes and Consequences of Spatial Heterogeneity in Ecosystem Function
9
The Template Patterns and Processes of Spatial Variation
31
Thoughts on the Generation and Importance of Spatial Heterogeneity in Ecosystems and Landscapes
49
Reciprocal Cause and Effect Between Environmental Heterogeneity and Transport Processes
67
Perspectives from Different Disciplines
91
Heterogeneity in Urban Ecosystems Patterns and Process
257
Origins Patterns and Importance of Heterogeneity in Riparian Systems
279
Flowpaths as Integrators of Heterogeneity in Streams and Landscapes
311
Causes and Consequences of Spatial Heterogeneity in Lakes
329
Application of Frameworks and Concepts
349
Editors Introduction to Section IV
351
The Importance of Multiscale Spatial Heterogeneity in Wildland Fire Management and Research
353
The Role of Spatial Heterogeneity in the Management of Freshwater Resources
367

Editors Introduction to Section II
93
Population Ecology in Spatially Heterogeneous Environments
95
Heterogeneity in Hydrologic Processes A Terrestrial Hydrologic Modeling Perspective
119
Spatial Heterogeneity in Infectious Disease Epidemics
137
Spatial Heterogeneity and Its Relation to Processes in the Upper Ocean
165
Illustrations of Heterogeneity and Ecosystem Function
183
Editors Introduction to Section III
185
Heterogeneity in Arid and Semiarid Lands
189
Formation of SoilVegetation Patterns
207
Spatial Patterning of Soil Carbon Storage Across Boreal Landscapes
229
The Roles of Spatial Heterogeneity and Ecological Processes in Conservation Planning
389
Synthesis
407
Editors Introduction to Section V
409
Challenges in Understanding the Functions of Ecological Heterogeneity
411
Spatial Pattern and Ecosystem Function Reflections on Current Knowledge and Future Directions
427
Spatial Heterogeneity Past Present and Future
443
Heterogeneity and Ecosystem Function Enhancing Ecological Understanding and Applications
451
Conceptual Frameworks Plan for a HalfBuilt House
463
Index
471
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