LEADER 00000cam 22000004a 4500
001 ocm43070169
003 OCoLC
005 20101014010011.0
008 990701t20002000cauab b 001 0 eng
010 99065100
015 GBA0-Z9932
019 45767255
020 0126289751|qalkaline paper
020 9780126289756|qalkaline paper
035 (OCoLC)43070169
035 (OCoLC)43070169|z(OCoLC)45767255
040 DLC|beng|cDLC|dUKM|dMIA|dAGL|dTJC|dMUQ|dOCLCQ|dBAKER
|dNLGGC|dUBA|dBTCTA|dYDXCP|dOCLCG|dIG#|dUBC|dZWZ|dVA@
042 pcc
049 STJJ
050 00 QL496.4|b.S56 2000
070 0 QL496.4|b.S36 2000
072 0 L300
072 0 L001
082 00 595.717|221
084 42.75|2bcl
100 1 Schowalter, Timothy Duane,|d1952-
245 10 Insect ecology :|ban ecosystem approach /|cTimothy D.
Schowalter.
264 1 San Diego :|bAcademic Press,|c[2000]
264 4 |c©2000
300 xi, 483 pages :|billustrations, map ;|c27 cm
336 text|btxt|2rdacontent
337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia
338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier
504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 423-461).
505 00 |gI.|tScope of Insect Ecology|g3 --|gII.|tEcosystem
Ecology|g5 --|gIII.|tEnvironmental Change and Disturbance
|g10 --|gIV.|tEcosystem Approach to Insect Ecology|g12 --
|gSection I|tEcology of Individual Insects --|g2
|tResponses to Abiotic Conditions|g17 --|gI.|tPhysical
Template|g18 --|gII.|tSurviving Variable Abiotic
Conditions|g33 --|gIII.|tFactors Affecting Dispersal
Behavior|g41 --|gIV.|tResponses to Anthropogenic Changes
|g47 --|g3|tResource Acquisition|g49 --|gI.|tResource
Suitability|g50 --|gII.|tResource Acceptability|g68 --
|gIII.|tResource Availability|g72 --|g4|tResource
Allocation|g85 --|gI.|tResource Budget|g85 --|gII.
|tAllocation of Assimilated Resources|g87 --|gIII.
|tEfficiency of Resource Use|g104 --|gSection II
|tPopulation Ecology --|g5|tPopulation Systems|g113 --|gI.
|tPopulation Structure|g113 --|gII.|tPopulation Processes
|g123 --|gIII.|tLife History Characteristics|g130 --|gIV.
|tParameter Estimation|g132 --|g6|tPopulation Dynamics
|g137 --|gI.|tPopulation Fluctuation|g138 --|gII.|tFactors
Affecting Population Size|g141 --|gIII.|tModels of
Population Change|g151 --|g7|tBiogeography|g161 --|gI.
|tGeographic Distribution|g162 --|gII.|tSpatial Dynamics
of Populations|g167 --|gIII.|tAnthropogenic Effects on
Spatial Dynamics|g175 --|gIV.|tConservation Biology|g181 -
-|gV.|tModels|g183 --|gSection III|tCommunity Ecology --
|g8|tSpecies Interactions|g189 --|gI.|tClasses of
Interactions|g190 --|gII.|tFactors Affecting Interactions
|g211 --|gIII.|tConsequences of Interactions|g217 --|g9
|tCommunity Structure|g221 --|gI.|tApproaches to
Describing Communities|g222 --|gII.|tPatterns of Community
Structure|g237 --|gIII.|tDeterminants of Community
Structure|g243 --|g10|tCommunity Dynamics|g249 --|gI.
|tShort-Term Change in Community Structure|g250 --|gII.
|tSuccessional Change in Community Structure|g250 --|gIII.
|tPaleoecology|g265 --|gIV.|tDiversity versus Stability
|g271 --|gSection IV|tEcosystem Level --|g11|tEcosystem
Structure and Function|g279 --|gI.|tEcosystem Structure
|g280 --|gII.|tEnergy Flow|g283 --|gIII.|tBiogeochemical
Cycling|g290 --|gIV.|tClimate Modification|g300 --|gV.
|tModeling|g303 --|g12|tHerbivory|g311 --|gI.|tTypes and
Patterns of Herbivory|g312 --|gII.|tEffects of Herbivory
|g322 --|g13|tPollination, Seed Predation, and Seed
Dispersal|g343 --|gI.|tMechanisms and Patterns of
Pollination|g344 --|gII.|tEffects of Pollination|g348 --
|gIII.|tMechanisms and Patterns of Seed Predation and
Dispersal|g350 --|gIV.|tEffects of Seed Predation and
Dispersal|g357 --|g14|tDecomposition and Pedogenesis|g361
--|gI.|tTypes and Patterns of Detritivory and Burrowing
|g362 --|gII.|tEffects of Detritivory and Burrowing|g372 -
-|g15|tInsects as Regulators of Ecosystem Processes|g389 -
-|gI.|tDevelopment of the Concept|g390 --|gII.|tProperties
of Cybernetic Systems|g394 --|gIII.|tEcosystems as
Cybernetic Systems|g395 --|gSection V|tSynthesis --|gIII.
|tCritical Issues|g419.
520 1 "Key features: integrates individual, population,
community, and ecosystem levels of ecological resolution;
illustrates the relationship of insect ecology to
disturbance dynamics and environmental change; relates
metapopulation dynamics to ecosystem structure and
function; demonstrates the ability of insect functional
groups to affect ecosystem and global processes, such as
primary production, biogeochemical cycling, and carbon
flux; and provides a context for evolution as feedback
between community modification of ecosystem conditions and
selection of individual attributes regulating ecosystem
conditions."--BOOK JACKET.
650 0 Insects|xEcology.
856 42 |3Publisher description|uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/
description/els033/99065100.html
938 Baker & Taylor|bBKTY|c79.95|d79.95|i0126289751|n0003390836
|sactive
938 YBP Library Services|bYANK|n1619783
938 Ingram|bINGR|n9780126289756
994 02|bSTJ
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