Vegetation Dynamics on the Mountains and Plateaus of the American Southwest 2013th Edition

Vegetation Dynamics on the Mountains and Plateaus of the American Southwest 2013th Edition book cover

Vegetation Dynamics on the Mountains and Plateaus of the American Southwest 2013th Edition

Author(s): John Vankat (Author)

  • Publisher: Springer
  • Publication Date: June 11, 2013
  • Edition: 2013th
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 474 pages
  • ISBN-10: 9400761481
  • ISBN-13: 9789400761483

Book Description

The book provides information essential for anyone interested in the ecology of the American Southwest, including land managers, environmental planners, conservationists, ecologists and students. It is unique in its coverage of the hows and whys of dynamics (changes) in the major types of vegetation occurring on southwestern mountains and plateaus. It explains the drivers and processes of change, describes historical changes and provides conceptual models that diagrammatically illustrate past, present, and potential future changes. All major types of vegetation are covered: spruce-fir, mixed conifer, and ponderosa pine forests, pinyon-juniper vegetation, subalpine-montane grassland, and Gambel oak and interior chaparral shrublands. The focus is on vegetation that is relatively undisturbed, i.e., in natural and near-natural condition, and how it responds to natural disturbances such as fire and drought, as well as to anthropogenic disturbances such as fire exclusion and invasive species

Editorial Reviews

Review

“This is a meticulous, deep, and important synthesis of scientific knowledge of the Southwest’s upland vegetation landscapes, enriched by the author’s extensive experience, critical thinking, and striking photographs. The place itself is large and spectacular and the natural disturbances, such as wildfires and insect outbreaks, and human interactions, that are themes, operate at these big scales. To understand them, the book weaves a rich selection of early images of these landscapes with extensive historical sources, and comprehensive coverage of the scientific literature. This is a book whose distilled scientific knowledge is needed right now to think intelligently about what to do about the future.” (Dr. William L. Baker, Faculty Emeritus, Department of Geography, University of Wyoming, February 2015)

“A beautiful work of careful scholarship … .” (Craig D. Allen, Research Ecologist, U.S. Geological Survey, Los Alamos, New Mexico, January 2015)

From the Back Cover

This book provides information essential for anyone interested in the ecology of the American Southwest, including land and resource managers, environmental planners, conservationists, environmentalists, ecologists, land stewards, and students. The book is unique in its coverage of the hows and whys of dynamics (changes) in the major types of vegetation occurring on southwestern mountains and plateaus. The book explains the drivers and processes of change, describes historical changes, and provides conceptual models that diagrammatically illustrate past, present, and potential future changes.

All major types of vegetation are covered: spruce-fir forest, mixed conifer forest, ponderosa pine forest, pinyon-juniper vegetation, subalpine-montane grassland, Gambel oak shrubland, and interior chaparral shrubland. The focus is on vegetation that is relatively undisturbed, i.e., in natural and near-natural condition, and how it responds to natural disturbances such as fire and drought, as well as to anthropogenic disturbances such as fire exclusion and invasive species. Although intensive land uses such as logging are not included, knowledge of post-disturbance vegetation dynamics is applicable to the restoration and recovery of heavily disturbed areas.

The book has an introductory chapter followed by chapters on the major types of vegetation. Each vegetation chapter has an introduction that presents an overall description of the vegetation, followed by sections on (a) major drivers including climate, soil, natural disturbances such as fire, and anthropogenic disturbances such as livestock grazing, (b) key processes of vegetation dynamics such as succession, (c) vegetation conditions before Euro-American settlement, approaches used to determine them, and changes that followed, (d) a three-tiered suite of conceptual models of vegetation dynamics, and (e) conclusions and key challenges for researchers and managers.

View on Amazon

电子书代发PDF格式价格30我要求助
未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » Vegetation Dynamics on the Mountains and Plateaus of the American Southwest 2013th Edition