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Temporal Dimensions of Landscape Ecology : Wildlife Responses to Variable Resources / edited by John A. Bissonette, Ilse Storch.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2007Descripción: Ix, 286 páginas, recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9780387454474
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • QH541.15.L35
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Relevant Temporal Theory -- Resource Acquisition and Animal Response in Dynamic Landscapes -- Pulsed Resources and Community Responses -- Invoking the Ghosts of Landscapes Past to Understand the Landscape Ecology of the Present … and the Future -- Modeling Adaptive Behavior in Event-Driven Environments -- Temporal Scaling in Complex Systems -- Statistics of Time -- Using Statistical Models to Study Temporal Dynamics of Animal—Landscape Relations -- Multivariate Landscape Trajectory Analysis -- Temporally Focused Case Studies -- Assessing Grouse Habitats in the Alps -- Exploring the Temporal Effects of Seasonal Water Availability on the Snail Kite of Florida -- Three Axes of Ecological Studies -- Building and Using Habitat Models for Assessing Temporal Changes in Forest Ecosystems -- Foraging Responses of the Endangered Gouldian Finch to Temporal Differences in Seed Availability in Northern Australian Savanna Grasslands -- Spending Time in the Forest -- Niche Opportunities and Introduced Birds.
Resumen: Over the past twenty-five years, the effects of the spatial distribution and scaling of resources on animal populations have been increasingly studied in wildlife biology, landscape ecology, conservation biology, and related fields. However, spatial patterns change over time. In Temporal Dimensions of Landscape Ecology: Wildlife Responses to Variable Resources, the authors discuss the effects that temporal changes in resources have on animal populations. Resource availability and quality are not distributed homogeneously over time, depending for example on predictable changes in seasons, mating and birthing cycles, unpredictable resource pulses and weather-related phenomena, ecological disturbances, and historical legacies. Temporal Dimensions of Landscape Ecology brings together chapters that address the idea of current as well as historical temporal influences on resource availability, quality, and distribution. The authors draw attention to the neglected temporal issues so important to understanding species and community responses. This book will be of interest to both wildlife and conservation students and practitioners working with temporal and spatial scale issues.
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Springer eBooks

Relevant Temporal Theory -- Resource Acquisition and Animal Response in Dynamic Landscapes -- Pulsed Resources and Community Responses -- Invoking the Ghosts of Landscapes Past to Understand the Landscape Ecology of the Present … and the Future -- Modeling Adaptive Behavior in Event-Driven Environments -- Temporal Scaling in Complex Systems -- Statistics of Time -- Using Statistical Models to Study Temporal Dynamics of Animal—Landscape Relations -- Multivariate Landscape Trajectory Analysis -- Temporally Focused Case Studies -- Assessing Grouse Habitats in the Alps -- Exploring the Temporal Effects of Seasonal Water Availability on the Snail Kite of Florida -- Three Axes of Ecological Studies -- Building and Using Habitat Models for Assessing Temporal Changes in Forest Ecosystems -- Foraging Responses of the Endangered Gouldian Finch to Temporal Differences in Seed Availability in Northern Australian Savanna Grasslands -- Spending Time in the Forest -- Niche Opportunities and Introduced Birds.

Over the past twenty-five years, the effects of the spatial distribution and scaling of resources on animal populations have been increasingly studied in wildlife biology, landscape ecology, conservation biology, and related fields. However, spatial patterns change over time. In Temporal Dimensions of Landscape Ecology: Wildlife Responses to Variable Resources, the authors discuss the effects that temporal changes in resources have on animal populations. Resource availability and quality are not distributed homogeneously over time, depending for example on predictable changes in seasons, mating and birthing cycles, unpredictable resource pulses and weather-related phenomena, ecological disturbances, and historical legacies. Temporal Dimensions of Landscape Ecology brings together chapters that address the idea of current as well as historical temporal influences on resource availability, quality, and distribution. The authors draw attention to the neglected temporal issues so important to understanding species and community responses. This book will be of interest to both wildlife and conservation students and practitioners working with temporal and spatial scale issues.

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