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Biological Invasions / edited by Wolfgang Nentwig.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Ecological Studies, Analysis and Synthesis ; 193Editor: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007Descripción: xxv, 441 páginas 38 ilustraciones recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9783540369202
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • QH540-549.5
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Biological Invasions: why it Matters -- Biological Invasions: why it Matters -- Pathways of Biological Invasions -- Pathways in Animal Invasions -- Pathways in Plant Invasions -- Is Ballast Water a Major Dispersal Mechanism for Marine Organisms? -- Waterways as Invasion Highways – Impact of Climate Change and Globalization -- Traits of a Good Invader -- Integrating Ecological and Evolutionary Theory of Biological Invasions -- Traits Associated with Invasiveness in Alien Plants: Where Do we Stand? -- Do Successful Invaders Exist? Pre-Adaptations to Novel Environments in Terrestrial Vertebrates -- Patterns of Invasion and Invasibility -- Effects of Land Management Practices on Plant Invasions in Wildland Areas -- Nitrogen Enrichment and Plant Invasions: the Importance of Nitrogen-Fixing Plants and Anthropogenic Eutrophication -- From Ecosystem Invasibility to Local,Regional and Global Patterns of Invasive Species -- Will Climate Change Promote Alien Plant Invasions? -- Ecological Impact of Biological Invasions -- Impacts of Invasive Species on Ecosystem Services -- Biological Invasions by Marine Jellyfish -- Effects of Invasive Non-Native Species on the Native Biodiversity in the River Rhine -- Hybridization and Introgression Between Native and Alien Species -- Genetically Modified Organisms as Invasive Species? -- Economy and Socio-Economy of Biological Invasions -- Plant,Animal, and Microbe Invasive Species in the United States and World -- Socio-Economic Impact and Assessment of Biological Invasions -- Prevention and Management of Biological Invasions -- Economic Analysis of Invasive Species Policies -- Phytosanitary Measures to Prevent the Introduction of Invasive Species -- Limits and Potentialities of Eradication as a Tool for Addressing Biological Invasions -- Pros and Cons of Biological Control -- General Conclusion, or what Has to be Done now?.
Resumen: This new volume on Biological Invasions deals with both plants and animals, differing from previous books by extending from the species to an ecosystem and global level. Its 22 chapters cover pathways of biological invasions (e.g. ballast water, waterways), traits of successful invaders (e.g. chemical weapons, empty niches), patterns of invasion and invasibility (e.g. man-induced predisposition by fire, land use and eutrophication, the role of climate change) as well as ecological impacts (e.g. food web shifts, genetic pollution), economy and socio-economy (e.g. ecosystem services and monetary valuation), and prevention and management of biological invasions (e.g. phytosanitary measures, biological control, particularly in view of globalisation). Topics of highest societal relevance, like impact of genetically modified organisms, are interlinked with more conventional ecological aspects, including biodiversity. The combination of these approaches is new and will make compelling reading for the public sector, too.
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Springer eBooks

Biological Invasions: why it Matters -- Biological Invasions: why it Matters -- Pathways of Biological Invasions -- Pathways in Animal Invasions -- Pathways in Plant Invasions -- Is Ballast Water a Major Dispersal Mechanism for Marine Organisms? -- Waterways as Invasion Highways – Impact of Climate Change and Globalization -- Traits of a Good Invader -- Integrating Ecological and Evolutionary Theory of Biological Invasions -- Traits Associated with Invasiveness in Alien Plants: Where Do we Stand? -- Do Successful Invaders Exist? Pre-Adaptations to Novel Environments in Terrestrial Vertebrates -- Patterns of Invasion and Invasibility -- Effects of Land Management Practices on Plant Invasions in Wildland Areas -- Nitrogen Enrichment and Plant Invasions: the Importance of Nitrogen-Fixing Plants and Anthropogenic Eutrophication -- From Ecosystem Invasibility to Local,Regional and Global Patterns of Invasive Species -- Will Climate Change Promote Alien Plant Invasions? -- Ecological Impact of Biological Invasions -- Impacts of Invasive Species on Ecosystem Services -- Biological Invasions by Marine Jellyfish -- Effects of Invasive Non-Native Species on the Native Biodiversity in the River Rhine -- Hybridization and Introgression Between Native and Alien Species -- Genetically Modified Organisms as Invasive Species? -- Economy and Socio-Economy of Biological Invasions -- Plant,Animal, and Microbe Invasive Species in the United States and World -- Socio-Economic Impact and Assessment of Biological Invasions -- Prevention and Management of Biological Invasions -- Economic Analysis of Invasive Species Policies -- Phytosanitary Measures to Prevent the Introduction of Invasive Species -- Limits and Potentialities of Eradication as a Tool for Addressing Biological Invasions -- Pros and Cons of Biological Control -- General Conclusion, or what Has to be Done now?.

This new volume on Biological Invasions deals with both plants and animals, differing from previous books by extending from the species to an ecosystem and global level. Its 22 chapters cover pathways of biological invasions (e.g. ballast water, waterways), traits of successful invaders (e.g. chemical weapons, empty niches), patterns of invasion and invasibility (e.g. man-induced predisposition by fire, land use and eutrophication, the role of climate change) as well as ecological impacts (e.g. food web shifts, genetic pollution), economy and socio-economy (e.g. ecosystem services and monetary valuation), and prevention and management of biological invasions (e.g. phytosanitary measures, biological control, particularly in view of globalisation). Topics of highest societal relevance, like impact of genetically modified organisms, are interlinked with more conventional ecological aspects, including biodiversity. The combination of these approaches is new and will make compelling reading for the public sector, too.

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