Plant Strategies The Demographic Consequences of Functional Traits in Changing Environments at Meripustak

Plant Strategies The Demographic Consequences of Functional Traits in Changing Environments

Books from same Author: Daniel C Laughlin

Books from same Publisher: Oxford University Press

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Daniel C Laughlin
    PublisherOxford University Press
    ISBN9780192867957
    Pages464
    BindingSoftcover
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearOctober 2023

    Description

    Oxford University Press Plant Strategies The Demographic Consequences of Functional Traits in Changing Environments by Daniel C Laughlin

    How do plants make a living? Some plants are gamblers, others are swindlers. Some plants are habitual spenders while others are strugglers and miserly savers. Plants have evolved a spectacular array of solutions to the existential problems of survival and reproduction in a world where resources are scarce, disturbances can be deadly, and competition is cut-throat. Few topics have both captured the imagination and furrowed the brows of plant ecologists, yet no topic is more important for understanding the assembly of plant communities, predicting plant responses to global change, and enhancing the restoration of our rapidly degrading biosphere. The vast array of plant strategy models that characterize the discipline now require synthesis. These models tend to emphasize either life history strategies based on demography, or functional strategies based on ecophysiology. Indeed, this disciplinary divide between demography and physiology runs deep and continues to this today.The goal of this accessible book is to articulate a coherent framework that unifies life history theory with comparative functional ecology to advance prediction in plant ecology. Armed with a deeper understanding of the dimensionality of life history and functional traits, we are now equipped to quantitively link phenotypes to population growth rates across gradients of resource availability and disturbance regimes. Predicting how species respond to global change is perhaps the most important challenge of our time. A robust framework for plant strategy theory will advance this research agenda by testing the generality of traits for predicting population dynamics.