<p>Arid lands require that organisms inhabiting them be well-adapted to thrive or even just to survive. This book provides a review of the ecological adaptations - be they behavioural, physiological or morphological - of carnivores to arid environments. Following a general introduction into aridity
Biotic Interactions in Arid Lands
β Scribed by Professor Dr. John L. Cloudsley-Thompson (auth.), Professor Dr. John L. Cloudsley-Thompson (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 213
- Series
- Adaptations of Desert Organisms
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The exigencies of life in the desert environment have resulted in the seΒ lection of a diversity of adaptations, both morphological and physiologiΒ cal, in the flora and fauna. At the same time, many plants and most small animals are able not merely to exist but even to thrive under desert conditions - mainly by avoiding thermal extremes and by the refineΒ ment of pre-existing abilities to economise in water. In the same way, the biotic interactions of the flora and fauna of the desert do not involve many new principles. Nevertheless, conditions in arid regions frequently do invoke refinements of the complex interrelations between predators and their prey, parasites and their hosts, as well as between herbivores and the plants upon which they feed. In this book, I shall discuss not only such interactions and their feedback effects, but also community processes and population dynamics in the desert. The physical conditions of the desert that principally affect predators and their prey are its openness and the paucity of cover. This is reΒ stricted to scattered plants, occasional rocks, holes, and crevices in the ground. Furthermore, nightfall does not confer relative invisibility, as it does in many other ecobiomes, because of the clarity of the atmosphere. The bright starlight of the desert renders nearby objects visible even to the human eye, while an incandescent moon bathes the empty landscape with a flood of silver light. Consequently, adaptive coloration is funcΒ tional at all hours of the day and night.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XI
Introduction....Pages 1-8
Predatory Techniques....Pages 9-35
Primary Anti-Predator Devices....Pages 37-65
Secondary Anti-Predator Devices....Pages 67-86
Parasitic and Allied Interactions....Pages 87-106
Plants and Herbivorous Animals....Pages 107-126
Community Processes....Pages 127-167
Discussion and Conclusions....Pages 169-176
Back Matter....Pages 177-208
β¦ Subjects
Ecology; Zoology; Plant Sciences
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