<p><P>The growth, reproduction, and geographical distribution of plants are profoundly influenced by their physiological ecology: the interaction with the surrounding physical, chemical, and biological environments. This textbook describes mechanisms that underlie plant physiological ecology at the
Plant Physiological Ecology
โ Scribed by Hans Lambers Ph.D., F. Stuart Chapin III Ph.D., Thijs L. Pons Ph.D. (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer New York
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 565
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xxvii
Assumptions and Approaches....Pages 1-9
Photosynthesis, Respiration, and Long-Distance Transport....Pages 10-153
Plant Water Relations....Pages 154-209
Leaf Energy Budgets: Effects of Radiation and Temperature....Pages 210-229
Scaling-Up Gas Exchange and Energy Balance from the Leaf to the Canopy Level....Pages 230-238
Mineral Nutrition....Pages 239-298
Growth and Allocation....Pages 299-351
Life Cycles: Environmental Influences and Adaptations....Pages 352-377
Biotic Influences....Pages 378-494
Role in Ecosystem and Global Processes....Pages 495-517
Back Matter....Pages 518-540
โฆ Subjects
Plant Ecology; Ecology; Plant Sciences; Plant Physiology
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><P>The growth, reproduction, and geographical distribution of plants are profoundly influenced by their physiological ecology: the interaction with the surrounding physical, chemical, and biological environments. This textbook describes mechanisms that underlie plant physiological ecology at the
<p><p></p><p>Growth, reproduction, and geographical distribution of plants are profoundly influenced by their physiological ecology: the interaction with the surrounding physical, chemical, and biological environments. This textbook highlights mechanisms that underlie plant physiological ecology at
Box 9E. 1 Continued FIGURE 2. The CโSโR triangle model (Grime 1979). The strategies at the three corners are C, competiti- winning species; S, stress-tolerating s- cies; R,ruderalspecies. Particular species can engage in any mixture of these three primary strategies, and the m- ture is described by
Box 9E. 1 Continued FIGURE 2. The C-S-R triangle model (Grime 1979). The strategies at the three corners are C, competiti- winning species; S, stress-tolerating s- cies; R, ruderalspecies. Particular species can engage in any mixture of these three primary strategies, and the m- ture is described by