Ant-Plant Interactions
Impacts of Humans on Terrestrial Ecosystems
Herausgeber: Oliveira, Paulo S; Koptur, Suzanne
Ant-Plant Interactions
Impacts of Humans on Terrestrial Ecosystems
Herausgeber: Oliveira, Paulo S; Koptur, Suzanne
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The first volume devoted to anthropogenic effects on interactions between ants and flowering plants, considered major parts of terrestrial ecosystems.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Ant-plant interactions in Australia42,99 €
- R.P. Buckley (ed.)Ant-Plant Interactions in Australia160,99 €
- A Monographic Revision of the Ant Genus Lasius.37,99 €
- Valentin KrassilovPlant-Arthropod Interactions in the Early Angiosperm History221,99 €
- P. NarayanasamyMicrobial Plant Pathogens-Detection and Disease Diagnosis:110,99 €
- P. NarayanasamyMicrobial Plant Pathogens-Detection and Disease Diagnosis:147,99 €
- P. NarayanasamyMicrobial Plant Pathogens-Detection and Disease Diagnosis110,99 €
-
-
-
The first volume devoted to anthropogenic effects on interactions between ants and flowering plants, considered major parts of terrestrial ecosystems.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 177mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 1064g
- ISBN-13: 9781107159754
- ISBN-10: 110715975X
- Artikelnr.: 48399139
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 177mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 1064g
- ISBN-13: 9781107159754
- ISBN-10: 110715975X
- Artikelnr.: 48399139
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Preface. Ants and plants: a prominent interaction in a changing world Paulo
S. Oliveira and Suzanne Koptur; Part I. Landscape Mosaics, Habitat
Fragmentation and Edge Effects: 1. Ant biodiversity and functional roles in
fragmented forest and grassland ecosystems of the agricultural Midwest,
North America Thomas O. Crist and Kaitlin U. Campbell; 2. Diversity and
specificity of ant-plant interactions in canopy communities: insights from
primary and secondary tropical forests in New Guinea Petr Klimes; 3. Living
together in novel habitats: a review of land-use change impacts on
mutualistic ant-plant symbioses in tropical forests Tom M. Fayle, Chua
Wanji, Edgar C. Turner and Kalsum M. Yusah; 4. Ecology of leaf-cutting ants
in human-modified landscapes Marcelo Tabarelli, Felipe F. S. Siqueira,
Julia Backé, Rainer Wirth and Inara R. Leal; Part II. Ant-Seed Interactions
and Man-Induced Disturbance: 5. Global change impacts on ant-mediated seed
dispersal in Eastern North American forests Robert J. Warren II, Joshua R.
King, Lacy Chick and Mark A. Bradford; 6. Effects of human disturbance and
climate change on myrmecochory in Brazilian Caatinga Inara R. Leal, Laura
C. Leal, Fernanda M. P. de Oliveira, Gabriela B. Arcoverde and Alan N.
Andersen; 7. Anthropogenic disturbances affect the interactions between
ants and fleshy fruits in two neotropical biodiversity hotspots Paulo S.
Oliveira, Alexander V. Christianini, Ana G. D. Bieber and Marco A. Pizo;
Part III. Ant-Plant Protection Systems under Variable Habitat Conditions:
8. Plasticity and efficacy of defense strategies against herbivory in
ant-visited plants growing in variable abiotic conditions Akira Yamawo; 9.
Interhabitat variation in the ecology of extrafloral nectar production and
associated ant assemblages in Mexican landscapes Cecilia Díaz-Castelazo,
Nathalia Chavarro-Rodríguez and Victor Rico-Gray; 10. Integrating
ecological complexity into our understanding of ant-plant mutualism:
ant-acacia interactions in African savannas Todd M. Palmer and Truman P.
Young; 11. Ecological and evolutionary responses of protective ant-plant
mutualisms to environmental changes Doyle McKey and Rumsaïs Blatrix; Part
IV. Effect of Invasive Ants on Plants and their Mutualists: 12. Playing the
system: the impacts of invasive ants and plants on facultative ant-plant
interactions Suzanne Koptur, Ian M. Jones, Hong Liu and Cecilia
Díaz-Castelazo; 13. Biological invasions and ant-flower networks on islands
Nico Blüthgen, Christopher Kaiser-Bunbury and Robert R. Junker; 14.
Mutualisms and the reciprocal benefits of comparing systems with native and
introduced ants Joshua H. Ness and David A. Holway; 15. Invasion biology
and ant-plant systems in Australia Lori Lach; Part V. Applied Ant Ecology:
Agroecosystems, Ecosystem Engineering and Restoration: 16. Services and
disservices of ant communities in tropical cacao and coffee agroforestry
systems Yann Clough, Stacy Philpott and Teja Tscharntke; 17.
Ant-plant-herbivore interactions in northern neotropical agroecosystems
Inge Armbrecht and Ivette Perfecto; 18. Leaf-cutting ants in Patagonia: how
human disturbances affect their role as ecosystem engineers on soil
fertility, plant fitness and trophic cascades Alejandro G.Farji-Brener,
Mariana Tadey and María N. Lescano; Part VI. Perspectives: 19. The study of
interspecific interactions in habitats under anthropogenic disturbance:
importance and applications Martin Heil and Marcia González-Teuber; 20. Why
study ant-plant interactions? Andrew J. Beattie.
S. Oliveira and Suzanne Koptur; Part I. Landscape Mosaics, Habitat
Fragmentation and Edge Effects: 1. Ant biodiversity and functional roles in
fragmented forest and grassland ecosystems of the agricultural Midwest,
North America Thomas O. Crist and Kaitlin U. Campbell; 2. Diversity and
specificity of ant-plant interactions in canopy communities: insights from
primary and secondary tropical forests in New Guinea Petr Klimes; 3. Living
together in novel habitats: a review of land-use change impacts on
mutualistic ant-plant symbioses in tropical forests Tom M. Fayle, Chua
Wanji, Edgar C. Turner and Kalsum M. Yusah; 4. Ecology of leaf-cutting ants
in human-modified landscapes Marcelo Tabarelli, Felipe F. S. Siqueira,
Julia Backé, Rainer Wirth and Inara R. Leal; Part II. Ant-Seed Interactions
and Man-Induced Disturbance: 5. Global change impacts on ant-mediated seed
dispersal in Eastern North American forests Robert J. Warren II, Joshua R.
King, Lacy Chick and Mark A. Bradford; 6. Effects of human disturbance and
climate change on myrmecochory in Brazilian Caatinga Inara R. Leal, Laura
C. Leal, Fernanda M. P. de Oliveira, Gabriela B. Arcoverde and Alan N.
Andersen; 7. Anthropogenic disturbances affect the interactions between
ants and fleshy fruits in two neotropical biodiversity hotspots Paulo S.
Oliveira, Alexander V. Christianini, Ana G. D. Bieber and Marco A. Pizo;
Part III. Ant-Plant Protection Systems under Variable Habitat Conditions:
8. Plasticity and efficacy of defense strategies against herbivory in
ant-visited plants growing in variable abiotic conditions Akira Yamawo; 9.
Interhabitat variation in the ecology of extrafloral nectar production and
associated ant assemblages in Mexican landscapes Cecilia Díaz-Castelazo,
Nathalia Chavarro-Rodríguez and Victor Rico-Gray; 10. Integrating
ecological complexity into our understanding of ant-plant mutualism:
ant-acacia interactions in African savannas Todd M. Palmer and Truman P.
Young; 11. Ecological and evolutionary responses of protective ant-plant
mutualisms to environmental changes Doyle McKey and Rumsaïs Blatrix; Part
IV. Effect of Invasive Ants on Plants and their Mutualists: 12. Playing the
system: the impacts of invasive ants and plants on facultative ant-plant
interactions Suzanne Koptur, Ian M. Jones, Hong Liu and Cecilia
Díaz-Castelazo; 13. Biological invasions and ant-flower networks on islands
Nico Blüthgen, Christopher Kaiser-Bunbury and Robert R. Junker; 14.
Mutualisms and the reciprocal benefits of comparing systems with native and
introduced ants Joshua H. Ness and David A. Holway; 15. Invasion biology
and ant-plant systems in Australia Lori Lach; Part V. Applied Ant Ecology:
Agroecosystems, Ecosystem Engineering and Restoration: 16. Services and
disservices of ant communities in tropical cacao and coffee agroforestry
systems Yann Clough, Stacy Philpott and Teja Tscharntke; 17.
Ant-plant-herbivore interactions in northern neotropical agroecosystems
Inge Armbrecht and Ivette Perfecto; 18. Leaf-cutting ants in Patagonia: how
human disturbances affect their role as ecosystem engineers on soil
fertility, plant fitness and trophic cascades Alejandro G.Farji-Brener,
Mariana Tadey and María N. Lescano; Part VI. Perspectives: 19. The study of
interspecific interactions in habitats under anthropogenic disturbance:
importance and applications Martin Heil and Marcia González-Teuber; 20. Why
study ant-plant interactions? Andrew J. Beattie.
Preface. Ants and plants: a prominent interaction in a changing world Paulo
S. Oliveira and Suzanne Koptur; Part I. Landscape Mosaics, Habitat
Fragmentation and Edge Effects: 1. Ant biodiversity and functional roles in
fragmented forest and grassland ecosystems of the agricultural Midwest,
North America Thomas O. Crist and Kaitlin U. Campbell; 2. Diversity and
specificity of ant-plant interactions in canopy communities: insights from
primary and secondary tropical forests in New Guinea Petr Klimes; 3. Living
together in novel habitats: a review of land-use change impacts on
mutualistic ant-plant symbioses in tropical forests Tom M. Fayle, Chua
Wanji, Edgar C. Turner and Kalsum M. Yusah; 4. Ecology of leaf-cutting ants
in human-modified landscapes Marcelo Tabarelli, Felipe F. S. Siqueira,
Julia Backé, Rainer Wirth and Inara R. Leal; Part II. Ant-Seed Interactions
and Man-Induced Disturbance: 5. Global change impacts on ant-mediated seed
dispersal in Eastern North American forests Robert J. Warren II, Joshua R.
King, Lacy Chick and Mark A. Bradford; 6. Effects of human disturbance and
climate change on myrmecochory in Brazilian Caatinga Inara R. Leal, Laura
C. Leal, Fernanda M. P. de Oliveira, Gabriela B. Arcoverde and Alan N.
Andersen; 7. Anthropogenic disturbances affect the interactions between
ants and fleshy fruits in two neotropical biodiversity hotspots Paulo S.
Oliveira, Alexander V. Christianini, Ana G. D. Bieber and Marco A. Pizo;
Part III. Ant-Plant Protection Systems under Variable Habitat Conditions:
8. Plasticity and efficacy of defense strategies against herbivory in
ant-visited plants growing in variable abiotic conditions Akira Yamawo; 9.
Interhabitat variation in the ecology of extrafloral nectar production and
associated ant assemblages in Mexican landscapes Cecilia Díaz-Castelazo,
Nathalia Chavarro-Rodríguez and Victor Rico-Gray; 10. Integrating
ecological complexity into our understanding of ant-plant mutualism:
ant-acacia interactions in African savannas Todd M. Palmer and Truman P.
Young; 11. Ecological and evolutionary responses of protective ant-plant
mutualisms to environmental changes Doyle McKey and Rumsaïs Blatrix; Part
IV. Effect of Invasive Ants on Plants and their Mutualists: 12. Playing the
system: the impacts of invasive ants and plants on facultative ant-plant
interactions Suzanne Koptur, Ian M. Jones, Hong Liu and Cecilia
Díaz-Castelazo; 13. Biological invasions and ant-flower networks on islands
Nico Blüthgen, Christopher Kaiser-Bunbury and Robert R. Junker; 14.
Mutualisms and the reciprocal benefits of comparing systems with native and
introduced ants Joshua H. Ness and David A. Holway; 15. Invasion biology
and ant-plant systems in Australia Lori Lach; Part V. Applied Ant Ecology:
Agroecosystems, Ecosystem Engineering and Restoration: 16. Services and
disservices of ant communities in tropical cacao and coffee agroforestry
systems Yann Clough, Stacy Philpott and Teja Tscharntke; 17.
Ant-plant-herbivore interactions in northern neotropical agroecosystems
Inge Armbrecht and Ivette Perfecto; 18. Leaf-cutting ants in Patagonia: how
human disturbances affect their role as ecosystem engineers on soil
fertility, plant fitness and trophic cascades Alejandro G.Farji-Brener,
Mariana Tadey and María N. Lescano; Part VI. Perspectives: 19. The study of
interspecific interactions in habitats under anthropogenic disturbance:
importance and applications Martin Heil and Marcia González-Teuber; 20. Why
study ant-plant interactions? Andrew J. Beattie.
S. Oliveira and Suzanne Koptur; Part I. Landscape Mosaics, Habitat
Fragmentation and Edge Effects: 1. Ant biodiversity and functional roles in
fragmented forest and grassland ecosystems of the agricultural Midwest,
North America Thomas O. Crist and Kaitlin U. Campbell; 2. Diversity and
specificity of ant-plant interactions in canopy communities: insights from
primary and secondary tropical forests in New Guinea Petr Klimes; 3. Living
together in novel habitats: a review of land-use change impacts on
mutualistic ant-plant symbioses in tropical forests Tom M. Fayle, Chua
Wanji, Edgar C. Turner and Kalsum M. Yusah; 4. Ecology of leaf-cutting ants
in human-modified landscapes Marcelo Tabarelli, Felipe F. S. Siqueira,
Julia Backé, Rainer Wirth and Inara R. Leal; Part II. Ant-Seed Interactions
and Man-Induced Disturbance: 5. Global change impacts on ant-mediated seed
dispersal in Eastern North American forests Robert J. Warren II, Joshua R.
King, Lacy Chick and Mark A. Bradford; 6. Effects of human disturbance and
climate change on myrmecochory in Brazilian Caatinga Inara R. Leal, Laura
C. Leal, Fernanda M. P. de Oliveira, Gabriela B. Arcoverde and Alan N.
Andersen; 7. Anthropogenic disturbances affect the interactions between
ants and fleshy fruits in two neotropical biodiversity hotspots Paulo S.
Oliveira, Alexander V. Christianini, Ana G. D. Bieber and Marco A. Pizo;
Part III. Ant-Plant Protection Systems under Variable Habitat Conditions:
8. Plasticity and efficacy of defense strategies against herbivory in
ant-visited plants growing in variable abiotic conditions Akira Yamawo; 9.
Interhabitat variation in the ecology of extrafloral nectar production and
associated ant assemblages in Mexican landscapes Cecilia Díaz-Castelazo,
Nathalia Chavarro-Rodríguez and Victor Rico-Gray; 10. Integrating
ecological complexity into our understanding of ant-plant mutualism:
ant-acacia interactions in African savannas Todd M. Palmer and Truman P.
Young; 11. Ecological and evolutionary responses of protective ant-plant
mutualisms to environmental changes Doyle McKey and Rumsaïs Blatrix; Part
IV. Effect of Invasive Ants on Plants and their Mutualists: 12. Playing the
system: the impacts of invasive ants and plants on facultative ant-plant
interactions Suzanne Koptur, Ian M. Jones, Hong Liu and Cecilia
Díaz-Castelazo; 13. Biological invasions and ant-flower networks on islands
Nico Blüthgen, Christopher Kaiser-Bunbury and Robert R. Junker; 14.
Mutualisms and the reciprocal benefits of comparing systems with native and
introduced ants Joshua H. Ness and David A. Holway; 15. Invasion biology
and ant-plant systems in Australia Lori Lach; Part V. Applied Ant Ecology:
Agroecosystems, Ecosystem Engineering and Restoration: 16. Services and
disservices of ant communities in tropical cacao and coffee agroforestry
systems Yann Clough, Stacy Philpott and Teja Tscharntke; 17.
Ant-plant-herbivore interactions in northern neotropical agroecosystems
Inge Armbrecht and Ivette Perfecto; 18. Leaf-cutting ants in Patagonia: how
human disturbances affect their role as ecosystem engineers on soil
fertility, plant fitness and trophic cascades Alejandro G.Farji-Brener,
Mariana Tadey and María N. Lescano; Part VI. Perspectives: 19. The study of
interspecific interactions in habitats under anthropogenic disturbance:
importance and applications Martin Heil and Marcia González-Teuber; 20. Why
study ant-plant interactions? Andrew J. Beattie.