Tropical Rain Forests – An Ecological and Biogeographical Comparison 2e

Author:   R Corlett ,  Richard B. Primack
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Edition:   2nd Edition
ISBN:  

9781444332551


Pages:   336
Publication Date:   28 January 2011
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Tropical Rain Forests – An Ecological and Biogeographical Comparison 2e


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Full Product Details

Author:   R Corlett ,  Richard B. Primack
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:   Wiley-Blackwell (an imprint of John Wiley & Sons Ltd)
Edition:   2nd Edition
Dimensions:   Width: 17.10cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 24.50cm
Weight:   0.720kg
ISBN:  

9781444332551


ISBN 10:   1444332554
Pages:   336
Publication Date:   28 January 2011
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Preface to the first edition. Preface to the second edition. Acknowledgments. 1 Many Tropical Rain Forests. What are tropical rain forests? Where are the tropical rain forests? Rain forest environments. Rain forest histories. Origins of the similarities and differences among rain forests. Many rain forests. Conclusions. 2 Plants: Building Blocks of the Rain Forest. Plant distributions. Rain forest structure. How many plant species? Widespread plant families. Neotropical rain forests. Asian rain forests. Rain forests in New Guinea and Australia. African rain forests. Madagascan rain forests. Conclusions and future research directions. 3 Primate Communities: A Key to Understanding Biogeography and Ecology. What are primates? Old World versus New World primates. Primate diets. Primate communities. Primates as seed dispersal agents. Conclusions and future research directions. 4 Carnivores and Plant-eaters. Carnivores. Herbivores of the forest floor. Conclusions and future research directions. 5 Birds: Linkages in the Rain Forest Community. Biogeography. Little, brown, insect-eating birds. Forest frugivores. Fruit size and body size. Flower visitors. Ground-dwellers. Woodpeckers. Birds of prey. Scavengers. Night birds. Migration. Comparison of bird communities across continents. Conclusions and future research directions. 6 Fruit Bats and Gliding Animals in the Forest Canopy. Fruit- and nectar-feeding bats. Flying behavior. Foraging behavior. Bats as pollinators and seed dispersal agents. Gliding vertebrates. Conclusions and future research directions. 7 Insects: Diverse, Abundant, and Ecologically Important. Butterflies. Ants. Termites. Bees. Conclusions and future research directions. 8 Island Rain Forests. Pacific islands. Evolution on islands. Indian Ocean islands. Atlantic islands. Caribbean islands. Natural disasters. Human impacts. Conclusions and future research directions. 9 The Future of Tropical Rain Forests. Different forests, different threats. The major threats. The forces behind the threats. Global climate change. Saving the many rain forests. Conclusions and future research directions. References. Index.

Reviews

In summary: this is a fascinating book. I enjoyed it, I learned from it and I recommend it. It will be of value to academics, researchers and students, and, due to its accessible style and illustrations, it will appeal to many others too. Columbus would have found it helpful-but over half a millennium later so might many of us. (Frontiers of biogeography, 3 January 2011)


"“This well-written, superbly illustrated, book should be compulsory reading for politicians and international bureaucrats, because, however good the ecological science conducted in rainforest, it will be a matter of preaching to the converted if it remains in scientific journals and does not reach the broader public.”  (Austral Ecology, 11 July 2013) “Recommended.  Lower-division  undergraduates through graduate student; general readers.”  (Choice, 1 May 2012) ""In summary: this is a fascinating book. I enjoyed it, I learned from it and I recommend it. It will be of value to academics, researchers and students, and, due to its accessible style and illustrations, it will appeal to many others too. Columbus would have found it helpful-but over half a millennium later so might many of us."" (Frontiers of biogeography, 3 January 2011)  "


Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through graduate student; general readers. (Choice, 1 May 2012) In summary: this is a fascinating book. I enjoyed it, I learned from it and I recommend it. It will be of value to academics, researchers and students, and, due to its accessible style and illustrations, it will appeal to many others too. Columbus would have found it helpful-but over half a millennium later so might many of us. (Frontiers of biogeography, 3 January 2011)


Author Information

Richard Corlett, a Professor at the National University of Singapore, has studied tropical rain forests in New Guinea, Southeast Asia, and southern China. His major current research interest is in how rain forest plants and animals survive in human-dominated landscapes. He has previously taught ecology at the University of Chiang Mai, in Thailand, and the University of Hong Kong, in China, and is author or co-author of several books on the ecology of the Asian tropics. Richard B. Primack, a Professor at Boston University, is the author of two leading textbooks in conservation biology and is the Editor in Chief of the journal, Biological Conservation. He has carried out research in Central America, Malaysia, and Australia, and is currently studying the impact of climate change on plant and animal communities.  He is a former President of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation.

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