Restoration ecology : a synthetic approach to ecological research

Bibliographic Information

Restoration ecology : a synthetic approach to ecological research

edited by William R. Jordan III, Michael E. Gilpin, John D. Aber

Cambridge University Press, 1987

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Includes bibiliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Although interest in ecological restoration has grown rapidly in recent years, restoration efforts have been highly empirical and have therefore been of only marginal interest to theoretical ecologists concerned with the structure and dynamics of communities. The ability to reassemble a community or ecosystem and to make it function properly actually represents a critical test of ecological understanding in the most fundamental sense. It is this idea of restoration as a technique - and even a paradigm - for ecological studies, leading in turn to improved restoration methods, that is the subject of this book.

Table of Contents

  • List of contributors
  • Acknowledgements
  • Part I. Introduction: Part II. Assembling Whole Systems in the Field: Part III. Synthetic Ecology: Part IV. Partial or Piecewise Restoration in the Field: Part V. Restored Systems as Opportunities for Basic Research: Part VI. Doing Restoration Ecology: Index.

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