Population cycles : the case for trophic interactions
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Bibliographic Information
Population cycles : the case for trophic interactions
Oxford University Press, 2002
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
For over sixty years, understanding the causes of multiannual cycles in animal populations has been a central issue in ecology. This book brings together ten of the leaders in this field to examine the major hypotheses and recent evidence in the field, and to establish that trophic interactions are an important factor in driving at least some of the major regular oscillations in animal populations that have long puzzled ecologists.
Table of Contents
1: Alan A. Berryman: Population Cycles: causes and Analysis
2: Mikael Munster-Swendsen: The Role of Insect Parasitoids in Population Cycles of the Spruce Needleminer in Denmark
3: Ilka Hanski and Heiki Henttonen: Population Cycles of Small Rodents in Fennoscandia
4: Stan Boutin, Charles J. Krebs, Rudy Boonstra, Anthony R.E. Sinclair, Karen E. Hodeges: Understanding the Snowshoe Hare Cycle through Larescale Field Experiments
5: John D. Reeve and Peter Turchin: Evidence for Predator-Prey Cycles in a Bark Beetle
6: Peter J. Hudson, Andrew P. Dobson, David Newborn: Parasitic Worms and Population Cycles of Red Grouse
7: Peter Turchin, Cherly J. Briggs, Spehen P. Ellner, Andreas Fischlin, Bruce E. Kendall, Edward McCauley, William W. Murdoch, Simon N. Wood: Population Cycles of the Larch Budmoth in Switzerland
8: Miis Tanhuanpaa, Kai Ruohomaki, Peter Turchin, Matthew P. Ayres, Helena Bylund, Pekka Kaitaniemi, Toomas tammaru, Erkki Haukioja: Population Cycles of the Autumnal Moth in Fennoscandia
9: Xavier Lambin, Charles J. Krebs, Robert Moss, Nigel G. Yoccoz: Population Cycles: Inferences form Experimental Modeling and time series approaches
10: Alan A. Berryman: Do Trophic Interactions Cause Population Cycles?
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