A Hierarchical Concept of Ecosystems. (MPB-23), Volume 23
By (Author) Robert V. O'Neill
By (author) Donald Lee Deangelis
By (author) J. B. Waide
By (author) Timothy F.H. Allen
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
29th January 1987
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Environmental science, engineering and technology
574.5
Paperback
262
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
340g
"Ecosystem" is an intuitively appealing concept to most ecologists, but, in spite of its widespread use, the term remains diffuse and ambiguous. The authors of this book argue that previous attempts to define the concept have been derived from particular viewpoints to the exclusion of others equally possible. They offer instead a more general line of thought based on hierarchy theory. Their contribution should help to counteract the present separation of subdisciplines in ecology and to bring functional and population/community ecologists closer to a common approach. Developed as a way of understanding highly complex organized systems, hierarchy theory has at its center the idea that organization results from differences in process rates. To the authors the theory suggests an objective way of decomposing ecosystems into their component parts. The results thus obtained offer a rewarding method for integrating various schools of ecology.