Dispersal in Plants
A Population Perspective
Cousens, Roger,
University of Melbourne, Australia
Dytham, Calvin,
University of York, UK and University of Potsdam, Germany
Law, Richard,
University of York
Print publication date: 2008
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2008 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-929912-6 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199299126.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Ecologists, both practical and theoretical, now appreciate that to understand biological systems they must consider the spatial dimension. Consequently, dispersal has become one of the hottest topics in plant ecology. However, in the midst of so much research output on dispersal, there is a need for a stock-take to determine the needs of future research: what has been achieved to date, where do current studies fit in, and what still needs to be determined? What are the implications of dispersal for those engaged in managing plant populations and communities? This is the first book for many years to present a synthesis of research on dispersal and its implications for plant population dynamics. The book consists of three sections: Section A reviews information on the biological and environmental processes that determine the path of an individual dispersing propagule, usually a seed, and the theory that has been developed to predict these trajectories; Section B discusses the distributions of seeds resulting from dispersal from an entire plant, theoretical research predicting the shapes of these distributions and design issues for future dispersal studies; Section C explores the implications of dispersal for expansion of populations, structure within existing populations and communities, and the evolution of dispersal traits.
Keywords: spatial dimension, dispersal, plant ecology, plant populations, plant communities, distributions of seeds, expansion of populations Table of Contents
Preface
CHAPTER 1.
Introduction
CHAPTER 2.
Contribution of the parent plant to dispersal
CHAPTER 3.
Attributes of propagules that aid dispersal
CHAPTER 4.
Post-release movement of propagules
CHAPTER 5.
Patterns of dispersal from entire plants
CHAPTER 6.
Invasions and range expansion
CHAPTER 7.
Propagule dispersal and the spatial dynamics of populations and communities
CHAPTER 8.
The evolution of dispersal
CHAPTER 9.
Concluding remarks
Bibliography
Index
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