Narrow your search

Library

UCLouvain (5)

UAntwerpen (3)

ULiège (3)

KBR (2)

KU Leuven (2)

UGent (2)

Odisee (1)

Thomas More Kempen (1)

Thomas More Mechelen (1)

UCLL (1)

More...

Resource type

book (6)


Language

English (6)


Year
From To Submit

2013 (1)

1997 (1)

1992 (2)

1991 (1)

1979 (1)

Listing 1 - 6 of 6
Sort by
Applications of physiological ecology to forest management
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0124359558 9780124359550 9780080527383 0080527388 1281033219 9781281033215 9786611033217 Year: 1997 Publisher: San Diego (Calif.): Academic press,

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract


Book
Physiological ecology of the Alpine timberline : tree existence at high altitudes with special reference to the European Alps
Authors: ---
ISBN: 3540090657 0387090657 3642671098 3642671071 9783540090656 Year: 1979 Volume: 31 Publisher: Berlin: Springer,

The physiological ecology of woody plants
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 0124241603 1299195075 0323138004 9780124241602 Year: 1991 Volume: vol *5 Publisher: San Diego (Calif.): Academic press,

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

The efficient management of trees and other woody plants can be improved given an understanding of the physiological processes that control growth, the complex environmental factors that influence those processes, and our ability to regulate and maintain environmental conditions that facilitate growth. Key Features * emphasizes genetic and environmental interactions that influence woody plant growth * outlines responses of individual trees and tree communities to environmental stress * explores cultural practices useful for efficient management of shade, forest, and fruit trees, woody vines, and shrubs


Book
Physical and physiological forest ecology
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 940178261X 940075602X 1283945142 9400756038 Year: 2013 Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer,

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This important contribution is the result of decades of theoretical thinking and high-value data collection by the University of Helsinki examining forest ecosystems in great detail. The ecology is dominated by a qualitative approach, e.g. species and vegetation zones, but in contrast quantitative thinking is characteristic in the exact sciences of physics and physiology. The editors have bridged the gap between ecology and the exact sciences with an interdisciplinary and quantitative approach. This book recognizes this discrepancy as a hindrance to fruitful knowledge flow between the disciplines, and that physical and physiological knowledge has been omitted from forest ecology to a great extent. Starting with the importance of mass and energy flows in the interactions between forest ecosystems and their environment, the editors and authors offer a strong contribution to the pioneer H. T. Odum and his work from over 50 years ago. This book introduces a holistic synthesis of carbon and nitrogen fluxes in forest ecosystems from cell to stand level during the lifetime of trees. Metabolism and physical phenomena give rise to concentration, pressure and temperature differences that generate the material and energy fluxes between living organisms and their environment. The editors and authors utilize physiological, physical and anatomical background information to formulate theoretical ideas dealing with the effects of the environment and the state of enzymes, membrane pumps and pigments on metabolism. The emergent properties play an important role in the transitions from detailed to more aggregate levels in the ecosystem. Conservation of mass and energy allow the construction of dynamic models of carbon and nitrogen fluxes and pools at various levels in the hierarchy of forest ecosystems. Testing the predictions of these theories dealing with different phenomena in forest ecosystems was completed using the versatile and extensive data measured at SMEAR I and II (Stations for Measuring Ecosystem Atmosphere Relations) and at six additional stands in Finland, and five stands in Estonia. The theories are able to predict fluxes at different levels in the forest ecosystem gaining strong corroboration in the numerous field tests. Finally, the combined results from different hierarchical levels in the forest ecosystem form the physical and physiological theory of forest ecology.

Listing 1 - 6 of 6
Sort by