Global Change and Terrestrial Ecosystems

Front Cover
Brian Harrison Walker, Will Steffen
Cambridge University Press, 1996 M11 13 - 619 pages
This major new book presents a collection of essays by leading authorities who address the current state of knowledge. The chapters bring together the early results of an international scientific research program designed to address what will happen to our ability to produce food and fiber, and what effects there will be on biological diversity under rapid environmental change. This book addresses how these changes to terrestrial ecosystems will feed back to further environmental change. International in scope, this state-of-the-art assessment will interest policymakers, students and scientists interested in global change, climate change and biodiversity. Special features include descriptions of a dynamic global vegetation model, developing generic crop models and a special section on the emerging discipline of global ecology.

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Contents

overview and synthesis
13
The response of complex multispecies systems to elevated CO₂
20
E D Schulze
40
implications for and beyond
43
H H Shugart
72
The role of vegetation in controlling carbon dioxide and water exchange
77
a grassland case study
93
The importance of structure in understanding global change
117
co CTPM Gehrmann Laboratories University of Queensland St Lucia QLD 4072
319
Global change and ecological complexity
341
Gunderson
346
W W Hargrove
396
Part seven
451
Global and regional land use responses to climate change
466
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology Bush Estate Penicuik Edinburgh EH26 OQB United
472
J Lloyd
475

Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory Colorado State University Fort Collins
130
Department of Environmental Sciences University of Virginia Charlottesville
131
Climate change disturbances and landscape dynamics
149
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Harvard University
184
The work of Focus 3
207
Gifford
229
Lambert
237
J Goudriaan
258
J J Landsberg
275
R W Sutherst
291
Soil erosion under global change
317
Incorporating landuse change in Earth system models illustrated
484
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology Merlewood Research Station Grange over Sands
495
Developing the potential for describing the terrestrial biospheres response
511
Data requirements for global terrestrial ecosystem modelling
529
Department of Global Change and Natural Systems Potsdam Institute for Climate
555
G Turner
557
Satellite data for monitoring understanding and modelling
566
Conclusion
584
challenges to GCTE
595
Index
609
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