24小时热门版块排行榜    

Znn3bq.jpeg
查看: 1025  |  回复: 2
【奖励】 本帖被评价1次,作者dongmy526增加金币 0.5
当前主题已经存档。

dongmy526

至尊木虫 (著名写手)


[资源] 【分享】经典:Fundamental Processes in Ecology: An Earth Systems Approach

快过年了,经典英文书籍大放送,做为各位虫友的鼠年大礼,欢迎下载及回帖评价,尊重他人劳动成果!!!




http://www.51ok.com/filedown-803948212.html


Fundamental Processes in Ecology: An Earth Systems Approach
By David M. Wilkinson


Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Number Of Pages: 200
Publication Date: 2006-09-18
ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0198568460
ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780198568469
Binding: Hardcover



Fundamental Processes in Ecology presents a way to study ecosystems that is not yet available in ecology textbooks but is resonant with current thinking in the emerging fields of geobiology and Earth System Science. It provides an alternative, process-based classification of ecology and proposes a truly planetary view of ecological science. To achieve this, it asks (and endeavours to answer) the question, what are the fundamental ecological processes which would be found on any planet with Earth-like, carbon based, life? The author demonstrates how the idea of fundamental ecological processes can be developed at the systems level, specifically their involvement in control and feedback mechanisms. This approach allows us to reconsider basic ecological ideas such as energy flow, guilds, trade-offs, carbon cycling and photosynthesis; and to put these in a global context. In doing so, the book puts a much stronger emphasis on microorganisms than has traditionally been the case. The integration of Earth System Science with ecology is vitally important if ecological science is to successfully contribute to the massive problems and future challenges associated with global change. Although the approach is heavily influenced by Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis, this is not a popular science book about Gaian theory. Instead it is written as an accessible text for graduate student seminar courses and researchers in the fields of ecology, earth system science, evolutionary biology, palaeontology, history of life, astrobiology, geology and physical geography.



Summary: Global thought-experiments
Rating: 5

Despite lacking any formal background in ecology, I really enjoyed this book. It uses what physicists might characterize as very Fermi-esque, back-of-the-envelope arguments to suggest, among other things, why biodiversity shouldn't be a surprise; why life, if it's present at all on a planet, is more likely to be widespread than isolated; and why the notion of the rain forests as the "lungs of the earth" is wrong. (Our real benefactors: marine phytoplankton, especially because they die and sink; see @88.)

When I first began the book I thought I'd be like an outsider intruding on some family argument: the author is at pains to distinguish his approach from the traditional one in ecology textbooks. Rather than approaching the topic through entities such as genes, individuals, populations, David Wilkinson (DMW) approaches it through processes such as the Second Law of thermodynamics, tradeoffs, hypercycles and photosynthesis (check @13 or see the chapter titles for Chaps. 2-8 for the complete list). I needn't have worried, since the presentation is quite transparent to an outsider to the field (certainly so if you're coming from a physical sciences or engineering background). Although the level of argumentation is sophisticated (more like a perspective piece in Science or Nature than a popularization), the level of biology and chemistry background necessary to follow the argument is probably around freshman level. There's also an extensive glossary at the end, if you can't tell your Archaean from your Phanerozoic.

An organizing concept is thought-experiments about what processes would be necessary for life on a planet not necessarily the earth. But it's far from abstract -- DMW's day job is as an empirical scientist rather than theoretician, and there are plenty of empirical papers cited. (Pace another reviewer, however, the book expressly and repeatedly disclaims being about "applied ecology," and makes no pretence of addressing management issues.) He's also quite up-front when he feels there isn't enough data to figure out whether, e.g., some process might accelerate or mitigate global warming (see @108).

Many of the results are quite counter-intuitive, at least if one's intuition is shaped by cable TV "Planet in Peril" extravaganzas. In terms of their effects on regulating the planetary environment so that it remains habitable, DMW suggests that prokaryotes are far more important than polar bears or pandas, and parasites than predators. (Admittedly, he doesn't address the issue of species charisma, which makes pandas better than any Prochlorococcus as poster-organisms for changing human behavior.) But the real fun of the book is the simple, common-sense way in which these results are derived.

The list of references at the end is excellent, and comprises more than 20 pages (the main text is only about 140). I also admire an author who cites one of his own papers only to mention that he was wrong (see discussion of dark pigments in leaves @105).

My one gripe is that the copy editor for this book (or the more senior Oxford UP editor who perhaps chose to forego one) should be summarily fired. There are numerous typos, run-on sentences and non sequiturs, and sentences missing commas where one is necessary in order to make sense. One should not have to waste time puzzling over statements like "As the sun's energy has increased [cite], the CO2 greenhouse has decreased helping [sic] to regulate the Earth's surface temperature," @ 103. (Should be "decreased, helping", with quite the opposite meaning from the original.) The net effect is like eating a very tasty lunch in the company of dozens of persistent flies. I read the hardcover edition, but from Amazon's "look inside" feature the paperback seems to preserve these irritations. But don't let that deter you from reading this very clever and intriguing book.

[ Last edited by dongmy526 on 2008-1-30 at 15:00 ]
回复此楼

» 猜你喜欢

已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

waterbeetle

木虫 (小有名气)


★★★ 三星级,支持鼓励

虫友辛苦!在此表示感谢!
2楼2008-01-31 10:17:31
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

wtoily

铜虫 (小有名气)


提示说域名过期啦

能否更新下?
3楼2008-04-02 16:00:40
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖
相关版块跳转 我要订阅楼主 dongmy526 的主题更新
☆ 无星级 ★ 一星级 ★★★ 三星级 ★★★★★ 五星级
普通表情 高级回复 (可上传附件)
最具人气热帖推荐 [查看全部] 作者 回/看 最后发表
[考研] 293分求调剂,外语为俄语 +7 加一一九 2026-04-07 10/500 2026-04-08 20:14 by yutian743
[考研] 生物医药调剂|SCI中科院三区一作+多项科研成果 +8 likangxing 2026-04-07 11/550 2026-04-08 00:02 by lys0704
[考研] 22408 一志愿双一流人工智能300分 四六级,数据分析国奖 +4 zzfeng123 2026-04-06 6/300 2026-04-07 21:02 by zzfeng123
[考研] 生物工程求调剂 +13 喜欢还是不甘心 2026-04-05 13/650 2026-04-07 16:55 by Ecowxq666!
[考研] 材料调剂 +17 小刘同学吖吖 2026-04-06 18/900 2026-04-07 11:41 by 诗与自由
[考研] 293求调剂 +3 勇远库爱314 2026-04-06 3/150 2026-04-07 11:15 by hugr
[考研] 材料工程302分求调剂 +13 zyx上岸! 2026-04-04 13/650 2026-04-07 11:14 by 诗与自由
[论文投稿] Decision: Revise for Editor还会送审吗 100+3 CccccccccFD 2026-04-04 5/250 2026-04-07 10:58 by 北京莱茵润色
[考研] 085100建筑学 寻求跨专业调剂 一志愿南大294分 校级省级国家级奖项若干 踏实肯干 +3 1021075758 2026-04-06 4/200 2026-04-07 09:23 by 蓝云思雨
[考研] 复试调剂 +14 呼呼?~+123456 2026-04-05 14/700 2026-04-06 22:50 by chenzhimin
[考研] 301求调剂 +6 细胞相关蛋白 2026-04-02 10/500 2026-04-06 08:34 by jp9609
[考研] 一志愿上海海洋大学083200食品学硕,求调剂,接受其他专业083200 +4 what张 2026-04-04 5/250 2026-04-05 14:07 by chw1980_0
[考研] 男生,一志愿沪9生物学071000,初试308求调剂 +3 刘墨墨 2026-04-04 3/150 2026-04-05 08:26 by barlinike
[考研] 求调剂 +3 ffyyu 2026-04-02 3/150 2026-04-04 19:03 by 蓝云思雨
[考研] 复试调剂 +6 范根培 2026-04-04 6/300 2026-04-04 14:27 by 土木硕士招生
[考研] 怎么删帖子啊 +3 缝曦1000 2026-04-04 3/150 2026-04-04 14:20 by 土木硕士招生
[考研] 274求调剂 +9 顺理成张 2026-04-03 10/500 2026-04-03 15:10 by 啊俊!
[考研] 求材料调剂 一志愿南昌大学 328分 +5 yyy..... 2026-04-03 5/250 2026-04-03 13:46 by 百灵童888
[考研] 326求调剂 +10 崽崽仔 2026-04-02 10/500 2026-04-03 09:08 by 帕尔马拉特
[考研] 一志愿山东大学,085600,344 +7 魏子per 2026-04-02 8/400 2026-04-02 21:12 by 百灵童888
信息提示
请填处理意见