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Author Briggs, D. (David), 1936-

Title Plant microevolution and conservation in human-influenced ecosystems / David Briggs
Published Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, ©2009

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Description 1 online resource (xix, 598 pages) : illustrations, maps
Contents Cover -- Half-title -- Title -- Copyright13; -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- 1 Introduction -- Human influences: implications for conservation -- Outline of the chapters -- 2 Studying change -- Defining terms and questioning assumptions -- Experiments and investigations -- Darwins scientific method -- Advances in the design of experiments -- Elements of experimental design -- Quasi-experiments -- 'Proof and falsification -- Testing hypotheses about the past -- Predicting the future -- Weighing the evidence -- Concluding remarks -- 3 Key concepts in plant evolution -- Darwins ideas about the evolution of species -- Post-Darwinian contributions to our understanding of evolution -- Cyto-genetic studies -- Chemical basis of hereditary information -- Genetic mutation -- Chromosome changes -- Microevolution in plant populations -- Populations -- Gene flow -- Gene flow and population structure -- Effects of chance in populations -- Stability of natural populations -- Animal and plant interactions -- Plants are different from animals -- Different modes of natural selection -- r- and K-selection -- r-selection -- K-selection -- Fitness -- Neutral theory of selection -- Post-Darwinian models of speciation -- Gradual speciation -- Speciation and founder effects -- Introgressive hybridisation -- Sympatric speciation -- Cytogenetics of polyploidy -- The success of polyploids -- Evidence from the fossil record -- Mass extinctions -- Punctuated equilibrium -- Continental drift -- Orbital variations -- Conclusions -- 4 The origin and extent of human-influenced ecosystems -- The origin of humans -- Human uses of plants -- Reaching 5 million: hunter-gatherers -- Reaching 50 million: the beginnings of agriculture -- The process of domestication of plants -- Reaching half a billion: the spread of agriculture from 2000 BC to AD 1500 -- The first billion humans: from subsistence to commercial farming 15001825 -- Populations rising to 2 billion: the expanding frontiers of agriculture 18251927 -- From 2 to over 6.5 billion: the rise of industrial food production 1927 to the present day -- What is the present extent of human-modified ecosystems? -- Human geomorphic activities -- The rise of concern about the environment -- Conservation through protection -- The wise use of resources -- Environmental concerns about pollution -- Atmospheric pollution -- The greenhouse effect and global climate change -- Heavy metal pollution -- Nitrogen (N) compounds -- Phosphate (P) compounds -- Pesticides -- Organic pollutants from various sources -- Concerns about the loss of biodiversity -- Confronting the adverse effects of introduced organisms -- Soil erosion and salination -- The inexorable rise of human populations -- Demographic projections for the next 4050 years -- Ecological footprints -- Conclusions -- 5 Consequences of human influences on the biosphere -- Cultural landscapes -- Is there any wilderness left? -- Wilderness concepts -- Wilderness and the 'Pristine Myth -- Megafaunal extinctions -- Cultural landscapes and fire -- How 'virgin is virgin rainforest? -- Wild areas in Europe -- The myth of ocean
Summary "As human activities are increasingly domesticating the Earth's ecosystems, new selection pressures are acting to produce winners and losers amongst our wildlife. With particular emphasis on plants, Briggs examines the implications of human influences on micro-evolutionary processes in different groups of organisms, including wild, weedy, invasive, feral, and endangered species. Using case studies from around the world, he argues that Darwinian evolution is ongoing. He considers how far it is possible to conserve endangered species and threatened ecosystems through management, and questions the extent to which damaged landscapes and their plant and animal communities can be precisely recreated or restored. Many of Darwin's ideas are highlighted, including his insights into natural selection, speciation, the vulnerability of rare organisms, the impact of invasive species, and the effects of climate change on organisms. An important text for students and researchers of evolution, conservation, climate change and sustainable use of resources."--NHBS Environment Bookstore
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 505-583) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Plants -- Evolution.
Nature -- Effect of human beings on.
Plant conservation.
Endangered plants.
SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Botany.
Endangered plants
Nature -- Effect of human beings on
Plant conservation
Plants -- Evolution
Ökosystem
Anthropogener Einfluss
Pflanzen
Mikroevolution
Artenschutz
Naturschutz
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2009024645
ISBN 9780511690983
0511690983
9780511692109
0511692102
9780511812965
0511812965
1107209579
9781107209572
0511849680
9780511849688
1282653199
9781282653191
9786612653193
6612653191
0511689500
9780511689505