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140122 ||| eng |
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|a 9783642667602
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|a Heal, O.W.
|e [editor]
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245 |
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|a Production Ecology of British Moors and Montane Grasslands
|h Elektronische Ressource
|c edited by O.W. Heal, D.F. Perkins
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250 |
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|a 1st ed. 1978
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|a Berlin, Heidelberg
|b Springer Berlin Heidelberg
|c 1978, 1978
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300 |
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|a XII, 428 p
|b online resource
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|a I. The Moor House Programme -- 1. Introduction and Site Description -- 2. Field Estimates of Primary Production -- 3. Physiological Aspects of Bog Production at Moor House -- 4. Ecology of Moorland Animals -- 5. Microbial Populations in Peat -- 6. Nutrient Availability and Other Factors Limiting Microbial Activity in the Blanket Peat -- 7. A Study of the Rates of Decomposition of Organic Matter -- 8. A Simulation of Production and Decay in Blanket Bog -- 9. A Model of Peat Bog Growth -- 10. The Blanket Bog as Part of a Pennine Moorland -- II. Supporting Studies—Dwarf Shrub Communities -- 11. The Productivity of a Calluna Heathland in Southern England -- 12. Production in Montane Dwarf Shrub Communities -- 13. Heather Productivity and Its Relevance to the Regulation of Red Grouse Populations -- III. Snowdonia Grasslands -- 14. Snowdonia Grassland: Introduction, Vegetation and Climate -- 15. Physiography, Geology and Soils of the Grassland Site at Llyn Llydaw -- 16. Primary Production, Mineral Nutrients and Litter Decomposition in the Grassland Ecosystem -- 17. The Role of Slugs in an Agrostis-Festuca Grassland -- 18. Sheep Population Studies in Relation to the Snowdonian Environment -- 19. The Grazing Intensity and Productivity of Sheep in the Grassland Ecosystem -- 20. The Distribution and Transfer of Energy and Nutrients in the Agrostis-Festuca Grassland Ecosystem -- References
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|a Terrestial Ecology
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|a Medicine / Research
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|a Biology / Research
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|a Biomedical Research
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|a Ecology
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|a Perkins, D.F.
|e [editor]
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|a eng
|2 ISO 639-2
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|b SBA
|a Springer Book Archives -2004
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|a Ecological Studies, Analysis and Synthesis
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|a 10.1007/978-3-642-66760-2
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|u https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-66760-2?nosfx=y
|x Verlag
|3 Volltext
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|a 577
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|a The International Biological Programme (IBP) was a cooperative effort on the part of scientists throughout the world, whose goal was an integrated study of the basic processes of biological productivity. The challenge of meeting the increasing food needs of a growing population demands optimum productivity from natural and managed ecosystems, which has not hitherto appeared to be compatible with the maintenance of environmental quality. The basic problem in natural resource development is how to transfer the high productivity and stability characteristic of natural ecosystems to managed ecosystems whose yield is in more useable form. The IBP studies aimed to investigate the basic production parameters of natural ecosystems, for use as base lines to assess the factors which control agricultural production (Worthington, 1975). It was realised that much was to be gained by close cooperation between the countries within IBP, to describe global patterns of production and to utilise fully the limited financial resources and scientifically qualified personel available in the various disciplines in individual countries. Within the Terrestrial Productivity section (PT) four major habitat types (Biomes) have been recognised-woodland, grassland, aridland and tundra. In each Biome the ecosystem structure and production, the interrelationships of the various components, and the factors influencing the operation of the systems, have been analysed
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