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Overview"A few conifers are found in nature only in narrow, discontinuous bands bordering continental margins. Despite their maritime location, these trees cannot thrive in saline waters and soils. What enables them to grow in challenging habitats? Why don't these species naturalize inland? What characteristics allow them to succeed only near salt water? A strange combination of qualities is seen: the trees are catastrophe-dependent, stress-tolerant, with broad niche potential, but are poor competitors in ""easy"" sites. They all possess moisture-conserving features usually associated with arid lands, although they grow in regions of high humidity and frequent fogs. This volume is the first to assemble and compare information on widely dispersed coastal forests of the Northern Hemisphere. Authorities on each system explore the properties of these unusual trees and their habitats, and formulate guidelines for their appropriate management and protection. The thirty-six contributing authors include natural resource managers and regulators, ecologists, lumbermen, geneticists, botanists, and paleontologists. The book draws from work on three continents, eight countries, and twenty-three states of the Unites States. One half of the volume is devoted to the seven highly prized, commercially valuable Chamaecyparis species." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Aimlee D. Laderman (Research Affiliate, Research Affiliate, Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, USA)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 24.30cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 16.60cm Weight: 0.744kg ISBN: 9780195075670ISBN 10: 0195075676 Pages: 352 Publication Date: 12 March 1998 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Aimlee D. Laderman: Freshwater forests of continental margins: overview and synthesis PART I: Chamaecyparis (False-cypress) Studies 2: Donald B. Zobel: Chamaecyparis forests: a comparative analysis PACIFIC RIM 3: Paul E. Hennon, Charles G. Shaw III, and Everett M. Hansen: Reproduction and forest decline of Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (yellow cedar) in southeast Alaska, USA 4: Glen B. Dunsworth: Problems and research needs for Chamaecyparis nootkanensis forest management in coastal British Columbia, Canada 5: John H. Russell: Genecology of Chamaecyparis nootkanensis 6: Mel Greenup: Managing Chamaecyparis lawsoniana (Port Orford cedar) to control the root disease caused by Phytophthora lateralis in the Pacific Northwest, USA 7: Shin-Ichi Yamamato: Regeneration ecology of Chamaecyparis obtusa and C. pisifera (Hinoki and Sawara cypress), Japan ATLANTIC COAST, NORTH AMERICA 8: Raymond M. Sheffield, Thomas W. Birch, William H. McWilliams, and John B. Tansey: Chamaecyparis thyoides in the United States: extent and characterization using broad-scale inventory data 9: Lucinda McWeeney: Reconstruction of the Mashantucket Pequot cedar swamp paleoenvironment using plant macrofossils, New England, USA 10: Dwight L. Stoltzfus and Ralph E. Good: Plant community structure in Chamaecyparis thyoides swamps in the New Jersey Pinelands Biosphere Reserve, USA 11: Ronald W. Phillips, Joseph H. Hughes, Marilyn A. Buford, William E. Gardner, Fred M. White, and Clair G. Williams: Atlantic white cedar in North Carolina, USA: a brief history and current regeneration efforts 12: Robert T. Eckert: Population genetic analysis of Chamaecyparis thyoides in New Hampshire and Maine, USA PART II: Systems with Diverse Dominants, Forests Not Dominated by Chamaecyparis species 13: Characteristics of the soil and water table in an Alnus japonica (Japanese alder) 14: Peter A. Khomentovsky: Pinus pumila (Siberian dwarf pine) on the Kamchatka Peninsula, northeast Asia: ecology of seed production 15: Robert Ornduff: The Sequoia sempervirens (coast redwood) forest of the Pacific coast, USA 16: Ingrid Olmstead and Rafael Duran Garcia: Distribution and ecology of low freshwater coastal forests of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico 17: William H. McWilliams, John B. Tansey, Thomas R. Birch, and Mark H. Hansen: Taxodium-Nyssa (cypress-tupelo) forest along the coast of southern United States 18: William H. Conner: Impact of hurricanes on forests of the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts, USA 19: William H. Conner and John W. Day, Jr.: The effect of sea level rise on coastal wetland forests: the Mississippi Delta, USA, as a model 20: Wolfgang Grosse, Hans B. Buchel, and Sibylle Latterman: Root aeration in wetland trees and its ecophysiological significance PART III: Management and Research 21: Aimlee D. Laderman and Rachel L. Donnette: Coastal forest management and researchReviewsAs students and managers of marine habitats attempt to resolve the various interactions between coastal and shelf wetlands, it is obvious that the coastal forests will have to be given ever greater consideration if in fact these important ecological entities are to survive. Dr. Laderman's volume will be extremely important in assessments and understanding how man has already affected the forests and coastal zone, and how our future efforts can save them as refuges and perhaps, to a degree, as economic entities. . . .I recommend the volume to anyone interested in coastal interactions. --Marine Pollution Bulletin<br> It has now been many years since I've taken other than a consultant's approach to the subject and the Coastal Forest book brought back how intellectually exciting the why and how forests grow where they do, can be. --Al Garlo, Senior Scientist, Normandeau Associates, Inc.<br> Those interested in the ecology and biology of such forest ecosystems and their dominant species may find this book interesting and helpful. --Choice<br> This volume treats the ecology, utilization, and management of freshwater forests within 250 km of the sea coast in the temperate and boreal Northern Hemisphere. . . . The book was derived, in part, from two symposia held in 1990 and 1991; however the 21 articles by 40 authors have recent literature references and are not outdated by publication in 1997. . . . Most chapters of the book are addressed primarily to forest and preserve managers. However, the several chapters that deal with plant biology and descriptive ecology are also of value as reviews of the state of our knowledge . . . and of interest to taxonomists and ecologists and areworthy of use as first readings for the professional and supplemental readings for students in plant ecology and plant geography courses. A few chapters could even serve as orientation material to be read before one visits some of the interesting forests for class trips, plant collecting, or tourism. --Brittonia<br> <br> As students and managers of marine habitats attempt to resolve the various interactions between coastal and shelf wetlands, it is obvious that the coastal forests will have to be given ever greater consideration if in fact these important ecological entities are to survive. Dr. Laderman's volume will be extremely important in assessments and understanding how man has already affected the forests and coastal zone, and how our future efforts can save them as refuges and perhaps, to a degree, as economic entities. . . .I recommend the volume to anyone interested in coastal interactions. --Marine Pollution Bulletin<p><br> It has now been many years since I've taken other than a consultant's approach to the subject and the Coastal Forest book brought back how intellectually exciting the why and how forests grow where they do, can be. --Al Garlo, Senior Scientist, Normandeau Associates, Inc.<p><br> Those interested in the ecology and biology of such forest ecosystems and their dominant Author InformationAimlee D. Laderman, Lecturer and Research Affiliate at the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, is Director of the Swamp Research Center, Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |