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OverviewMost of the papers included here were part of the Plenary Sym- posium on The Testing of General Ecological Theory in Lotic Ecosys- tems held in conjunction with the 29th Annual Meeting of the North American Benthological Society in Provo, Utah, April 28, 1981. Sev- eral additional papers were solicited, from recognized leaders in certain areas of specialization, in order to round out the coverage. All of the articles have been critiqued by at least two or three re- viewers and an effort was made to rely on authorities in stream and theoretical ecology. In all cases this has helped to insure accur- acyand to improve the overall quality of the papers. However, as one of our purposes has been to encourage thought-provoking and even controversial coverage of the topics, material has been retained even though it may upset certain critical readers. It is our hope that these presentations will stimulate further research, encourage the fuller development of a theoretical perspective among lotic ecologists, and lead to the testing of general ecological theories in the stream environment. Full Product DetailsAuthor: James R. Barnes , G. Wayne MinshallPublisher: Springer Science+Business Media Imprint: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers Edition: 1983 ed. Weight: 0.900kg ISBN: 9780306414602ISBN 10: 0306414600 Pages: 412 Publication Date: 31 October 1983 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock Table of ContentsStream Ecology: An Historical and Current Perspective.- Succession in Streams.- Primary Productivity in Streams.- Density Independence Versus Density Dependence in Streams.- Use of Behavioral Experiments to Test Ecological Theory in Streams.- The Importance of Competitive Interactions Within Stream Populations and Communities.- Competition, Colonization Patterns, and Disturbance in Stream Benthic Communities.- Plant-Herbivore Interactions in Stream Systems.- Predator-Prey Relationships in Streams.- Macroscopic Models of Community Organization: Analyses of Diversity, Dominance, and Stability in Guilds of Predaceous Stream Insects.- Insect Species Diversity as a Function of Environmental Variability and Disturbance in Stream Systems.- Application of Island Biogeographic Theory to Streams: Macroinvertebrate Recolonization of the Teton River, Idaho.- Organic Matter Budgets for Stream Ecosystems: Problems in Their Evaluation.- Stability of Stream Ecosystems.ReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |