Plant Life Histories

Ecology, Phylogeny and Evolution

Jonathan Silvertown editor John L Harper editor Miguel Franco editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:18th Sep '97

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Plant Life Histories cover

Aimed at understanding how plant diversity evolved and the effects on plants today.

Plants life forms are amazingly diverse. This book, written by leading researchers, is aimed at understanding how that diversity evolved, and how it affects the modern-day ecology of plants. It will be invaluable to students and researchers of evolution, ecology and botany.Plant Life Histories re-examines patterns of relationship between plant life history traits in phylogenetic perspective. The re-examination first recognises that because evolution is a branching process, traits are not randomly distributed across taxa and that therefore analysis of trait correlations cannot treat species as independent data points. It then discusses the use of phylogeny to reconstruct the evolutionary pathways of traits. Part I looks at the use of the phylogenetic perspective on trait correlation. Parts II-IV examine traits from the reproductive phase from seed production and dispersal to recruitment and growth. The final section looks at interactions between plants and competitors, herbivores and microbial symbionts, recognising that these interactions may have an ancient evolutionary history. Students and researchers of evolution, ecology and botany will find much of value here.

'Plant Life Histories has arrived at an apt moment … I enjoyed readingPlant Life Histories and recommend it not only to everybody interested in evolutionary ecology, but also to ecologists who may be classsified as 'too ecological'.' Martin Zobel, Trends in Plant Science

ISBN: 9780521574952

Dimensions: 228mm x 152mm x 19mm

Weight: 474g

331 pages