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Physiological Ecology of Forest Production, Vol 4. Terrestrial Ecology

  • Book

  • 352 Pages
  • August 2016
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 1769440

Process-based models open the way to useful predictions of the future growth rate of forests and provide a means of assessing the probable effects of variations in climate and management on forest productivity. As such they have the potential to overcome the limitations of conventional forest growth and yield models, which are based on mensuration data and assume that climate and atmospheric CO2 concentrations will be the same in the future as they are now.

This book discusses the basic physiological processes that determine the growth of plants, the way they are affected by environmental factors and how we can improve processes that are well-understood such as growth from leaf to stand level and productivity. A theme that runs through the book is integration to show a clear relationship between photosynthesis, respiration, plant nutrient requirements, transpiration, water relations and other factors affecting plant growth that are often looked at separately. This integrated approach will provide the most comprehensive source for process-based modelling, which is valuable to ecologists, plant physiologists, forest planners and environmental scientists.

  • Includes explanations of inherently mathematical models, aided by the use of graphs and diagrams illustrating causal interactions and by examples implemented as Excel spreadsheets
  • Uses a process-based model as a framework for explaining the mechanisms underlying plant growth
  • Integrated approach provides a clear and relatively simple treatment

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Table of Contents

Preface
1  Introduction
2  Weather and Energy Balance
3  Physiological Processes
4  Stand Structure and Dynamics
5  The Carbon Balance of Trees and Stands
6  Nutrient Dynamics and Tree Growth
7  Hydrology and Plant Water Relations
8  Modelling tree growth: concepts and review
9  The 3-PG Process-Based Model
10  Future developments
Appendix 1    Determining solar direction and radiation
Appendix 2   Some mathematical details of 3 PG
Appendix 3   Further reading
References

Authors

Landsberg, J. J. Sands, Peter