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Introduction to Population Ecology

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ISBN: 978-1-405-13263-3

January 2006

Wiley-Blackwell

352 pages

Description
Introduction to Population Ecology is an accessible and up-to-date textbook covering all aspects of population ecology.

  • Discusses field and laboratory data to illustrate the fundamental laws of population ecology.
  • Provides an overview of how population theory has developed.
  • Explores single-species population growth and self-limitation; metapopulations; and a broad range of interspecific interactions including parasite-host, predator-prey, and plant-herbivore.
  • Keeps the mathematics as simple as possible, using a careful step-by-step approach and including graphs and other visual aids to help understanding.

Artwork from the book is available to instructors online at www.blackwellpublishing.com/rockwood and by request on CD-ROM.

About the Author
Larry L. Rockwood is Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Policy at George Mason University, Virginia. He received his B.S. degree in Biopsychology from the University of Chicago, where he also completed his doctoral research on the foraging patterns of leaf-cutting ants. He has taught courses in population ecology for 30 years.
Features

  • An accessible and up-to-date textbook covering all aspects of population ecology.

  • Discusses field and laboratory data to illustrate the fundamental laws of population ecology.

  • Provides an overview of how population theory has developed.
  • Explores single-species population growth and self-limitation; metapopulations; and a broad range of interspecific interactions including parasite-host, predator-prey, and plant-herbivore.
  • Keeps the mathematics as simple as possible, using a careful step-by-step approach and including graphs and other visual aids to help understanding.