Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Preface xiii

Acknowledgements xv

1 Introduction 1

Lessons from the Past 1

Ecological versus Historical Biogeography, and Plants versus Animals 4

Biogeography and Creation 5

The Distribution of Life Today 7

Evolution – a Flawed and Dangerous Idea! 8

Enter Darwin – and Wallace 10

World Maps – the Biogeographical Regions of Plants and Animals 13

Getting Around the World 15

The Origins of Modern Historical Biogeography 20

The Development of Ecological Biogeography 23

Living Together 24

Marine Biogeography 27

Island Biogeography 28

Biogeography Today 30

Section I: The Challenge of Existing 37

2 Patterns of Distribution: Finding a Home 39

Limits of Distribution 42

The Niche 44

Overcoming the Barriers 45

Climatic Limits: The Palms 46

A Successful Family: The Daisies (Asteraceae) 48

Patterns Among Plovers 51

Magnolias: Evolutionary Relicts 55

The Strange Case of the Testate Amoeba 57

Climatic Relicts 58

Topographical Limits and Endemism 65

Physical Limits 67

Species Interactions: A Case of the Blues 73

Competition 75

Reducing Competition 76

Predators and Prey, Parasites and Hosts 79

Migration 83

Invasion 85

3 Communities and Ecosystems: Living Together 97

The Community 97

The Ecosystem 100

Ecosystems and Species Diversity 103

Biotic Assemblages on a Global Scale 108

Mountain Biomes 112

Global Patterns of Climate 116

Climate Diagrams 119

Modelling Biomes and Climate 122

4 Patterns of Biodiversity 127

Measuring Biodiversity: How Many Species are There? 128

Latitudinal Gradients of Diversity 132

Is Evolution Faster in the Tropics? 139

The Legacy of Glaciation 141

Latitude and Species Ranges 142

Diversity and Altitude 143

Biodiversity Hotspots 146

Diversity in Space and Time 148

The Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis 151

Dynamic Biodiversity and Neutral Theory 151

Section II: The Engines of The Planet 157

5 Plate Tectonics 159

The Evidence for Plate Tectonics 159

Changing Patterns of Continents 164

How Plate Tectonics Changes the World 164

Islands and Plate Tectonics 172

Terranes 174

6 Evolution, the Source of Novelty 179

The Origin of Novelty 179

From Populations to Species 180

Sympatry versus Allopatry 183

Defining the Species 188

Microevolution versus Macroevolution 189

Adaptive Radiations 189

Naming and Cataloguing the Living World 189

Charting the Course of Evolution 190

Morphology Gives Way to Molecules 193

Darwin’s Finches Updated 194

Section III: Islands and Oceans 197

7 Life, Death and Evolution on Islands 199

Types of Island 200

Getting There: The Challenges of Arriving 200

Dying There: The Problems of Survival 202

Adapting and Evolving 203

The Hawaiian Islands 206

Integrating the Data: The Theory of Island Biogeography 214

Modifying the Theory 216

The General Dynamic Model for Oceanic Island Biogeography 219

Nestedness 221

Living Together: Incidence and Assembly Rules 221

Building an Ecosystem: The History of Rakata 223

8 Patterns in the Oceans 235

Zones in the Ocean and on the Sea Floor 237

Basic Biogeography of the Seas 240

The Open‐Sea Environment 240

The Ocean Floor 246

The Shallow‐Sea Environment 250

And Finally … Marine Biogeographical Realms of the World 263

Section IV: Historical Biogeography 269

9 From Evolution to Patterns of Life 271

Studying the Patterns 272

Methods of Analyzing the Patterns 273

Studying Organisms and their Molecules 287

An Integrative Approach to Historical Biogeography 290

Investigating the More Distant Past 292

10 Geography, Life and Climates Through Time 299

Introduction 299

Early Land Life on the Moving Continents 300

Animal Life Through the Mesozoic 304

The End of the Mesozoic World 308

Climates and Plants Through Time 309

Reconstructing Plant Life and Biomes 310

Evolution of the Mammals 318

The Mesozoic Roots of the Radiation of Modern Mammals 320

11 Patterns of Life Today 327

The Biogeographical Regions Today 327

The History of Today’s Biogeographical Regions 334

The Old World Tropics: Africa, India and Southeast Asia 334

Australia 342

New Caledonia 345

New Zealand 346

The West Indies 348

South America 351

The Northern Hemisphere: Holarctic Mammals and Boreal Plants 359

12 The Arrival of the Ice Ages 367

Climatic Wiggles 368

Interglacials and Interstadials 369

Biological Changes in the Pleistocene 371

The Last Glacial 375

Causes of Glaciation 382

The Current Interglacial: A False Start 388

Forests on the Move 390

The Dry Lands 393

Changing Sea Levels 396

A Time of Warmth 398

Climatic Cooling 399

Recorded History 400

Atmosphere and Oceans: Short‐Term Climate Change 402

The Future 403

Section V: People and Problems 409

13 The Human Intrusion 411

The Emergence of Humans 411

Modern Humans and the Megafaunal Extinctions 420

Plant Domestication and Agriculture 423

Animal Domestication 428

The Diversification of Homo sapiens 430

The Biogeography of Human Parasitic Diseases 431

The Environmental Impact of Early Human Cultures 434

14 Conservation Biogeography 439

Welcome to the Anthropocene 439

The Sixth Mass Extinction? 440

Less, and Less Interesting 444

What’s Behind the Biodiversity Crisis? 445

Crisis Management: Responding to Biodiversity Loss 451

The Birth of Conservation Biogeography 452

The Scope of Conservation Biogeography 453

Conservation Biogeography in Action 459

The Future is Digital 462

Conclusions 463

Glossary 471

Index 481

Colour plates between pages 240 and 241

Biogeography

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    A Paperback / softback by C. Barry Cox, Richard J. Ladle, Peter D. Moore

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      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 30/01/2020
      ISBN13: 9781119486312, 978-1119486312
      ISBN10: 1119486319

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      Preface xiii

      Acknowledgements xv

      1 Introduction 1

      Lessons from the Past 1

      Ecological versus Historical Biogeography, and Plants versus Animals 4

      Biogeography and Creation 5

      The Distribution of Life Today 7

      Evolution – a Flawed and Dangerous Idea! 8

      Enter Darwin – and Wallace 10

      World Maps – the Biogeographical Regions of Plants and Animals 13

      Getting Around the World 15

      The Origins of Modern Historical Biogeography 20

      The Development of Ecological Biogeography 23

      Living Together 24

      Marine Biogeography 27

      Island Biogeography 28

      Biogeography Today 30

      Section I: The Challenge of Existing 37

      2 Patterns of Distribution: Finding a Home 39

      Limits of Distribution 42

      The Niche 44

      Overcoming the Barriers 45

      Climatic Limits: The Palms 46

      A Successful Family: The Daisies (Asteraceae) 48

      Patterns Among Plovers 51

      Magnolias: Evolutionary Relicts 55

      The Strange Case of the Testate Amoeba 57

      Climatic Relicts 58

      Topographical Limits and Endemism 65

      Physical Limits 67

      Species Interactions: A Case of the Blues 73

      Competition 75

      Reducing Competition 76

      Predators and Prey, Parasites and Hosts 79

      Migration 83

      Invasion 85

      3 Communities and Ecosystems: Living Together 97

      The Community 97

      The Ecosystem 100

      Ecosystems and Species Diversity 103

      Biotic Assemblages on a Global Scale 108

      Mountain Biomes 112

      Global Patterns of Climate 116

      Climate Diagrams 119

      Modelling Biomes and Climate 122

      4 Patterns of Biodiversity 127

      Measuring Biodiversity: How Many Species are There? 128

      Latitudinal Gradients of Diversity 132

      Is Evolution Faster in the Tropics? 139

      The Legacy of Glaciation 141

      Latitude and Species Ranges 142

      Diversity and Altitude 143

      Biodiversity Hotspots 146

      Diversity in Space and Time 148

      The Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis 151

      Dynamic Biodiversity and Neutral Theory 151

      Section II: The Engines of The Planet 157

      5 Plate Tectonics 159

      The Evidence for Plate Tectonics 159

      Changing Patterns of Continents 164

      How Plate Tectonics Changes the World 164

      Islands and Plate Tectonics 172

      Terranes 174

      6 Evolution, the Source of Novelty 179

      The Origin of Novelty 179

      From Populations to Species 180

      Sympatry versus Allopatry 183

      Defining the Species 188

      Microevolution versus Macroevolution 189

      Adaptive Radiations 189

      Naming and Cataloguing the Living World 189

      Charting the Course of Evolution 190

      Morphology Gives Way to Molecules 193

      Darwin’s Finches Updated 194

      Section III: Islands and Oceans 197

      7 Life, Death and Evolution on Islands 199

      Types of Island 200

      Getting There: The Challenges of Arriving 200

      Dying There: The Problems of Survival 202

      Adapting and Evolving 203

      The Hawaiian Islands 206

      Integrating the Data: The Theory of Island Biogeography 214

      Modifying the Theory 216

      The General Dynamic Model for Oceanic Island Biogeography 219

      Nestedness 221

      Living Together: Incidence and Assembly Rules 221

      Building an Ecosystem: The History of Rakata 223

      8 Patterns in the Oceans 235

      Zones in the Ocean and on the Sea Floor 237

      Basic Biogeography of the Seas 240

      The Open‐Sea Environment 240

      The Ocean Floor 246

      The Shallow‐Sea Environment 250

      And Finally … Marine Biogeographical Realms of the World 263

      Section IV: Historical Biogeography 269

      9 From Evolution to Patterns of Life 271

      Studying the Patterns 272

      Methods of Analyzing the Patterns 273

      Studying Organisms and their Molecules 287

      An Integrative Approach to Historical Biogeography 290

      Investigating the More Distant Past 292

      10 Geography, Life and Climates Through Time 299

      Introduction 299

      Early Land Life on the Moving Continents 300

      Animal Life Through the Mesozoic 304

      The End of the Mesozoic World 308

      Climates and Plants Through Time 309

      Reconstructing Plant Life and Biomes 310

      Evolution of the Mammals 318

      The Mesozoic Roots of the Radiation of Modern Mammals 320

      11 Patterns of Life Today 327

      The Biogeographical Regions Today 327

      The History of Today’s Biogeographical Regions 334

      The Old World Tropics: Africa, India and Southeast Asia 334

      Australia 342

      New Caledonia 345

      New Zealand 346

      The West Indies 348

      South America 351

      The Northern Hemisphere: Holarctic Mammals and Boreal Plants 359

      12 The Arrival of the Ice Ages 367

      Climatic Wiggles 368

      Interglacials and Interstadials 369

      Biological Changes in the Pleistocene 371

      The Last Glacial 375

      Causes of Glaciation 382

      The Current Interglacial: A False Start 388

      Forests on the Move 390

      The Dry Lands 393

      Changing Sea Levels 396

      A Time of Warmth 398

      Climatic Cooling 399

      Recorded History 400

      Atmosphere and Oceans: Short‐Term Climate Change 402

      The Future 403

      Section V: People and Problems 409

      13 The Human Intrusion 411

      The Emergence of Humans 411

      Modern Humans and the Megafaunal Extinctions 420

      Plant Domestication and Agriculture 423

      Animal Domestication 428

      The Diversification of Homo sapiens 430

      The Biogeography of Human Parasitic Diseases 431

      The Environmental Impact of Early Human Cultures 434

      14 Conservation Biogeography 439

      Welcome to the Anthropocene 439

      The Sixth Mass Extinction? 440

      Less, and Less Interesting 444

      What’s Behind the Biodiversity Crisis? 445

      Crisis Management: Responding to Biodiversity Loss 451

      The Birth of Conservation Biogeography 452

      The Scope of Conservation Biogeography 453

      Conservation Biogeography in Action 459

      The Future is Digital 462

      Conclusions 463

      Glossary 471

      Index 481

      Colour plates between pages 240 and 241

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