ABSTRACT

This textbook provides a fresh, up-to-date, introduction to biogeography. Examining where different animals and plants live and how they came to be living there it investigates how populations grow, interact and survive. It explores how equilibrium communities are formed, how communities change and looks at the likely shape of communities in the twenty-first century.
Stressing the role of ecological, geographical, historical and human factors in fashioning animal and plant distributions, Huggett reveals how life has, and is, adapting to its biological and physical surroundings. The book includes several sections on how human attitudes to nature differ, and how biogeography can affect conservation practice. Huggett tackles many topical and controversial environmental and ethical concerns including:
* animal rights
* species exploitation
* habitat fragmentation
* biodiversity
* metapopulations
Illustrated throughout with informative diagrams and photos, and including chapter summaries, guides to further reading and an extensive glossary of key terms Fundamentals of Biogeography presents an engaging introduction for students.

chapter |3 pages

INTRODUCTION: STUDYING BIOGEOGRAPHY

chapter 1|1 pages

WHAT IS BIOGEOGRAPHY?

chapter |7 pages

HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY

chapter 2|1 pages

LIFE AND THE ENVIRONMENT

chapter |1 pages

Table 2.1 Habitat scales

chapter |7 pages

Regions

chapter |5 pages

Dry environments

chapter |2 pages

Zonobiomes

chapter |4 pages

Altitude

chapter |6 pages

Ecological equivalents

chapter |1 pages

FURTHER READING

chapter 3|6 pages

THE DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANISMS

chapter |2 pages

Climatic relicts

chapter |16 pages

Range size and shape

chapter |20 pages

Dispersal today

chapter |1 pages

FURTHER READING

chapter 4|13 pages

POPULATIONS

the form and function of single populations

chapter |7 pages

Metapopulations and conservation

chapter |2 pages

Controlling populations Swedish beavers

chapter |1 pages

ESSAY QUESTIONS

chapter 5|1 pages

INTERACTING POPULATIONS

chapter |3 pages

Plant-plant protocooperation

chapter |1 pages

Commensalism

chapter |14 pages

Plant eaters

chapter |1 pages

Pests in the Mediterranean

chapter |1 pages

SUMMARY

chapter |1 pages

FURTHER READING

chapter 6|13 pages

COMMUNITIES

chapter |7 pages

Long-range transport of pesticides

chapter |4 pages

Diversity change

chapter |1 pages

ESSAY QUESTIONS

chapter 7|3 pages

COMMUNITY CHANGE

chapter |7 pages

Inhibition model

chapter |4 pages

Glacier Bay revisited

chapter |12 pages

Chaotic communities

chapter |3 pages

Soil water regimes and forest change

chapter |1 pages

ESSAY QUESTIONS

chapter 8|3 pages

LIFE, HUMANS, AND MORALITY

chapter |13 pages

Does all Nature have rights?

chapter |1 pages

FURTHER READING

chapter |9 pages

GLOSSARY

chapter |5 pages

FURTHER READING