Synopses & Reviews
This book focuses on the dynamical processes influencing the structure of coral communities, some of the most biologically diverse communities on earth. A variety of biological and physical processes operating across an enormous range of spatiotemporal scales are highlighted (e.g., niche partitioning, biological interactions, disturbance phenomena, large-scale tectonic, eustatic, climatic, and oceanographic processes). The focus on the community provides a framework for presenting some of the best examples from the literature using multiple taxonomic groups (e.g., corals, fishes, encrusting invertebrates).
Review
"The book provides a focus on the rich diversity and strong biological interactions that characterise the most fascinating coral communities. Defining community, guild, assemblage and web, the theme of the book is introduced with descriptions of the dynamics of coral community, especially of the constituent species, the interactions among them, the local environments, oceanographic transport processes, climatic fluctuations and a host of geographical and historical phenomena. The subject is narrated in thoughtfully and admirably organised chapters on diversity, stability, succession, competition and so on. Citing suitable examples, each chapter considers one or more selected principles, theories, hypotheses and models. In this process, new information is provided, for example that `coexistence competition' can be an alternative to competitive exclusion. Each chapter is closed with an overview, providing a sort of summary. The book includes useful references and subject index." (Professor T.J. Pandian, Madurai Kamaraj University, India)
Synopsis
This book focuses on the dynamical processes influencing the structure of coral communities, some of the most biologically diverse communities on earth. A variety of biological and physical processes operating across an enormous range of spatiotemporal scales are highlighted (e.g., niche partitioning, biological interactions, disturbance phenomena, large-scale tectonic, eustatic, climatic, and oceanographic processes). The focus on the community provides a framework for presenting some of the best examples from the literature using multiple taxonomic groups (e.g., corals, fishes, encrusting invertebrates).
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [213]-243).
Table of Contents
Preface. 1: Introduction. 1.1. Ecological communities, guilds, assemblages and webs. 1.2. Taxonomic and trophic constraints. 1.3. Scale-dependent dynamics. 1.4. Marine epibenthic communities. 1.5. Overview. 2: Diversity. 2.1. Origins of diversity. 2.2. Patterns of coral diversity. 2.3. Diversity of non-coral taxa. 2.4. Overview. 3: Stability. 3.1. What is stability? 3.2. Are stability and diversity related? 3.3. Keystone species. 3.4. Transient dynamics of nonequilibrial systems. 3.5. Overview. 4: Succession. 4.1. Successional mechanisms on ecological time scales. 4.2. Succession in coral communities. 4.3. Overview. 5: Interspecific competition. 5.1. General considerations. 5.2. Interspecific competition in coral communities. 5.3. Overview. 6: Consumer-resource interactions. 6.1. Coupled populations, food webs, and interactive community processes. 6.2. Food-web interactions of coral reef fishes: an example. 6.3. Plant-herbivore interactions in coral communities. 6.4. Predator-prey interactions in coral communities. 6.5. Overview. 7: Disturbance. 7.1. Disturbance and species coexistence. 7.2. Disturbances to coral communities: a potpourri. 7.3. Do disturbances promote species coexistence? 7.4. Overview. 8: Large-scale perspectives. 8.1. General considerations. 8.2. Evidence from coral communities. 8.3. Middle ground. 8.4. Overview. 9: Integration across scales. 9.1. The local environment. 9.2. The regional setting and cross-scale linkage. 9.3. A biogeographic context for coral community ecology. 9.4. Closing comments. References. Subject Index.