Desert Hawk Books

 

Changing Precipitation Regimes
and Terrestrial Ecosystems

A North American Perspective

Edited by Jake F. Weltzin and Guy R. McPherson

 

 

250 pages
20 halftones
18 line illus.
6.125" x 9.25"
Cloth

Quantity: $50.00 & S/H

 

 

Read the Foreword

By the beginning of the twenty-first century, few people could deny the reality of global change. But while most alarm has been over increasing temperatures, other changes are occurring in precipitation patterns—variations that may be due in part to global warming but also to factors such as changes in atmospheric circulation and land surfaces.

This volume provides a central source of information about this newly emerging area of global change research. It presents ongoing investigations into the responses of plant communities and ecosystems to the experimental manipulation of precipitation in a variety of field settings—particularly in the western and central United States, where precipitation is already scarce or variable. By exploring methods that can be used to predict responses of ecosystems to changes in precipitation regimes, it demonstrates new approaches to global change research and highlights the importance of precipitation regimes in structuring ecosystems.

The contributors first document the importance of precipitation, soil characteristics, and soil moisture to plant life. They then focus on the roles of precipitation amount, seasonality, and frequency in shaping varied terrestrial ecosystems: desert, sagebrush steppe, oak savanna, tall- and mixed-grass prairie, and eastern deciduous forest. These case studies illustrate many complex, tightly woven, interactive relationships among precipitation, soils, and plants—relationships that will dictate the responses of ecosystems to changes in precipitation regimes.

As the first volume to discuss and document current and cutting-edge concepts and approaches to research into changing precipitation regimes and terrestrial ecosystems, this book shows the importance of developing reliable predictions of the precipitation changes that may occur with global warming. These studies clearly demonstrate that patterns of environmental variation and the nature of vegetation responses are complex phenomena that are only beginning to be understood, and that these experimental approaches are critical for our understanding of future change.

Jake Weltzin is Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Tennessee. Guy McPherson is Professor in the School of Renewable Natural Resources and the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Arizona and author of Ecology and Management of North American Savannas, also published by the University of Arizona Press.


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