Reference List for Community Ecology
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Community Ecology, BIOL 7083 – Fall 2018 Louisiana State University – Department of Biological Sciences Reference List I have presented the references under topic headings; the order corresponds to the order in which I have presented the topics in previous versions of the course (the order is a bit different from the order in which topics are presented in the textbook we are using this semester, i.e., G. Mittelbach’s [2012] Community Ecology). For a reference that I used to prepare lectures under multiple topic headings, its citation information appears only once, so if you are looking for a particular reference you might have to search the document for the author if you do not find that reference under a particular topic. This is a work-in-progress, so if you find mistakes and want to send me the corrections, or if you can add the missing details to incomplete entries, please send me e-mail: [email protected] 1. What is Community Ecology? Additional references: Abrahamson, Warren G., ed. 1989. Plant-Animal Interactions. McGraw-Hill Publishing, New York, NY. Agrawal, Anurag A., David D. Ackerly, Fred Adler, A. Elizabeth Arnold, Carla Cáceres, Daniel F. Doak, Eric Post, Peter J. Hudson, John Maron, Kailen A. Mooney, Mary Power, Doug Schemske, Jay Stachowicz, Sharon Strauss, Monica G. Turner & Earl Werner. 2007. Filling key gaps in population and community ecology. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 5:145-152. Barash, David P. 1973. The ecologist as Zen master. The American Midland Naturalist 89:214-217. Bawa, Kamaljit S., W. John Kress, Nalini M. Nadkarni & Sharachchandra Lele. 2004. Beyond paradise – meeting the challenges in tropical biology in the 21st century. Biotropica 36:437-446. Bray, J. Roger & J. T. Curtis. 1957. An ordination of the upland forest communities of southern Wisconsin. Ecological Monographs 27:325-349. Brown, J. H. & B. A. Maurer. 1989. Macroecology: the division of food and space among species on continents. Science 243:1145-1150. Carothers, John H. 1986. Homage to Huxley: on the conceptual origin of minimum size ratios among competing species. American Naturalist 128:440-442. Carpenter, Stephen R., E. Virginia Armbrust, Peter W. Arzberger, F. Stuart Chapin III, James J. Elser, Edward J. Hackett, Anthony R. Ives, Peter M. Kareiva, Mathew A. Leibold, Per Lundberg, Marc Mangel, Nirav Merchant, William W. Murdoch, Margaret A. Palmer, Debra P. C. Peters, Steward T. A. Pickett, Kathleen K. Smith, Diana H. Wall & S. 1 Zimmerman. 2009. Accelerate synthesis in ecology and environmental sciences. BioScience 59. Clements, Frederic E. 1936. Nature and structure of the climax. Journal of Ecology 24:252- 284. Cody, M. L. & J. M. Diamond, eds. 1975. Ecology and Evolution of Communities. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. [Dedicated to Robert MacArthur] Cody & Smallwood. Long-term Studies of Vertebrate Communities. Connell, Joseph H. 1961. Effects of competition, predation by Thais lapillus, and other factors on natural populations of the barnacle Balanus balanoides. Ecological Monographs 31:61-104. Connell, Joseph H. 1961. The influence of competition and other factors on the distribution of the barnacle Chthamalus stellatus. Ecology 42:710-723. Cowles, Henry Chandler. 1899. The ecological relations of the vegetation on the sand dunes of Lake Michigan. The Botanical Gazette 27:95-117, 167-202, 281-308, 361-391. Damschen et al. 2005. Visibility matters: increasing knowledge of women’s contributions to ecology. Front. Ecol. Environ. 3:212-219. Darwin, Charles. 1859. The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Diamond, J. & T. J. Case, eds. 1986. Community Ecology. Harper and Row, NY, NY. [Dedicated to G. Evelyn Hutchinson] Dobzhansky, Theodosius. 1973. Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution. The American Biology Teacher 35:125-129. Fauth, J. E., J. Bernardo, M. Camara, W. J. Resetarits, Jr., J. Van Buskirk & S. A. McCollum. 1996. Simplifying the jargon of community ecology: A conceptual approach. The American Naturalist 147:282-286. Forbes, Stephen A. 1887. The lake as a microcosm. [Reprinted in Bulletin of the Illinois State Natural History Survey 15 (1925):537-550] Gleason, H. A. 1926. The individualistic concept of the plant association. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 53:7-26. Gotelli, Nicholas J. 2001. A Primer of Ecology, 3rd ed. Sinauer Assocs., Inc., Sunderland, MA. Gotelli, Nicholas J. & Gary R. Graves. 1996. Null Models in Ecology. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC. Gotelli, N. J. & B. McGill. 2006. Null versus neutral models: What’s the difference? Ecography 29:793-800. Grant, Peter R. & B. Rosemary Grant. 2008. How and Why Species Multiply: The Radiation of Darwin’s Finches. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. HilleRisLambers, J., P. B. Adler, W. S. Harpole, J. M. Levine & M. M. Mayfield. 2012. Rethinking community assembly through the lens of coexistence theory. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution & Systematics 43:227-248. Holdridge, L. R. 1947. Determination of world plant formations from simple climatic data. Science 105:367-368. Howe, H. F. & L. C. Westley. 1988. Ecological Relationships of Plants and Animals. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. Huston, Michael A. & Steve Wolverton. 2011. Regulation of animal size by eNPP, Bergmann’s rule, and related phenomena. Ecological Monographs 81:349-405. Hutchinson, G. Evelyn. 1951. Copepodology for the ornithologist. Ecology 32:571-577. 2 Hutchinson, G. Evelyn. 1965. The Ecological Theater and the Evolutionary Play. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT. Hutchinson, G. Evelyn. 1967. A treatise on limnology. Vol. II. John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY. Huxley, J. 1942. Evolution: the modern synthesis. Harper, New York, NY. Inchausti, Pablo. 1994. Reductionist approaches in community ecology. Am. Nat. 143:201- 221. Johnson, Marc T. J. & John R. Stinchcombe. 2007. An emerging synthesis between community ecology and evolutionary biology. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 22:250-257. Kaspari, Michael. 2008. Knowing your warblers: thoughts on the 50th anniversary of MacArthur (1958). Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. October:448-458. Keddy, Paul & Evan Weiher. 1999. Introduction: The scope and goals of research on assembly rules. Pp. 1-20 in E. Weiher & P. Keddy, eds., Ecological Assembly Rules: Perspectives, Advances, Retreats. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. [Useful background re the “agony of community ecology” and assembly rules] Kingsland, Sharon E. 2005. The Evolution of American Ecology 1890-2000. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD. Lawton, John H. 1999. Are there general laws in ecology? Oikos 84:177-192. Leibold, M. A., M. Holyoak, N. Mouquet, P. Amarasekare, J. M. Chase, M. F. Hoopes, R. D. Holt, J. B. Shurin, R. Law, D. Tilman, M. Loreau & A. Gonzalez. 2004. The metacommunity concept: a framework for multi-scale community ecology. Ecology Letters 7:601-613. Leibold, Mathew A. & Mark A. McPeek. 2006. Coexistence of the niche and neutral perspectives in community ecology. Ecology 87:1399-1410. Lewontin, R. C. 1974. The Genetic Basis of Evolutionary Change. Columbia U. Press, N.Y. [P. A. Keddy (1992; Keddy & Weiher chapt. 1999, pg. 19) refers to Lewontin’s description of “the agony of community ecology”] Lindeman, Raymond L. 1942. The trophic-dynamics aspect of ecology. Ecology 23:399-418. MacArthur, Robert H. 1958. Population ecology of some warblers of northeastern coniferous forests. Ecology 39:599-619. MacArthur, Robert H. 1971. Patterns of terrestrial bird communities. Pp. 189-221 in D. S. Farner & J. R. King, eds. Avian Biology. Academic Press, New York, NY. MacArthur, Robert H. 1972. Geographical Ecology: Patterns in the Distribution of Species. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. Marquet, P. A., A. P. Allen, J. H. Brown, J. Dunne, B. J. Enquist, J. Gillooly, P. A. Gowaty, J. L. Green, D. Storch, J. Harte, S. P. Hubbel, J. O'Dwyer, Jordan Oki, A. Ostling, M. Ritchie & G. West. 2014. On theory in ecology. Bioscience 64:701-710. Martínez del Rio, Carlos & Arthur D. Middleton. 2010. Laws for ecology? Ecology 91:1244- 1245. [Book review of Dodds, Walter K. 2009. Laws, theories, and patterns in ecology.] May, Robert M. 1986. The search for patterns in the balance of nature: advances and retreats. Ecology 67:1115-1126. Matthews, W. J. 1998. Patterns in Freshwater Fish Ecology. Chapman and Hall, NY, NY. McGill, Brian J., Brian J. Enquist, Evan Weiher & Mark Westoby. 2006. Rebuilding community ecology from functional traits. TREE 21:178-185. McIntosh, R. P. 1985. The Background of Ecology. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, UK. 3 McLachlan, Athol J. & Richard J. Ladle. 2010. Barriers to adaptive reasoning in community ecology. Biol. Rev. McPeek, Mark A. 2017. Evolutionary Community Ecology. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. McShea, Daniel W. & Robert N. Brandon. 2010. Biology’s First Law: The Tendency for Diversity and Complexity to Increase in Evolutionary Systems. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL. Merriam. 1889. Mittelbach, Gary G. 2012. Community Ecology. Sinauer, Sunderland, MA. Mittelbach, Gary G. & Douglas W. Schemske. 2015. Ecological and evolutionary perspectives on community assembly. TREE… Morin, Peter J. 1999. Community Ecology. Blackwell Science, Inc., Oxford, U.K. Morin, Peter J. 2011. Community Ecology, 2nd ed. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, U.K. Myers, Jonathan A. & Joseph A. LaManna. 2016. The promise and pitfalls of β-diversity in ecology and conservation. Journal of Vegetation Science 27:1081-1083. Paine, Robert T. 2010. Macroecology: Does it ignore or can it encourage further ecological syntheses based on spatially local experimental manipulations? The American Naturalist 176:385-393. Pianka, E. R. 1992. The state of the art in community ecology. Proceedings of the First World Congress of Herpetology. In Herpetology: Current Research on the Biology of Amphibians & Reptiles, ed. K. Adler, pp. 141-162. Society for the Study of Amphibians & Reptiles, Oxford, OH. [“community ecology has for too long been perceived as repugnant and intractably complex… the discipline has been neglected and now lags far behind the rest of ecology”] Real, Leslie A.