Multiple Stable States in Natural Ecosystems
Peter Petraitis
Abstract
One of the most interesting and vexing problems in ecology is how distinctly different communities of plants and animals can occur in the same ecosystem. The theory of these systems, known as multiple stable states, is well understood, but whether multiple stable states actually exist in nature has remained a hotly debated subject. This book provides a broad and synthetic critique of recent advances in theory and new experimental evidence. Modern models of systems with multiple stable states are placed in historical context. Current theories are covered in a rigorous fashion with the specific ... More
One of the most interesting and vexing problems in ecology is how distinctly different communities of plants and animals can occur in the same ecosystem. The theory of these systems, known as multiple stable states, is well understood, but whether multiple stable states actually exist in nature has remained a hotly debated subject. This book provides a broad and synthetic critique of recent advances in theory and new experimental evidence. Modern models of systems with multiple stable states are placed in historical context. Current theories are covered in a rigorous fashion with the specific goal of identifying testable predictions about multiple stable states. The book provides a more synthetic, more critical, and broader analysis of multiple stable states in natural ecosystems than any previous review. By making the theory more transparent and the analysis of the evidence more comparative, the book broadens the discussion about multiple stable states, leading to a more general consideration of the interplay between theory and experiment in community ecology and environmental management.
Keywords:
community ecology,
natural ecosystems,
multiple stable states,
environmental management
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2013 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199569342 |
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2015 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780199569342.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Peter Petraitis, author
Professor of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, USA
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