Fr. 189.00

Trace Gas Exchange in Forest Ecosystems

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

Read more

This volume summarizes the current knowledge on the exchange of trace gases between forests and the atmosphere with the restriction that exclusively carbon and nitrogen compounds are included. For this purpose the volume brings together and interconnects knowledge from different disciplines of biological and atmospheric sciences. It covers microbial and plant processes involved in the production and consumption of these trace gases; the exchange processes between forest soils and vegetation on the one hand, and the atmosphere on the other hand; the fate of the trace gases exchanged inside the atmosphere as well as environmental influences on the exchange of trace gases between forest ecosystems and the atmosphere. With this interdisciplinary approach the volume provides the background for an evaluation of the exchange of trace gases between forest ecosystems and the atmosphere and man-made disturbances of this exchange.

List of contents

1. Biological processes involved in trace gas exchange.- 1.1 Microbiological and biochemical background of production and consumption of NO and N2O in soil.- 1.2 NO2, NO and HNO3 Uptake by Trees.- 1.3 Production and consumption of NH4+ and NH3 in trees.- 1.4 Isoprene and terpene biosynthesis.- 1.5 Biosynthesis of aldehydes and organic acids.- 2. Exchange of trace gases at the soil-atmosphere interface.- 2.1 NO, NO2 and N2O.- 2.2 CH4.- 3. Exchange of trace gases at the tree-atmosphere interface.- 3.1 Ammonia exchange at the tree-atmosphere interface.- 3.2 Isoprene and other isoprenoids.- 3.3 Aldehydes and organic acids.- 3.4 Ozone.- 4. Forest canopies as sources and sinks of atmospheric trace gases.- 4.1 Scaling up to the ecosystem level.- 5. Atmospheric chemistry of trace gases exchanged in forest ecosystems.- 5.1 Nitrogen oxides.- 5.2 Ozone and volatile organic ompounds: isoprene, terpenes, aldehydes, and organic acids.- 6. Environmental factors influencing trace gas exchange.- 6.1 Acid rain and N-deposition.- 6.2 Tropospheric Ozone.

Summary

This volume summarizes the current knowledge on the exchange of trace gases between forests and the atmosphere with the restriction that exclusively carbon and nitrogen compounds are included. For this purpose the volume brings together and interconnects knowledge from different disciplines of biological and atmospheric sciences. It covers microbial and plant processes involved in the production and consumption of these trace gases; the exchange processes between forest soils and vegetation on the one hand, and the atmosphere on the other hand; the fate of the trace gases exchanged inside the atmosphere as well as environmental influences on the exchange of trace gases between forest ecosystems and the atmosphere. With this interdisciplinary approach the volume provides the background for an evaluation of the exchange of trace gases between forest ecosystems and the atmosphere and man-made disturbances of this exchange.

Additional text

"I would highly recommend this book to all scientists who are engaged in tree physiology and also to forestry students. I encourage environment protection students to study the issue of acidification of ecosystems from sulfur and nitrogen deposition and the consequences of this process on forest ecosystems (temperate forest and tropical forests) in the global scale. Moreover, they will find much interesting information concerning tropospheric ozone as an important component of photochemical smog, which induces gene expression in deciduous and coniferous trees."
(Acta physiologiae plantarum, 25:4, 2003)

Report

"I would highly recommend this book to all scientists who are engaged in tree physiology and also to forestry students. I encourage environment protection students to study the issue of acidification of ecosystems from sulfur and nitrogen deposition and the consequences of this process on forest ecosystems (temperate forest and tropical forests) in the global scale. Moreover, they will find much interesting information concerning tropospheric ozone as an important component of photochemical smog, which induces gene expression in deciduous and coniferous trees."
(Acta physiologiae plantarum, 25:4, 2003)

Product details

Assisted by R. Gasche (Editor), Papen (Editor), H Papen (Editor), H. Papen (Editor), H Rennenberg (Editor), H. Rennenberg (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.06.2009
 
EAN 9781402011139
ISBN 978-1-4020-1113-9
No. of pages 343
Weight 680 g
Illustrations XIII, 343 p. 24 illus.
Series Tree Physiology
Tree Physiology
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Agriculture, horticulture; forestry, fishing, food

Vegetation, B, Forstwirtschaft und Waldbau: Praxis und Techniken, Forest, influence, Plant, trees, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Botany & plant sciences, Iron, Forestry & silviculture: practice & techniques, Forestry, Soil, Tree Biology, ozone, gas exchange

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.