Fr. 135.00

Chemical Ecology of Plants: Allelopathy in Aquatic and Terrestrial Ecosystems

English · Hardback

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Description

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Allelochemicals play a great role in managed and natural ecosystems. Apart from plant growth, allelochemicals also may influence nutrient dynamics, mycorrhizae, soil chemical characteristics, and microbial ecology. Synergistic action of various factors may better explain plant growth and distribution in natural systems. The book emphasizes the role of allelochemicals in shaping the structure of plant communities in a broader ecological perspective. The book addresses the following questions: (1) How do allelochemicals influence different components of the ecosystem in terms of shaping community structure? (2) Why is it difficult to demonstrate interference by allelochemicals (i.e., allelopathy) in a natural system in its entirety? Despite a large amount of existing literature on allelopathy, why are ecologists still skeptical about the existence of allelopathy in nature? (3) Why are there only scarce data on aquatic ecosystems? (4) What role do allelochemicals play in microbial ecology?.....

List of contents

Problems and prospects in the study of plant allelochemicals: a brief introduction.- Antifungal properties of cyanobacteria and algae: ecological and agricultural implications.- The chemistry and chemical ecology of biologically active cyanobacterial metabolites.- Compounds from Typha domingensis P..- Allelochemicals from sunflowers: chemistry, bioactivity and applications.- Feedback mechanism in the chemical ecology of plants: role of soil microorganisms.- Do allelochemicals operate independent of substratum factors?.- Ecological relevance of allelopathy: some considerations related to Mediterranean, subtropical, temperate, and boreal forest shrubs.- Linking ecosystem disturbance with changes in keystone species, humus properties and soil chemical ecology: implications for conifer regeneration with ericaceous understory.- Black walnut allelopathy: current state of the science.- Allelopathy and agroecology.- Allelochemicals phytotoxicity in explaining weed invasiveness and their function as herbicide analogues.- Shift in allelochemical functioning with selected abiotic stress factors.- Pitfalls in interpretation of allelochemical data in ecological studies: implications for plant-herbivore and allelopathic research.- Biochemical and physiological aspects of pollen allelopathy.

Summary

Allelochemicals play a great role in managed and natural ecosystems.
Apart from plant growth, allelochemicals also may influence nutrient
dynamics, mycorrhizae, soil chemical characteristics, and microbial
ecology. Synergistic action of various factors may better explain plant
growth and distribution in natural systems. The book emphasizes the role
of allelochemicals in shaping the structure of plant communities in a
broader ecological perspective.
The book addresses the following questions: (1) How do allelochemicals
influence different components of the ecosystem in terms of shaping
community structure? (2) Why is it difficult to demonstrate interference
by allelochemicals (i.e., allelopathy) in a natural system in its
entirety? Despite a large amount of existing literature on allelopathy,
why are ecologists still skeptical about the existence of allelopathy in
nature? (3) Why are there only scarce data on aquatic ecosystems? (4)
What role do allelochemicals play in microbial ecology?.....

Product details

Assisted by Inderji (Editor), Inderjit (Editor), Inderjit (Editor), Azim Mallik (Editor), Azim U. Mallik (Editor), U Mallik (Editor), U Mallik (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Basel
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 28.11.2002
 
EAN 9783764365356
ISBN 978-3-7643-6535-6
No. of pages 272
Weight 764 g
Illustrations X, 272 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Botany

B, Plants, ecosystem, growth, Plant, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Plant Science, Plant Sciences, Microbial Ecology, Soil, microorganism, plant growth, terrestrial ecosystems, mycorrhiza, terrestrial ecosystem

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