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Trees, Truffles, and Beasts
Chris Maser
Andrew W. Claridge
James M. Trappe
其他書名
How Forests Function
出版
Rutgers University Press
, 2008
主題
Nature / General
Nature / Ecology
Nature / Ecosystems & Habitats / Forests & Rainforests
NATURE / Plants / Trees
Science / Life Sciences / Biology
Science / Life Sciences / Ecology
ISBN
081354226X
9780813542263
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=NQyJiqmBWp8C&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
In today's world of specialization, people are attempting to protect the Earth's fragile state by swapping limousines for hybrids and pesticide-laced foods for organic produce. At other times, environmental awareness is translated into public relations gimmicks or trendy commodities. Moreover, simplistic policies, like single-species protection or planting ten trees for every tree cut down, are touted as bureaucratic or industrial panaceas.
Because today's decisions are tomorrow's consequences, every small effort makes a difference, but a broader understanding of our environmental problems is necessary to the development of sustainable ecosystem policies. In
Trees, Truffles, and Beasts
, Chris Maser, Andrew W. Claridge, and James M. Trappe make a compelling case that we must first understand the complexity and interdependency of species and habitats from the microscopic level to the gigantic. Comparing forests in the Pacific Northwestern United States and Southeastern mainland of Australia, the authors show how easily observable species, trees and mammals are part of a complicated infrastructure that includes fungi, lichens, and organisms invisible to the naked eye, such as microbes.
Eminently readable, this important book shows that forests are far more complicated than most of us might think, which means simplistic policies will not save them. Understanding the biophysical intricacies of our life-support systems just might.