Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies

Alpine tundra is an intriguing ecosystem—for its beauty as well as for the harsh climate in which it exists. Contrasted against jagged rock precipices and snow and ice and subjected to rapid changes in weather, the tundra, with its proliferation of diminutive flowers, appears deceptively fragile. Jo...

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Main Author: Bowman, William D.
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Oxford University Press 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195117288.003.0005
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spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/oso/9780195117288.003.0005 2023-05-15T15:16:58+02:00 Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies Bowman, William D. 2001 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195117288.003.0005 unknown Oxford University Press Structure and Function of an Alpine Ecosystem book-chapter 2001 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195117288.003.0005 2022-08-05T10:31:45Z Alpine tundra is an intriguing ecosystem—for its beauty as well as for the harsh climate in which it exists. Contrasted against jagged rock precipices and snow and ice and subjected to rapid changes in weather, the tundra, with its proliferation of diminutive flowers, appears deceptively fragile. John Muir, in detailing the alpine of the Sierra Nevada, was at a loss to adequately describe “the exquisite beauty of these mountain carpets as they lie smoothly outspread in the savage wilderness” (Muir 1894). Despite this aesthetic fascination for the alpine, it is one of the least studied ecosystems in the world. Significant effort has been expended to describe the physiological ecology of alpine organisms (e.g., Bliss 1985; Carey 1993; Körner 1999) and community patterns (Komárková 1979; Billings 1988), but there have been no syntheses detailing alpine ecosystem processes and patterns to the degree that they have been described in the arctic (e.g., Chapin 1992) and forest (e.g., Likens and Bormann 1995) ecosystems. The goal of this book is to provide a description of the Niwot Ridge/Green Lakes Valley alpine ecosystem of the Front Range in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, including the spatial and temporal patterns of animals, plants, and microorganisms and the associated ecosystem processes. The book focuses on the strengths of the research carried out on Niwot Ridge during the past four decades, particularly physical factors influencing alpine ecology (climate and geomorphology), patterns and functions of the vegetation, and N biogeochemistry. While the book focuses on a particular site, the results can be extrapolated to much of the southern and central Rocky Mountains, and thus it pertains to a broader geographic and scientific scope and will be of direct interest to ecologists in general as well as to those interested in ecosystems in extreme environments. There are numerous justifications for a synthesis of alpine ecosystem studies. While alpine tundra occupies only about 3% of the global land surface (Körner ... Book Part Arctic Tundra Oxford University Press (via Crossref) Arctic Jagged ENVELOPE(-65.683,-65.683,-65.967,-65.967)
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description Alpine tundra is an intriguing ecosystem—for its beauty as well as for the harsh climate in which it exists. Contrasted against jagged rock precipices and snow and ice and subjected to rapid changes in weather, the tundra, with its proliferation of diminutive flowers, appears deceptively fragile. John Muir, in detailing the alpine of the Sierra Nevada, was at a loss to adequately describe “the exquisite beauty of these mountain carpets as they lie smoothly outspread in the savage wilderness” (Muir 1894). Despite this aesthetic fascination for the alpine, it is one of the least studied ecosystems in the world. Significant effort has been expended to describe the physiological ecology of alpine organisms (e.g., Bliss 1985; Carey 1993; Körner 1999) and community patterns (Komárková 1979; Billings 1988), but there have been no syntheses detailing alpine ecosystem processes and patterns to the degree that they have been described in the arctic (e.g., Chapin 1992) and forest (e.g., Likens and Bormann 1995) ecosystems. The goal of this book is to provide a description of the Niwot Ridge/Green Lakes Valley alpine ecosystem of the Front Range in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, including the spatial and temporal patterns of animals, plants, and microorganisms and the associated ecosystem processes. The book focuses on the strengths of the research carried out on Niwot Ridge during the past four decades, particularly physical factors influencing alpine ecology (climate and geomorphology), patterns and functions of the vegetation, and N biogeochemistry. While the book focuses on a particular site, the results can be extrapolated to much of the southern and central Rocky Mountains, and thus it pertains to a broader geographic and scientific scope and will be of direct interest to ecologists in general as well as to those interested in ecosystems in extreme environments. There are numerous justifications for a synthesis of alpine ecosystem studies. While alpine tundra occupies only about 3% of the global land surface (Körner ...
format Book Part
author Bowman, William D.
spellingShingle Bowman, William D.
Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies
author_facet Bowman, William D.
author_sort Bowman, William D.
title Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies
title_short Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies
title_full Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies
title_fullStr Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies
title_full_unstemmed Introduction: Historical Perspective and Significance of Alpine Ecosystem Studies
title_sort introduction: historical perspective and significance of alpine ecosystem studies
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 2001
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195117288.003.0005
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genre Arctic
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genre_facet Arctic
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op_source Structure and Function of an Alpine Ecosystem
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195117288.003.0005
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