Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation

This book discusses UV radiation, its effects on ecosystems and the likely evolutionary consequences of changed UV radiation environments, past, present and future. The first two chapters examine the history of the UV radiation climate of earth and the factors that determine organismal and ecosystem...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Cockell, Charles, Blaustein, Andrew R.
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: Springer 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/3145/
http://www.springer.com/dal/home?SGWID=1-102-22-2099992-0&changeHeader=true
id ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:3145
record_format openpolar
spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:3145 2024-06-23T07:46:49+00:00 Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation Cockell, Charles Blaustein, Andrew R. 2001 https://oro.open.ac.uk/3145/ http://www.springer.com/dal/home?SGWID=1-102-22-2099992-0&changeHeader=true unknown Springer Cockell, Charles <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/csc235.html> and Blaustein, Andrew R. eds. (2001). Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation. New York, USA: Springer. Edited Book PeerReviewed 2001 ftopenunivgb 2024-06-12T14:21:37Z This book discusses UV radiation, its effects on ecosystems and the likely evolutionary consequences of changed UV radiation environments, past, present and future. The first two chapters examine the history of the UV radiation climate of earth and the factors that determine organismal and ecosystem exposure. Their purpose is to give the reader a physical perspective on UV radiation and an understanding of the constantly changing UV environment that ecosystems are exposed to over time. Variations in the UV radiation environment occur at the local level (such as boundary layer and plant canopy effects) through to global-scale changes (such as alterations in the column abundance of UV-B protecting ozone). UV radiation regimes also vary over temporal scales. These alterations occur on time scales of seconds (the movement of clouds and plant canopies) to literally billions of years (gross long-term changes in the composition of the Earth's atmosphere). In the chapters that follow five specific biological and ecological topics in photobiology are considered. They are effects of UV radiation on amphibians, plants, corals, aquatic microbial ecosystems and Antarctic ecosystems that are exposed to the anthropogenically generated ozone 'hole'. These chapters consider UV radiation effects at a diversity of levels from the biochemical to the community. Their purpose is to provide the reader with our current understanding of the ecological effects of UV radiation, the areas where questions still remain and to provide a perspective from which the reader can better understand questions in evolutionary photobiology. The final chapter investigates the biological consequences of altered extraterrestrial ultraviolet fluxes, which are quite different from those experienced on the Earth. Our knowledge of the role of UV radiation in shaping ecologies and evolutionary change is still in its infancy. This book brings together a number of authors with the aim of helping to consolidate a better understanding of this interesting area of ... Book Antarc* Antarctic The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description This book discusses UV radiation, its effects on ecosystems and the likely evolutionary consequences of changed UV radiation environments, past, present and future. The first two chapters examine the history of the UV radiation climate of earth and the factors that determine organismal and ecosystem exposure. Their purpose is to give the reader a physical perspective on UV radiation and an understanding of the constantly changing UV environment that ecosystems are exposed to over time. Variations in the UV radiation environment occur at the local level (such as boundary layer and plant canopy effects) through to global-scale changes (such as alterations in the column abundance of UV-B protecting ozone). UV radiation regimes also vary over temporal scales. These alterations occur on time scales of seconds (the movement of clouds and plant canopies) to literally billions of years (gross long-term changes in the composition of the Earth's atmosphere). In the chapters that follow five specific biological and ecological topics in photobiology are considered. They are effects of UV radiation on amphibians, plants, corals, aquatic microbial ecosystems and Antarctic ecosystems that are exposed to the anthropogenically generated ozone 'hole'. These chapters consider UV radiation effects at a diversity of levels from the biochemical to the community. Their purpose is to provide the reader with our current understanding of the ecological effects of UV radiation, the areas where questions still remain and to provide a perspective from which the reader can better understand questions in evolutionary photobiology. The final chapter investigates the biological consequences of altered extraterrestrial ultraviolet fluxes, which are quite different from those experienced on the Earth. Our knowledge of the role of UV radiation in shaping ecologies and evolutionary change is still in its infancy. This book brings together a number of authors with the aim of helping to consolidate a better understanding of this interesting area of ...
author2 Cockell, Charles
Blaustein, Andrew R.
format Book
title Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
spellingShingle Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
title_short Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
title_full Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
title_fullStr Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
title_full_unstemmed Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
title_sort ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation
publisher Springer
publishDate 2001
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/3145/
http://www.springer.com/dal/home?SGWID=1-102-22-2099992-0&changeHeader=true
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation Cockell, Charles <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/csc235.html> and Blaustein, Andrew R. eds. (2001). Ecosystems, evolution and ultraviolet radiation. New York, USA: Springer.
_version_ 1802648433171890176