Over millions of years, terrestrial plants have competed for
limited resources, defended themselves against herbivores, and
resisted a myriad of environmental stresses. These struggles have
helped generate more than a quarter million terrestrial plant
species, each possessing a unique strategy for success. Yet, as
"Resource Strategies of Wild Plants" demonstrates, the constraints
on plant growth are universal enough that a few survival strategies
hold true for all seed-producing plants. This book describes the
five major strategies of growth for terrestrial plants, details how
plants succeed when resources are scarce, delves into the history
of research into plant strategies, and resets the foundational
understanding of ecological processes.
Drawing from recent findings in plant-herbivore interactions,
ecosystem ecology, and evolutionary ecology, Joseph Craine explains
how plants attain available nutrients, withstand the immense
stresses of drying soils, and flourish in the race for light. He
shows that the competition for resources has shaped plant evolution
in newly discovered ways, while the scarcity of such resources has
affected how plants interact with herbivores, wind, fire, and
frost. An understanding of the major resource strategies of wild
plants remains central to learning about the ecology of plant
communities, global changes in the biosphere, methods for species
conservation, and the evolution of life on earth.
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