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Ecologists are increasingly being drawn into the task of addressing
problems of environmental degradation. They are expected to find
solutions that will lead to sustainable resource use throughout the
world. In doing so, the robustness of the science becomes
increasingly important, and the problem of extrapolating the
results of research conducted within what is usually a relatively
limited geographical scope is increasingly highlighted. One
approach to developing a globally robust ecology involves more or
less formal intercontinental comparative studies, usually focused
on the question of ecological convergence. These studies are
directed at testing the prediction that similar physical and other
environmental factors in different parts of the world, through
their selective influences, will give rise to ecosystems which
share com mon structural and functional features. Should this be
true, the predictive power of ecology developed within such a
framework should be sufficient to solve similar problems elsewhere
in such biomes. There is a long history of such an approach in
mediterranean type ecosystems, documented in a series of volumes
and their accompanying scientific papers beginning with that of Di
Castri and Mooney (1973).
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