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Landscape ecology is the study of the pattern and interaction between ecosystems within a region of interest, and the way the interactions affect ecological processes, especially the unique...
- Bioindicators: Using Organisms to Measure Environmental Impacts
Science of the Total Environment 348, 211–230 (2005). Iwama,...
- Large-Scale Ecology Introduction
Landscape ecology is a subdiscipline of global ecology that...
- The Sources and Impacts of Tropospheric Particulate Matter
Science 245, 1227-1230 (1989). Benson, D. R., Yu, J. H. et...
- Spatial Ecology and Conservation
Definition and Scope of Spatial Ecology. ... This was...
- The Geography and Ecology of Diversification in Neotropical Freshwaters
This article addresses central themes in the study of...
- Causes and Consequences of Dispersal in Plants and Animals
Regional gene flow and population structure of the...
- Bioindicators: Using Organisms to Measure Environmental Impacts
Landscape ecology is the science of studying and improving relationships between ecological processes in the environment and particular ecosystems. This is done within a variety of landscape scales, development spatial patterns, and organizational levels of research and policy.
28 lis 2022 · Key research topics in landscape ecology include ecological flows in landscape mosaics, land use and land cover change, scaling, relating landscape pattern analysis with ecological processes, and landscape conservation and sustainability.
Landscape ecology is an emerging science, with a complex character and heterogeneous content, but with a clearly scientific philosophical (epistemological) background. Before we describe the subject, it is worth explaining why land ecology or landscape ecology is a...
A general definition of landscape ecology may be the science and art of studying and improving the relationship between spatial pattern and ecological processes on a multitude of scales and organizational levels.
Landscape ecology is the science of studying and improving relationships between ecological processes in the environment and particular ecosystems. This is done within a variety of landscape scales, development spatial patterns, and organizational levels of research and policy.
In this chapter, we define landscape ecology, briefly review its intellectual roots, introduce key concepts related to scale, and present an overview of the remainder of the book. In addition, some commonly used terms in landscape ecology are defined in Table 1.1.