Field and Laboratory Methods for General Ecology,/
James E. Bower
- Fourth Edition
- Boston, Mass: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 1997.
- xi, 273 p.
Unit 1*Collecting, Analyzing, and Reporting Ecological Data1a. Ecological Sampling1b. Data Analysis1c. Writing Research ReportsUnit 2*Analysis of Habitats2a. Microhabitat Analysis2b. Atmospheric Analysis2c. Substrate Analysis2d. Analysis of Aquatic Habitats2e. Chemical Analysis of Habitats2f. Habitat AssessmentUnit 3*Biotic Sampling Methods3a. Plot Sampling3b. Transect Sampling3c. Point-quarter Sampling3d. Terrestrial Invertebrate Sampling3e. Aquatic Sampling3f. Capture-recapture Sampling3g. Removal Sampling3h. Terrestrial Vertebrate SamplingUnit 4*Analysis of Populations4a. Age Structure and Survivorship4b. Population Growth4c. Population Dispersion 4d. Competition . PredationUnit 5* Analysis of Communities5a. Community Structure5b. Species Diversity5c. Community SimilarityUnit 6*Analysis of Production6a. Biomass Measurements 6b. Aquatic Productivity 6c. Aquatic Microecosystems Appendixes A. Symbols and Abbreviations B. Equivalents for Units of Measurements C. Atomic Weights of Elements D. Common Logarithm E. Microcomputer Programming