Image for Principles and Standards for Measuring Primary Production

Principles and Standards for Measuring Primary Production

Part of the The ^ALong-Term Ecological Research Network Series series
See all formats and editions

This volume will lay out the best methods for measuring net primary productivity (NPP) in ecological research. Primary productivity is the rate at which energy is stored in the organic matter of plants per unit area of the earth's surface. NPP is the beginning point of the carbon cycle, so our ability to accurately measure NPP is important.

The book includes chapters for each of the critical biome types to offer special techniques that work best in each biome.

For example, there are chapters that discuss grassland ecosystems, urban ecosystems, marine pelagic ecosystems, forest ecosystems, and salt marsh ecosystems, among others.

All 26 LTER sites will be expected to collect and report data using these methods, but ecologists more generally should also find these methods useful and authoritative.

Currently no standard methods or standards exist. Measuring NPP is fundamental to many ecosystem studies at thousands of sites, and having identified standards and methods would be extremely useful for comparing measurements among sites and for compiling a broad scale understanding of the environmental, biological, and nutrition controls on NPP. This book would resemble the Standard Soil Measurement volume in the LTER series in that it reaches well beyond any single LTER site to apply to any ecosystem. It should be rather more widely used than the soil measurements volume, in that measuring productivity is so fundamental to any ecological analyses as well as agronomy, forestry, fisheries, limnology and oceanography.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£71.10 Save 10.00%
RRP £79.00
Product Details
Oxford University Press Inc
0195168666 / 9780195168662
Hardback
577.15
17/05/2007
United States
English
240 p. : ill.
24 cm
research & professional Learn More