Reviews
Engaging and insightful. I've studied ecology all my life, and still learned things from this book. Steele offers some perspectives that more ecologists need to bring into their consciousness.
This is the wisdom of a lifetime of study and research on oaks. The author shows us the world in an acorn and its dispersal. Life is a fascinating chain of continuously evolving, interlinked dependencies and relationships. I can think of no better book to show readers a glimpse of this.
A must-read exploration of the amazingly diverse evolutionary adaptations that oaks have developed to deal with seed predators and trick them into dispersing seeds. Michael Steele's passion and years of first-hand experience with the topic resonate through the book. A great source for students and anyone interested in plant ecology.
This book remarkably and comprehensively illustrates the critical ecosystem process of animal-mediated oak dispersal, while at the same time posing new questions that will keep this area of research alive for many years to come.
Oak Seed Dispersal illustrates the deep synthesis of intrinsic and extrinsic factors that drive seed dispersal and natural regeneration of oaks globally. The oak-animal models reviewed by Dr. Steele offer readers a broad look at some interesting theories and methodologies related to plant-animal interactions and behavioral ecology.
Book Details
Foreword, by Stephen B. Vander Wall
Preface
Chapter 1. Seed Dispersal
Chapter 2. The Distribution, Diversity, and Evolution of the Oaks
Chapter 3. The Oak Life Cycle
Chapter 4. Masting in Oaks
Chapter 5
Foreword, by Stephen B. Vander Wall
Preface
Chapter 1. Seed Dispersal
Chapter 2. The Distribution, Diversity, and Evolution of the Oaks
Chapter 3. The Oak Life Cycle
Chapter 4. Masting in Oaks
Chapter 5. The Oak Dispersal Process: Intrinsic Factors I
Chapter 6. The Oak Dispersal Process: Intrinsic Factors II
Chapter 7. The Oak Dispersal Process: Extrinsic Factors I
Chapter 8. The Oak Dispersal Process: Extrinsic Factors II
Chapter 9. The Rodents: Seed Predators or Seed Dispersers?
Chapter 10. The Jays: A Different Kind of Oak Dispersal Agent
Chapter 11. The Mind of the Scatterhoarder
Chapter 12. The Insects: Acorn Predators, Parasites, or Commensals?
Chapter 13. Anthropogenic Factors Influencing Oak Dispersal, Establishment, and Regeneration
Chapter 14. Threatened Oak Forests and Oak Forest Conservation
Chapter 15. Oak Dispersal and Oak-Animal Interactions: Looking Forward
Literature Cited
Index