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Numerous step-by-step tutorials help the reader to learn quickly
A special chapter on next generation Flash prepares readers for the future
Includes ten tips on how to protect flash sites from hackers
Numerous step-by-step tutorials help the reader to learn quickly A special chapter on next generation Flash prepares readers for the future Includes ten tips on how to protect flash sites from hackers
Auteur
Andrew Greller received the Ph.D. in Botany from Columbia University, in 1967. He is Professor Emeritus of Biology at the City University of New York (CUNY). Greller publishes in a wide variety of scientific journals, on subjects that include conservation ecology, floristics, vegetation geography, bioclimatology, tropical ecology, alpine ecology, eastern North American forest classification, as well as plant morphology and paleobotany. Throughout his 30-year career at Queens College, he taught numerous college and university-level courses on botany, ecology and bioclimatology. He is a Research Associate at the Institute for Systematic Botany of the New York Botanical Garden. Greller was twice past-President of the Torrey Botanical Society, the oldest botanical society in the Americas. He has been honored with citations and certificates from national and local political entities and non-governmental groups. Greller travels widely, leads field trips, and presents lectures ona wide range of botanical and ecological topics. He has served as a consultant and reviewer for many textbook companies.
Kazue Fujiwara is Professor Emerita of Yokohama National University and Research Professor in the Graduate School of Nanobioscience of Yokohama City University since 2010. She received her Doctor of Science from Tohoku University in 1972. Prof. Fujiwara is a vegetation scientist, adhering closely to classical standards and procedures but also able to apply vegetation science to field study and vegetation rehabilitation efforts in Asia, Europe, Africa and the USA. Her specialties are deciduous and evergreen broad-leaved forests, tropical and subtropical forests, the vegetation of mangroves, mires and coastlines in Asia through the world, as well as detailed vegetation monographs in Japan. In particular, she identifies relationship between potential natural vegetation and actual vegetation, and represents these on vegetation maps.She is also known for her interest in and extensive knowledge of the vegetation of the whole world, having studied vegetation in the field in about 60 countries or comparable regions, on all continents except Antarctica. She publishes specialized studies on Japan, mainland Asia, Southeast Asia, Kenya, eastern North America and Amazon forests often in comparison with other parts of the world. Prof. Fujiwara served as an INTECOL board member (2001-2008) and as a Vice-President of the International Association for Vegetation Science (2000-2007), remaining still in the Advisory Committee of the latter.
Franco Pedrotti is a botanist specialized in the study and cartography of vegetation, environmental cartography and ecological planning. He has also worked in conservation of nature and its resources on the technical and scientific level, as well as in its promotion. He served as President of the Italian Botanical Society from 1982 to 1990, and as President of the Association Internationale Francophone de Phytosociologie from 1982 to 2002, and was awarded honorary degrees in Biology from the Babes-Bolyai University of Cluj-Napoca and the A.I. Cuza University of Iasi (Romania), in Ecology and Biogeography from the University of Palermo (Italy) and in Gearchitecture from University of Brest (France). He taught Botany, Geobotanical Cartography and Conservation of Nature and its Resources at the Universities of Padova, Milan, Catania, Ferrara and Camerino; currently he is Professor Emeritus at the University of Camerino. He published several textbooks for university students of Biology and Natural Sciences on conservation of flora, vegetation, the environment and protected areas.
Contenu
Section 1. General problems of vegetation interpretation.- 1. Evidence of unique association between single forest vegetation types and seral sequences: praise for the concept of 'vegetation series'.- Section 2. Global aspects of Plant function.- 2. Latitudinal variation in plant functional types.- 3. lant eco-morphological traits as adaptations to environmental conditions: some comparisons between different biomes across the world.- Section 3. Regional vegetation types and distribution, prehistoric landscapes.- 4. Changes in the landscape and vegetation under the influence of prehistoric and historic man in Central Europe.- 5. Sclerophyllous vs. Deciduous forests in Spain: A standard case of Mediterranean climatic vegetation distribution.- 6. What is the 'True' Mediterranean-type vegetation?.- 7. Characterization of vegetation on the plains of European Russia.- 8. Degeneration and regeneration process of Carpinus betulus forests in the Central Alps of northern Italy.- 9. Phytoindicating comparison of vegetation of the Polish Tatras, the Ukrainian Carpathians, and the Crimean Mountains.- 10. Beech (Fagus grandifolia) in the plant communities of Long Island and adjacent locations, and some comparisons across eastern North America.- 11. Phytosociological study of Pteroceltis tatarinowii forest in the deciduous-forest zone of eastern China.- 12. Vegetation ecology of Sphagnum wetlands in subtropical subalpine regions-A case study in the Qi Zimei mountains.- Section 4. Vegetation and plant ecology.- 13. High-resolution aerial imagery for assessing changes in canopy status in Hawaian.- 14. Plant assemblages of abandoned ore-mining heaps: a case study from Roia Montan mining area, Romania 'hi'a (Metrosideros polymorpha) rainforest.- 15. Autoecological and synecological resilience of Angelica heterocarpa M.J. Lloyd, observed in the Loire Estuary (France).- 16. Environmental mapping: From analysis maps to the synthesis map.