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Back Matter Source: Ecology, Vol. 80, No. 5 (Jul., 1999) Published by: Ecological Society of America Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/176574 . Accessed: 08/05/2014 20:14 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Ecological Society of America is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Ecology. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 20:14:45 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Back Matter

Back MatterSource: Ecology, Vol. 80, No. 5 (Jul., 1999)Published by: Ecological Society of AmericaStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/176574 .

Accessed: 08/05/2014 20:14

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Ecological Society of America is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Ecology.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 20:14:45 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Back Matter

New from , Forthcoming Meetings of the

Ecological Society of Am erica

_ ; ~~~~~~The science editor of the New YorklTmesissuesa 1999

w ~~~~~~~~call to arms for beach lovers and environmental- Spokane, Aashingto ists that covers the sci- 8-1 2 August

| ~~~~~~~~ence as well as the |

| ~~~~~~~~hubris-filled history of_

r _! |

~~~~Americans' efforts to hold - |

11 ~~~~~~back the sea.iL

"6Outstnding ..... It seems to me that the whole 1 | coastal zone crisis, as I view it, is covered. Yet it doesn't overwhelm: everything in its time and place. And it is so well written it will hold the Held at the Opera House and Convention Center on reader's attention to the end."-Orrin Pikey, author the Spokane River, surrounded by glacial lakes, snow- of The BeachesAre Moving capped mountains, and unique landforms, this years

of The BeachesyAre annual meeting theme is 'Legacies, Landscapes, and 336 pages * 27 photos * $24.95 cloth Limits: Bridging Borders.' It is a tribute to the unique

history and environment of eastern Washington State; a region familiar to trappers, traders, and Na-

b. _ ftive American peoples, explored by the Lewis and ulab :: :Clark expedition in 1805, and settled more than 100

_ledi lty Sim-Cse years ago along the cascading falls of the Spokane and Pel cy River.

Ciaf. .

The Plenary and Symposia Sessions reflect an eco- _ T ^:logical science that bridges state, national and disci-

_f.iEininms T . plinary borders. Field trips will explore many of the diverse natural features and landscapes of the Spo-

Fmw m'd by ESO~ kane and Palouse regions and nearby sites in Wash- ington, Oregon and Idaho.

The result of a conference of the American Museum BES/ESA 2000 of Natural History's Center for Biodiversity and Orlando, Florida Conservation, this book 9-13 April

brings together an international array of experts from the scientific, societal, and conservation policy areas A special meeting of the British Ecological Society to address policy responses to the problem of and the Ecological Society of America at Disney's biodiversity loss. Coronado Springs Resort. 394 pages * $25.00 paper To receive monthly news of new Earth Science liles, sign up at 2000

COUMBI~sA UNIESTY PRS_ Snowbird, Utah columbia.edu/culcup 800-944-8648 |7-10 August

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Page 3: Back Matter

Coming in the August 1999 Issue of

Ecological Applications:

S. R. CARPENTER, D. LUDWIG, AND W. A. BROCK. Management of eutrophication for lakes subject to potentially irreversible change.

K. T. PEREZ, E. W. DAVEY, R. H. MOORE, P. R. BURN, M. S. RosOL, J. A. CARDIN,

R. L. JOHNSON, AND D. N. KoPANs. Application of computer-aided tomography (CT) to the study of estuarine benthic communities.

A. R. BLAUSTEIN, J. B. HAYS, P. D. HOFFMAN, D. P. CHIVERS, J. M. KIESECKER, W. P. LEONARD, A. MARCO, D. H. OLSON, J. K. REASER, AND R. G. ANTHONY. DNA repair and resistance to UV-B radiation in western spotted frogs.

R. S. DUNCAN AND C. A. CHAPMAN. Seed dispersal and potential forest succes- sion in abandoned agriculture in tropical Africa.

W. H. CLEMENTS. Metal tolerance and predator-prey interactions in benthic macroinvertebrate communities from Rocky Mountain streams.

EcologicalApplications is the premier journal concerned with the application and implication of ecological science for environmental problem-solving. To subscribe, contact Member and

Subscriber Services, ESA, 2010 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20036; telephone (202) 833-8773; fax (202) 833-8775; e-mail: [email protected].

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Page 4: Back Matter

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL of ECOLOGY MANAGING EDITOR

EtAssz$tttYB6^gt 52l Michael Bull _ - Flinders University of South Australla, Adelaide

Published for the Ecological Society of Australia, the Australian Journal of Ecology is the premier journal for pure and applied ecological research in the Southern Hemisphere. Volume 24 of the journal sees a change. The Ecological Society of Australia is encouraging a wider perspective in its journal to cover the broader geographical region of the Southern Hemisphere. We believe much can be gained by ecologists everywhere, from having a journal which covers the ecology of the Southern Hemisphere.

_c.

The Australian Journal of Ecology publishes research papers, critical reviews, short articles, notes and comments on previously published papers, abstracts of theses, and book reviews dealing with any aspect of pure or applied research.

Abstracting and indexing Australian Journal of Ecology is covered by APAIS, BIOSIS Database, CAB Abstracts,

__Cambridge ScentitAbstracts, Current Contents/Agrcultre, Biology & Environmental Sciences, Ecological Abstracts, Elsevier BIOBASE/Current Awareness in Biological Sciences.

Subscription rates Australian Journal of Ecology is published bimonthly. The subscription rates for 1999 (Volume 24) are Aus$565 (Australasia); US$615 and/or Aus$995 (overseas) per calendar year. Subscribers will automatically receive issues already published in 1999. The journal is despatched to subscribers outside Australia by TNT Mailfast.

For more information visit the journal home page rS , www.blackwell-science.com/products/journals/xaje.htm

I would like to receive a FREE sample copy of Australian Journal of Ecology I would like to subscribe to Ausftrlian Journal of Ecology at the 1999 (Volume 24) subscription rate.

I will pay by: 0 cheque/bank draft/postal order payable to Blackwell Science Asia 0l Visa 0 Mastercard 0 Bankcard 01 AMEX 01 Diners Club 01 JCB

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Page 5: Back Matter

-~~~~~~~~~M U

CHOOSE FROM AN IMMENSE LIBRARY OF RELIABLE STATISTICS With SYSTAT's extensive statistical library, you'll never have to worry about finding the right statistic for the specific needs of your research data. Designed by statisticians, SYSTAT's algorithms give reliable results - even when your data are extreme.

VISUALIZE YOUR DATA WITH UNMATCHED GRAPHIC CAPABILITIES SYSTAT 8.0 offers more analytical graphs than any other desktop statistics package. For example, the spatial statistics capabilities allow you to represent your data with five flexible semnivariogram models and four Kriging options. SYSTAT's map library includes world continents, nations, European subgroups, overlaying

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H ~~~~~~~DRAMATICALLY INCREASE YOUR ANALYTICAL POWER SYSTAT's elegant browser-style interface and powerful computation engine will dramatically increase your analytical power. With SYSTAT's General Linear model, you can specify interactions,

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Page 6: Back Matter

Your New Best Friend

For CO2 Measurement.

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The GasHound800 features high sensi- Built-in digital outputs (high and low About This Great tivity like the Blood Hound and the alarms) can be set to allow the New Anal er. GasHound 800 to signal another device

to react to changing CO2 concentrations.

LI-COR's GasHound800 is packed with The GasHoundA800 is insensitive to dirt, 8I 88.645.7

more value than any other CO2 analyzer making cleaning an infrequent event. If in its price range. Low noise, automatic cleaning is necessary, the GasHound's _

temperature and pressure compensation unique, innovative design gives you the 'PC 'Si combine to provide high accuracy for ability to clean it yourself. No factory ~ ^) the entire measurement range (0-2,000 recalibration is necessary, just reset the 4421 Superior Street, Lincoln, NE, 68504 ppm, or 0-20,000 ppm). zero and span and you're on your way! 402-467-3576, www.Iicor.com

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Page 7: Back Matter

_ _ _ __ i B l . s S .. X X | | | . . _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . .. .. .. ...

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ | . S_ .St, . .W .,f,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.. ..... ...

*+ 4

Data~~~~~~ogger_ ,. _0s ^ *si34ff f

Thanks to the new LI-1400 both a multichannel data logger and Call Isw fur Norm DataLogger, you have the a powerful hand held meter in one lmfsrmaflhm o the flexibility in one instrument to package, the LI- 1400 DataLogger LI-lOU Iata mupr meet applications that vary from delivers both value and perfor-

remote~~~~ eniomna dat logn mance. With6 simple seu an 14 8- 4 -1 4 in harsh environments, to hand held operation, the hardest thing you'll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i ,.li~.t ̂.*,T.

i aquatic sysem. Bypoidin sensor toesr. I ,ntent htpllww.icro

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Page 8: Back Matter

New E coBeaker is an ecological simulation program, designed "Overall, an laboratories for use by students in the classroom but with features extremely effective Econ eake useful for research as well. EcoBeaker provides a two- include: dimensional world in the computer into which students can of usoft re

c place creatures whose behaviors they design. As the of w

Samssure-fUads creatures eat, reproduce, move around, and die, students The product is an the most effcdent can perform experiments, sample the populations, and plot excellent teaching way to sample for biodiversity? statistics to compare model output against the real world aid for ecology r Competition - and theoretical predictions. EcoBeaker comes with over 20 I i ''' Predictthe results 4 classroom-tested laboratories (see side bar) which cover a I is as ver go of Competition broad range of subjects across the fields of ecology, fun to play with, between phytoplankton conservation biology, and evolution. Each lab is written as which it was clearly species based on IndIvI-dual growth an experiment that the student conducts. Instructors and designed to be. rates. students can also easily construct their own, novel models. st Aquatic lrophic Rated 5/5 stars. Cascades - How New Laboratories covering topics such as tropic cascades, J. Wright, does, adding fish to a lake affect lower evolution and selection, sampling for biodiversity, diseases, Life Sciences Educatfonal trophic levels?

programing spatial models, and many more. Also includes Computing 9 (1), UK

Seteage ho all laboratories from the original EcoBeaker. increased sewag

dafestal will New features include a completely redesigned interface, 'A cleverly constructed piece

Sick Fish- better graphics, a new macro language for total flexibility in of software which is easy and various strateges constructing and automatically running models, up to 256 fun to use and veyj instructive. for controlling species, on-line help, access restriction, and much more. It is flexible and extensible and diseases on a fishfI fanm. comes provided with a variety Islands and Natural .. - _ X", Rof scenarios for examining Sehodion - Explaek aspects of ecological theory

changes with and practice. The different weather EcoBeaker is documentation is well-written conditions and a xeln spatially anexcelent and very readable (with clear hetbo neous3 ,. envirogents. simulation instructions for all the

The Heterozygote program tat laboratories and a thorough Advantage - lets you design user manual for the software r-plore thef Sad lay with itself.? Designed for use in a dynamicS ofsckle ai e - ta cell anemia and computerlaboratory... itcould malaria resistance. wideo Varieties of Spatial ~. ecological alsoebeuveiryusefulinthe Maedels -x SAu

-'s l ecture theatre." Models - A models. comparison m e t beten cellular a powerful tool I Montgomery, UniServe automata, PDE, individual-based for teaching Science News 7, Australia ODE, and nule- based spatial ecology. models. ALSO from Beakeffare:

... and more, G. Santini, Virtual Forest

labs from the 12 Quarterly Review Virtual Forest lets you explore a Central

origials Erom e of Biology, (LS. Hardwoods forest using 3-d virtual reality original E L

. I I ,technology. Pratice sampling techniques and keying out trees.

Ii aI I I _

I~~S I -

Ecoeaker is used in e

~~~~~~fo h Eco Beaker vve usie. EncollkradBekraeaegbt TaemrsofBaearanEl

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Page 9: Back Matter

Contents continued from outside back cover

1713 1776 Induced responses to herbivory in wild radish: Effects of birds and rodents on synthetic effects on several herbivores and plant fitness tallgrass communities * H. F. HOWE AND J. S. BROWN * ANURAG A. AGRA WAL

1724 1782 Why does early-season herbivory affect Book Reviews subsequent budburst? * D. T. QUIRINS AND M. L. BARBOSA - Conservation biological control * SVATA M. McKINNON LOUDA

1736 DESALLE AND SCHIERWATER -Molecular approaches to Blade abandonment/proliferation: a novel ecology and evolution * ROBERT M. ZINK

mechanism for rapid epiphyte control in marine macrophytes* MARK M. LITTLER AND DIANE S. LITTLER EBERT Plant and animal populations: methods in

demography * ROBERT P. FRECKLETON

1747 LAmBERS, CHAPIN, AND PONS -Plant physiological Bidirectional facilitation and interference ecology * HOWARD S. NEUFELD

between shrubs and annuals in the Mojave Desert * CLAUS HOLZAPFEL AND BRUCE E. MAHALL

1787 1762 Books and Monographs Received Indirect facilitation: evidence and predictions from a riparian community* JONATHAN M. LEVINE 1788

Reports Errata

1770 Instructions to Authors Effects of leaf-litter accumulation on riparian Available on the World Wide Web at plant diversity across Europe * CHRISTER NILSSON, (http://esa.sdsc.edu). SHAOJUN XIONG, MATS E. JOHANSSON, AND LENA B.-M. (Also available from the Publications Office upon VOUGHT request.)

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Page 10: Back Matter

The Robert H. MacArthur Award Lecture 1594 Seed mass, seedling emergence, and

1455 environmental factors in seven rain forest The ecological consequences of changes in Psychotria (Rubiaceae) * HORACIO PAZ SUSAN J. biodiversity: a search for general principles MAZER, AND MIGUEL MARTINEZ-RAMOS * DAVID TILMAN

1607

Concepts and Synthesis Asymptotic height as a predictor of photosynthetic characteristics in Malaysian rain

1475 forest trees * S. C. THOMAS AND F. A. BAZZAZ

Seed dispersal near and far: patterns across 1623 temperate and tropical forests * JAMES S. CLARK 623

MILES ILMANRUTH KRN ERI MACKLN ANianks between microbial population dynamics MILES SILMAN, RUTH KERN, ERIC MACKLIN, AND and nitrogen availability in an alpine ecosystem JANNEKE HILLERISLAMBERS * DAVID A. LIPSON, STEVEN K. SCHMIDT, AND RUSSELL K

1495 - MONSON Trophic rank and the species-area relationship 1632 * ROBERT D. HOLT, JOHN H. LAWTON, GARY A. POLIS, The El Niflo southern oscillation, variable AND NEO D. MARTINEZ fruit production, and famine in a tropical forest

* S. JOSEPH WRIGHT, CLAUDIO CARRASCO, OSVALDO 1505 CALDERON, AND STEVEN PATON Universal power laws govern intermittent rarity in communities of interacting species * REGIS 1648 FERRIERE AND BERNARD CAZELLES. The effect of habitat corridors on rates of

transfer and interbreeding between vole demes 1522 * JON AARS AND ROLF A. IMS Global patterns of plant invasions and the concept of invasibility * W. M. LONSDALE 1656

Home range analysis using a mechanistic home 1537 range model * P. R. MOORCROFT, M. A. LEWIS, AND

Detecting population-level consequences of R. L. CRABTREE ongoing environmental change without long- 1666 term monitoring * DANIEL F. DOAK AND WILLIAM 1666 MORRIS Within-season variability of pupal period in the

autumnal moth: a bet-hedging strategy?. TOOMAS

Other Articles TAMMARU, KAI RUOHOMAKI, AND IRMA SALONIEMI

1678 1552 Cost of flight apparatus and optimum body size Early vs. asymptotic growth responses of of aphid migrants * ANTHONY F. G. DIXON AND herbaceous plants to elevated COP S. C. THOMAS, RAVEL KINDLMANN M. JASIENSKI, AND F. A. BAZZAZ

1691 1568 Modeling the spread of pine wild disease caused Validity of extrapolating field CO2 experiments by nematodes with pine sawyers as vectors to predict carbon sequestration in natural * AKIKO YOSHIMURA, KOHKICHI KAWASAKI, FUGO ecosystems * YIQI LUO AND JAMES F REYNOLDS TAKASU, KATSUMI TOGASHI, KAZUYOSHI FUTAI, AND

NANAKO SHIGESADA 1584 Whole-plant consequences of Crassulacean acid 1703 metabolism for a tropical forest understory Nectar-robbing bumble bees reduce the fitness plant * JOHN B. SKILLMAN, MILTON GARCIA, AND KLAUS of Ipomopsis aggregata (Polemoniaceae) WINTER | * REBECCA E. IRWIN AND ALISON K. BRODY

Contents continued on inside of back cover

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