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Success and dominance in ecosystemsSuccess and dominance in ecosystems

Success and dominance in ecosystems1990

Edward Osborne Wilson

About this book

Professor Edward O. Wilson was elected by the ECI Jury chaired by Professor Sir Richard Southwood (University of Oxford, England) for his professional excellence in numerous publications, especially in the fields of population biology, biogeography, sociobiology, biodiversity, and evolutionary biology. Ed Wilson was born in Birmingham, Alabama (USA) in 1929. From Junior Fellow, he progressed at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (USA), to the Frank B. Baird Professorship of Science, also holding the Curatorship of Entomology in the University's Museum of Comparative Zoology. He has received prestigious international awards and is a top figure in current biological and ecological research. EE Book 2 addresses success and dominance in ecosystems with a mastership acquired over decades of devoted, critical research. Defining 'success' as evolutionary longevity of a clade (a species and its descendants), and 'dominance' as abundance of a clade controlling the appropriation of biomass and energy, Wilson exemplifies his subject by referring to eusocial insects, especially termites and ants, but also bees and wasps. [Inter-Research description]

Details

First published
1990
OL Work ID
OL1378179W

Subjects

Insect societiesInsectsEcologyBiotic communitiesColonies (Biology)

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.