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Phytosociology of the Beech (Fagus) Forests in East Asia

by Hukusima, Tukasa.
Authors: Matsui, Tetsuya.%author. | Nishio, Takayoshi.%author. | Pignatti, Sandro.%author. | YANG, Liang.%author. | Lu, Sheng-You.%author. | Kim, Moon-Hong.%author. | Yoshikawa, Masato.%author. | Honma, Hidekazu.%author. | Wang, Yuehua.%author. | SpringerLink (Online service) Series: Geobotany Studies, Basics, Methods and Case Studies Physical details: XI, 257 p. 41 illus., 37 illus. in color. online resource. ISBN: 3642356206 Subject(s): Geography. | Life sciences. | Physical geography. | Plant Ecology. | Botany. | Earth Sciences. | Biogeosciences. | Physical Geography. | Plant Ecology. | Plant Sciences.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 550 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Introduction -- Syntaxonomy of the East Asiatic Fagus Forests -- Synthetic Remarks.

This book describes the mountain forests of East Asia (Korea, Japan, China and Taiwan), the tree layers of which contain different species of the genus Fagus. The vegetation is primarily deciduous in the northern regions, whereas in South China evergreen trees can also be found: a total of 21 plant communities are described, with data on species composition, dominance, geographical distribution and ecology. A general comparison is provided by synoptic Table 1, which details the frequencies of ca. 1500 species  growing in the Fagus forests; biodiversity and evolution are discussed. The book, which is the fruit of a major international collaboration, presents a synthesis of extended original investigations by the authors and hardly accessible specialist literature.

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