The New Neotropical Companion

(Elliott) #1
and S. V. Heald. 2004. Flowering Plants of the Neotropics.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press.
Utley, J. F., and K. Burt- Utley. 1983. Bromeliads (Pina silvestre,
pinuelas, chiras, wild pineapple). In Costa Rican Natural
History, D. H. Janzen (ed.). Chicago: Univ. of Chicago
Press.
Wallace, Alfred Russel (1853). Palm Trees of the Amazon and
Their Uses. London: John Van Voorst.
Walterm, K. S. 1983. Orchidaceae (orquideas, orchids). In
Costa Rican Natural History, D. H. Janzen (ed.). Chicago:
Univ. of Chicago Press.
Zahl, P. A. 1975. Hidden worlds in the heart of a plant. Nat.
Geog. 147: 388– 397.
Zuchowski, W. 2007. Tropical Plants of Costa Rica: A Guide
to Native and Exotic Flora. Ithaca, NY: Comstock.
{~?~DES: Note, there is no further reading list for
chapter 4.}

Chapter 5: Further Reading
Baker, D. F. 2007. Reassessing carbon sinks. Science 316: 1708–
1709.
Brown, S., and A. E. Lugo. 1982. The storage and production
of organic matter in tropical forests and their role in the
global carbon cycle. Biotropica 14: 161– 187.
Bunker, D. E., F. DeClerck, J. C. Bradford, R. K. Colwell, I.
Perfecto, O. L. Phillips, M. Sankaran, and S. Naeem. 2005.
Species loss and aboveground carbon storage in a tropical
forest. Science 310: 1029– 1031.
Chambers, J. Q., N. Higuchi, E. S. Tribuzy, and S. E.
Trumbore. 2001. Carbon sink for a century. Nature 410:
429.
Clark, D. A. 2004. Tropical forests and global warming:
slowing it down or speeding it up? Front. Ecol. Environ.
2: 73– 80.
Clark, D. A., S. Brown, D. W. Kicklighter, J. Q. Chambers, J. R.
Thomplinson, J. Ni, and E. A. Holland. 2001. Net primary
productivity in tropical forests: An evaluation and synthesis
of existing field data. Ecol. Appl. 11: 371– 384.
Clark, D. A., and D. B. Clark. 1994. Climate induced annual
variation in canopy tree growth in a Costa Rican tropical
rainforest. Jour. Ecol. 82: 865– 872.
Clark, D. L. 2002. Are tropical forests an important carbon
sink? Reanalysis of the long- term plot data. Ecol. Appl.
12: 3– 7.
Cochrane, M. A. 2003. Fire science for rainforests. Nature 421:
913– 919.
Grace, J., and Y. Malhi. 2002. Carbon dioxide goes with the
fl o w. Nature 416: 594– 595.
Graham, E. A., S. S. Mulkey, S. J. Wright, K. Kitajima, and
N. G. Phillips. 2003. Cloud cover limits productivity in
a rainforest tree during tropical rainy seasons. Proc. Nat.
Acad. Sci. USA 100: 572– 576.

Holloway, M. 1993. Sustaining the Amazon. Sci. Amer. 269:
90– 99.
Hughen, K. A., T. I. Eglinton, L. Xu, and M. Makou. 2004.
Abrupt tropical vegetation response to rapid climate
changes. Science 304: 1955– 1959.
Malhi, Y., and J. Grace. 2000. Tropical forests and atmospheric
carbon dioxide. Trends in Ecol. Evol. 15: 332– 337.
Mayorga, E., A. K. Aufdenkampe, C. A. Masiello, A. V.
Krusche, J. I. Hedges, P. D. Quay, J. E. Richey, and T. A.
Brown. 2005. Young organic matter as a source of carbon
dioxide outgassing from Amazonian rivers. Nature 436:
538– 541.
Mellilo, J. M., A. D. McGuire, D. W. Kicklighter, B. I. Moore,
C. J. Vorosmarty, and A. L. Schloss. 1993. Global climate
change and terrestrial net primary production. Nature 363:
234– 240.
Moran, E. F., E. Brondizio, P. Mausel, and Y. Wu. 1994.
Integrating Amazonian vegetation, land- use, and
satellite data. Bioscience 44: 329– 338.
Page, S. E., F. Siegert, J. O. Rieley, H- D. V. Boehm, A. Jaya,
and S. Limin. 2002. The amount of carbon released from
peat and forest fires in Indonesia during 1997. Nature 420:
61– 65.
Phillips, O. L., and 10 other authors. 1998. Changes in the
carbon balance of tropical forests: evidence from long-
term plots. Science 282: 439– 442.
Phillips, O. L., and 18 other authors. 2002. Increasing
dominance of large lianas in Amazonian forests. Nature
418: 770– 774.
Phillips, O. L., and 66 other authors. 2009. Drought sensitivity
of the Amazon rainforest. Science 323: 1344– 1347.
Raich, J. W., E. B. Rastetter, J. M. Melillo, D. W. Kicklighter, P.
A. Steudler, B. J. Peterson, A. L. Grace, B. Moore III, and C.
J. Vorosmarty. 1991. Potential net primary productivity in
South America: Application of a global model. Ecol. Appl.
1: 399– 429.
Raich, J. W., A. E. Russell, K. Kitayama, W. J. Parton, and
P. M. Vitousek. 2006. Temperature influences carbon
accumulation in moist tropical forests. Ecology 87: 76– 87.
Richey, J. E., J. M. Melack, A. K. Aufdenkampe, V. M.
Ballester, and L. L. Hess. 2002. Outgassing from
Amazonian rivers and wetlands as a large tropical source
of atmospheric CO2. Nature 416: 617– 620.
Saleska, S. R., and 17 other authors. 2003. Carbon in
Amazon forests: Unexpected seasonal fluxes and
disturbance- induced losses. Science 302: 1554– 1557.
Saleska, S. R., K. Didan, A. R. Huete, and H. R. da Rocha.


  1. Amazon forests green- up during 2005 drought.
    Science 318: 612.
    Schiermeier, Q. 2006. Methane finding baffles scientists. Nature
    439: 128.
    Schuur, E. A. G. 2003. Productivity and global climate
    revisited: The sensitivity of tropical forest growth to
    precipitation. Ecology 84: 1165– 1170.


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