Tropical rain forests contain most of the world's known biological
diversity. Understanding how this diversity persists in the face of
anthropogenic disturbance is an increasingly critical issue. To manage
and preserve intact ecosystems, and to restore degraded ones, a better
knowledge of the basic ecological processes that affect them is
necessary. We must be able to answer such questions as: How are plant
communities structured? How is diversity maintained in species-rich
ecosystems? What ecological factors determine which plants grow where?
Many processes are known to shape plant communities, but what is their
relative importance? Approaching answers to these questions is the
primary focus of this book. The book presents a case study, built upon
experiments performed in a Peruvian rain forest. The author conducted a
series of manipulative experiments on tree seedlings to dissect the
various forces that shape their coexistence. This book is directed to an
audience of ecologists, forest researchers, and conservationists.