Une pure merveille !
Un roman d'une grande beauté, drôle, fin, extrêmement lumineux sur des sujets difficiles : la perte de
l'être aimé, la dureté de la vie et la tristesse qu'on barricade parfois... Elise franco-japonaise,
orpheline de sa maman veut poser LA question à son père et elle en trouvera le courage au fil des pages,
grâce au retour de sa grand-mère du japon, de sa rencontre avec son extravagante amie Stella..
Ensemble il ne diront plus Sayonara mais Mata Ne !
Why do species live where they live ? What determines the abondance and diversity of species in a given area ? What role do species play in the functioning...
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Livré chez vous entre le 1 octobre et le 8 octobre
En librairie
Résumé
Why do species live where they live ? What determines the abondance and diversity of species in a given area ? What role do species play in the functioning of entire ecosystems ? All of these questions share a single core conceptthe ecological niche. Although the niche concept Las declined in popularity in recent years, Jonathan M Chase and Mathew A Leibold argue that the niche is an ideal tool with which to unify disparate research and theoretical approaches in contemporary ecology. Chase and Leibold define the niche as including both what an organism needs from its environment and how that organism's activities in turn shape its environment. Drawing on the theory of consumer-resource interactions, as well as its graphical analysis, they develop a framework for understanding niches that is flexible enough to include a variety of small- and large-scale processes, from resource competition, predation, and stress to community structure, biodiversity and ecosystem fonction. Chase and Leibold's synthetic approach will interest ecologists from a vide range of subdisciplines.