22 research outputs found

    Performance of commercial soybeans in Illinois, 1978

    Get PDF
    Chiefly tables.Cover title

    Expert System for Planning the Establishment of Turfs

    No full text

    High-extraction coal mining in Illinois: Effects on crop production, 1985-1987

    No full text
    This work was sponsored by the Illinois Mine Subsidence Research Program administered by the Illinois State Geological Survey through a grant from the Coal Development Board of the Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources and the members of the Illinois coal industry.Ope

    High-extraction coal mining in Illinois: Effects on crop production, 1985-1987

    No full text
    This work was sponsored by the Illinois Mine Subsidence Research Program administered by the Illinois State Geological Survey through a grant from the Coal Development Board of the Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources and the members of the Illinois coal industry.Ope

    Functional diversity within a morphologically conservative genus of predators: implications for functional equivalence and redundancy in ecological communities

    No full text
    1. The idea that sets of species may have similar effects on population, community or ecosystem processes is a prevalent theme in many areas of ecology, especially in the context of biodiversity and ecosystem function. If indeed species are functionally equivalent, limiting similarity suggests that it should be closely related, morphologically similar species using similar resources in a similar manner.2. We assayed the functional equivalence of three congeneric, morphologically similar predatory fish species (genus Enneacanthus). Functional equivalence was evaluated using aspects of both effects of fish on a variety of prey responses and the growth responses of the fish themselves as a measure of energy consumption. Fish were matched by initial size to control for effects of body size. A strict definition of functional equivalence based on niche theory was used to delineate it from the alternative of functional diversity.3. Based on observed effects on larval anurans, only a single species pair could roughly be judged functionally equivalent, but these two species showed the greatest differences in growth rate and, hence, metabolic demand. Using the criterion of relative yield total, again, only a single pair could roughly be judged equivalent, however, members of this alternative species pair were dramatically different in their effects on larval anurans. Thus, as previously shown for a more diverse set of species, grouping of species by similarity in effects depends upon the specific response variable. 4. Overall range of effects produced on a variety of response variables was surprising, given the similarity in morphology and autecology, strong phylogenetic affinity, and the fact that neither predator size nor growth explained significant variation. Each species appears to be interacting with the environment in a different manner, either as a consequence of differences in metabolic demand or differences in preferences or efficiency with regard to prey types.5. Observed responses are consistent with the predictions of niche theory and support an alternative explanation for observed relationships between diversity and ecosystem function. Our work suggests that functional equivalence may be uncommon, difficult to predict a priori, and that functional diversity, not functional equivalence, may underlie observed diversity–ecosystem function relationships
    corecore