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1 The article is based on the book by the author entitled Elephant on the Bridge. 2004, Budapest: L’Harmattan. References Cited Anderson , Eugen 1996 Ecologies of the Heart. Emotion, Belief, and the Environment . New York
Community ecology
Mittelbach, G. M. 2012. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Publishers. Sunderland, Massachusetts USA. www.sinauer.com. 400 pages + 166 illustrations. Paperback. ISBN 978-0-87893-509-3. Price: US$72.95
This paper broadly compares environmentalism in Hungary and Slovakia, with a specific focus on Slovakia’s green movement under late-socialism and after. Nature activism in both countries was not directly controlled by the Party, and in each case individuals pushed the boundaries of activism and redefined notions of protest and dissent. But the way these two movements emerged were quite different from one another. In Hungary, the movement coalesced around a big “international” Soviet-style mega-project. This was the flashpoint. In Hungary, the Nagymaros dam project was an infringement — a monument of unhappy partnerships, and a symbol that fueled nationalist rumblings. In Slovakia, the whole notion of megaworks was not an unwelcome idea. But the differences between Hungarian and Slovak greens are more than the story of a dam controversy. While Hungary’s movement had its origins in the Danube River, Slovak greens emerged from the conservation of folk dwellings in the mountains. In Slovakia — the weekend amateur, the Catholic, the writer, the sociologist — instead found traction in the notion of human conservation. I explore these differences and examine how things change in the post-socialist period.
We review the population ecology of Allium ursinum according to its life history, phenology, demography, dispersal, and population dynamics. Spatial distribution is reviewed on two spatial scales. First, on a broad scale over Europe, in relation to the habitat requirement of the species. Second, on a fine scale of individual patches, presenting some results about the local processes of density regulation and patch formation. We conclude that A. ursinum has a distinct, hitherto non-described, strategy for monopolizing space and dominating the forest floor. This Clan-of-Clones strategy has the following attributes. 1) Most of the seeds are dispersed close to the parent. 2) Seedling establishment is facilitated by the surrounding adults. 3) Allocation to vegetative reproduction is relatively small; its main role is to prolong local persistence. 4) The genet is not integrated physiologically, except for a transient connection between parent and offspring. An important consequence of the Clan-of-Clones strategy is that occupied patches can be fine-grained mosaics in terms of genetic composition and age groups.
. törvény 35. §-ának (1) bekezdése.] [Hungarian] http://www.social-ecology.org/ http://www.social-ecology.org/learn/ma-program-in-social-ecology/
Introduction Ecology is a very prolific field of research, with more than 360 active journals dedicated to the annual publication of several thousand research articles (data from the Web of Science). Ecologists simply cannot
pigment in proper exciple, hypothecium and epihymenium. Etymology: The epithet refers to the mountain area where it was discovered. Distribution and ecology: The new species is only known from the type locality where it grows abundantly on dead branches of
12 153 155 Baker, W. 1989. A review of models of landscape change. Landscape Ecology : 111-133. A review of models of
Blasco, F. 1970. Aspects of the flora and ecology of savannas of south Indian hills. J. Natural History Society 67:522–534. Blasco F. Aspects of the flora and ecology of savannas
. Microbial ecology: where are we now? Postdoc. J. 4 ( 11 ): 3 – 17 . Caporaso , J.G. , J. Kuczynski , J. Stombaugh , K. Bittinger , F.D. Bushman , E.K. Costello , N. Fierer , A