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J Philip Grime

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Name
  
J. Grime


J. Philip Grime httpswwwshefacukpolopolyfs127540image

Books
  
Comparative plant ecology, Plant Strategies - Vegetatio, The Evolutionary Strategie, Plant Strategies and Vege, An ecological atlas of gr

John Philip Grime FRS is a prominent British ecologist and emeritus professor at the University of Sheffield. He is best known for his CSR theory on plant strategies, for the unimodal relationship between species richness and site productivity (the "humped-back model"), for the Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis, for the DST classification (dominants, subordinates and transients) and, with Simon Pierce (University of Milan, Italy), universal adaptive strategy theory (UAST) and the twin filter model of community assembly and eco-evolutionary dynamics.

Contents

Grime's 1979 book Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes has been cited more than 1,200 times. Together with many influential scientific papers, it has made him a highly cited scientist. In an interview Grime has stated that "Ecology lacks a Periodic Table", quoting Richard Southwood.

Career

He obtained his PhD from University of Sheffield in 1960 and joined the staff of the Department of Botany in 1961. He worked at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, US from 1963 to 1964. He then returned to the University of Sheffield and joined the Unit of Comparative Plant Ecology, which had been founded in 1961 by professor Ian H. Rorison. Grime served as deputy director of the unit 1964–1989 and as director from 1989.

His work on plant strategies

His work and his theories are focused on plant strategies, as developed along their evolutionary history. His CSR theory says that each plant species has a blend of the three strategies that he labels C (competitive), S (stress tolerant) and R (ruderal, or rapid propagation). Ruderal strategists thrive in disturbed areas. He has described a method to classify herbaceous vegetations by analysing the importance of the three strategies in the genotypes of the species that are present.

Honours

In 1991, Grime became a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1997, he won the Marsh Ecology Award from the British Ecological Society and was awarded honorary membership of the Ecological Society of America. He was also Distinguished Visiting Ecologist at Pennsylvania State University in that year. In 1998, he became elected Fellow of the Royal Society and honorary doctor at University of Nijmegen. He has been honorary member of the British Ecological Society since 1999. He was the first ever recipient of the Alexander von Humboldt Medal (2011) for his outstanding contribution to the intellectual development of plant community ecology.

Selected works

  • Grime J.P. & Pierce S. The Evolutionary Strategies that Shape Ecosystems. Wiley-Blackwell. (2012) ISBN 0-470-67481-4
  • Vegetation classification by reference to strategies. Nature (1974) 250: 26–31.
  • Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory. American Naturalist (1977) 111: 1169–1194.
  • Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes. Wiley. (1979) ISBN 0-471-99692-0
  • Plant Strategies, Vegetation Processes, and Ecosystem Properties. (2nd much expanded edition of the above) Wiley (2001) ISBN 0-471-49601-4
  • Benefits of plant diversity to ecosystems: immediate, filter and founder effects. Journal of Ecology (1998) 86: 902–910.
  • Trait convergence and trait divergence in herbaceous plant communities: mechanisms and consequences. Journal of Vegetation Science (2006) 17: 255–260.
  • Plant strategy theories: a comment on Craine (2005). Journal of Ecology, 95, 227–230.
  • References

    J. Philip Grime Wikipedia