Henry S. Horn
Henry S. Horn is a natural historian and ecologist. He is an emeritus professor in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department at Princeton University. He has worked on a wide variety of topics including the following:
- the geometrical structure of forests[1]
- patterns of forest succession[2]
- wind dispersal of seeds[3]
- spatial patterns of competition[4]
- social behavior of butterflies
He is also one of several scientists to have proposed the intermediate disturbance hypothesis.[5]
References
- ↑ R.H. MacArthur, H.S. Horn (1969). "Foliage profiles by vertical measurements". Ecology 50: 802–804. JSTOR 1933693.
- ↑ H.S.Horn (1975). "Forest Succession". Scientific American 232 (5): 90–98. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0575-90.
- ↑ R. Nathan, G.G. Katul, H.S. Horn, S.M. Thomas, R. Orem, R. Avissar, S.W. Pacala, S.A. Levin (2002). "Mechanisms of long-distance dispersal of seeds by wind". Nature 418 (6896): 409–413. doi:10.1038/nature00844.
- ↑ H.S. Horn, R.H. MacArthur (1972). "Competition among fugitive species in a harlequin environment". Ecology 53: 749–752. JSTOR 1934797.
- ↑ Horn, H.S. (1975). "Markovian properties of forest succession". In Cody, M.L. and Diamond, J. M. Ecology and evolution of communities. Belknap Press, Massachusetts, USA. pp. 196–211. ISBN 0-674-22444-2.
Books
Horn, H.S. (1971) The Adaptive Geometry of Trees Princeton University Press.