Peter Morin is a leading experimental community ecologist. He is interested in many aspects of community ecology, including predator-prey interactions, food webs, and the causes and consequences of biological diversity.
“The book arose from courses the author has been giving since 1983, so is well-tailored to final year graduate and particularly postgraduate students in ecology, but will also be of value to biodiversity scientists wishing to understand more of within-community interactions.” (Biodiversity and Conservation, 1 October 2012) “This text is written with the postgraduate ecologist in mind, and the basic concepts, biological and mathematical, are Assumed . . . Given the relatively advanced level at which it is pitched, the text is pleasingly accessible to the non-specialist.” (Bulletin of the British Ecological Society, 1 June 2012) “With a strong editorial input to improve readability and the employment of good graphic design and typography, Community Ecology could be an excellent, highly useful resource for coursework and self-study. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through researchers/faculty.” (Choice, 1 April 2012)""As such I recommend it to anyone involved in teaching introductory ecology at undergraduate level."" (Elsevier's Biological Conservation, 1 January 2012) ""One might query the balance of coverage of various topics but nevertheless this remains the only textbook exclusively devoted to this scale of study."" (Frontiers of Biogeography, 3 March 2011) ""However, conservation biologists have got to be trained in community ecology and this is a very good and authoritative book covering the basics. As such I recommend it to anyone involved in teaching introductory ecology at undergraduate level."" (Biological Conservation, 12 December 2011)