Appalachian Wildflowers

Voorkant
University of Georgia Press, 2000 - 327 pagina's
This informative field guide covers the wildflowers of the entire Appalachian region, which stretches from Quebec to northern Alabama, encompassing the Catskills of New York, the Berkshires of Massachusetts, the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee, and many mountain ranges in between. Using this book, readers will learn to identify this region's wildflowers by shape, color, family, and habitat.

Ecologist and botanist Thomas E. Hemmerly encourages us to "read the landscape" in order to learn about plants' habitats, distribution, and use. In his brief, introductory chapters, he describes ecosystems such as mountain forests and wetlands to provide a context for the information on individual plant species that will be valuable to both professional scientists and amateur naturalists.

Practical: The 378 color plates, grouped by color for clear reference, appear alongside plant descriptions for ease of identification.Informative: Each entry includes a description of the plant's habitat, abundance, and geographical distribution, along with information about its ethnobotanical, economic, or medicinal uses. An appendix lists and describes the best places in the Appalachians for "botanizing."User-Friendly: Diagrams of leaf and flower shapes are a further aide to plant identification.The Appalachian Region: Alabama, Connecticut, Georgia, Kentucky, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Quebec, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia

 

Inhoudsopgave

Dynamics of Mountain Ecosystems
10
Treeless Mountain Ecosystems
24
Mountain Wetlands
31
Appalachian Wildflowers Illustrated
41
Monocots with BluePurple Flowers
234
Dicots with BluePurple Flowers
240
Monocots with GreenBrown Flowers
272
Dicots with GreenBrown Flowers
280
Glossary
289
Bibliography
301
Index
309
Copyright

Overige edities - Alles bekijken

Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen

Populaire passages

Pagina 301 - Endemism in rock outcrop plant communities of unglaciated eastern United States: an evaluation of the roles of the edaphic, genetic and light factors.
Pagina 301 - R., and SF Anliot. 1965. The structure and floristic composition of a virgin hemlock forest in West Virginia. Castanea 30: 205-26.
Pagina 301 - Some Considerations in Evaluating and Monitoring Populations of Rare Plants in Successional Environments.
Pagina 301 - Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. Bell, C. Ritchie, and Anne H. Lindsey. 1990. Fall Color and Woodland Harvests: A Guide to the More Colorful Fall Leaves and Fruits of the Eastern Forests. Chapel Hill, NC: Laurel Hill Press.
Pagina 301 - Stephenson. 1995. Recent successional changes in a former chestnut-dominated forest in southwestern Virginia. Castanea 60: 107-13.

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Over de auteur (2000)

Thomas E. Hemmerly, author of Wildflowers of the Central South, is a professor of biology at Middle Tennessee State University.

Bibliografische gegevens