PLANT SCIENCE BULLETIN
A Publication of the Botanical Society of America, Inc.
VOLUME 47, NUMBER 4, 2001
The Botanical Society of America:
The Society for ALL Plant Biologists
ISSN 0032-0919
Published quarterly by Botanical Society of America, Inc., 1735 Neil
Ave., Columbus, OH 43210
The yearly subscription rate of $15 is included in the membership dues
of the Botanical Society of America, Inc. Periodical postage paid at Columbus,
OH and additional mailing office.
Send address changes to:
Business Manager
Botanical Society of America
1735 Neil Ave.
Columbus OH 43210-1293
Phone/Fax: 614/292-3519
email: bsa-manager@botany.org
Address Editorial Matters (only) to:
Editor: Marshall D. Sundberg
Department of Biological Sciences
Emporia State University
1200 Commercial Street, Emporia, KS 66801-5707
Telephone: 620-341-5605 Fax: 620-341-5607
Email: sundberm@emporia.edu
Editorial Committee for Volume 47
Vicki A. Funk (2001)
Department of Botany
Smithsonian Institution
Washington, D.C. 20560
funkvicki@nmnh.si.edu
Ann E. Antlfinger (2002)
Biology Department
Univ. of Nebraska - Omaha
Omaha NE 681823
antlfinger@unomaha.edu
Norman C. Ellstrand (2003)
Department of Botany and Plant Science
University of California
Riverside CA 92521-0124
ellstrand@ucracl.ucr.edu
James E. Mickle (2004)
Department of Botany
North Carolina State University
Raleigh, NC 27695-7612
james_mickle@ncsu.edu
Andrew W. Douglas (2005)
Department of Biology
University of Mississippi
University, MS 38677
adouglas@olemiss.edu
Contents
The E.A. McIlhenny Natural History Collection............................................................................134
News from the Society
Annual Reports
Business
Manager.................................................................................................................137
Membership
Tiers Committee...............................................................................................138
Publications
Committee.........................................................................................................141
Merit Committee...................................................................................................................142
Pelton
Award........................................................................................................................142
Section
Reports.....................................................................................................................142
Association
for Systematic Collections...................................................................................146
Farewell
to Business Manager Kim Hiser...............................................................................146
News from
the Sections
New Officers for the Physiological Section.........................................................................147
Announcements
Award Opportunities
2002
Lawrence Memorial Award..........................................................................................147
Jeanette
Siron Pelton Award..................................................................................................147
2001-2002
Botanical Society of America Young Botanist Awards..........................................148
Timothy
C. Plowman Latin American Research Award...........................................................148
Call
for Proposals: Karling Graduate Student Research Award................................................148
Courses/Workshops
Ant Course
2002....................................................................................................................149
The
Highlands Biological Station.............................................................................................150
Symposia, Conferences, Meetings
Gordon
Conference................................................................................................................151
XVIIth
International Congress on Sexual Plant Reproduction ..................................................151
American
Institute of Biological Sciences, 53rd Annual Meeting...............................................152
Other News
From the
Laboratory to the Parlor...........................................................................................152
Positions Available
New York
Botanical Garden, Vice-President for Botanical Science.........................................153
Rider University......................................................................................................................153
Black Hills
State University.....................................................................................................154
Plant
Molecular Genetics........................................................................................................154
Department
of Botany and Microbiology, University of Oklahoma...........................................154
Postdoctoral
Fellowship in Plant Molecular Systematics...........................................................155
Graduate
Assistantships in Bryology........................................................................................155
Book Reviews................................................................................................................................156
Books Received..............................................................................................................................177
Late Announcements
National Invasive
Weeds Awareness Week 2002......................................................................179
IV Southern
Connection Congress. Southern Temperate Ecosystems and Biota:
Contributions towards a global synthesis...............................................................................179
Around the country there are botanical treasures, perhaps well know
to locals, but unknown to most of us unless we happen to "discover" them
on a trip or at a meeting. I discovered one of these treasurers when I
first moved to Louisiana State University and visited the Hill Memorial
Library. The original campus library, Hill Memorial now houses the special
collections and archives.
I knew this library was special when I first entered the north reading
room on the second floor. Just inside the door was a large glass-covered
book cabinet displaying the largest book I had ever seen _ one of four
volumes of the double-elephant folio edition of Audubon's Birds of America.
One volume at a time was slid out of its shelf and moved to the display
shelf on top. One page at a time was on daily exhibit, not to be seen again
for more than a year. Unfortunately the volumes are no longer on public
display, but they can be "called" for a visitor/researcher to examine.
Works on birds are just one of the foci of the special collections at
Hill Memorial. Of more immediate interest are works on plants and exploration
in the Mississippi Valley. The feature article in this issue highlights
one of these treasures in the special collections at Louisiana State University
- the E.A. McIlhenny Natural History Collection.
-editor
The E. A.
McIlhenny Natural History Collection
Naturalist and explorer Edward Avery McIlhenny (1872-1949) was a man
of parts: after adventures in the Arctic in 1897, he returned home to semi-tropical
Louisiana to run the family enterprise that made Tabasco sauce. He also
ran a plant nursery on Avery Island (the family's "island" is a salt dome
located in the south central Louisiana swamp lands) that specialized in
bamboos and camellias. In 1945, he translated from the French and published
New
Iconography of the Camellias, which included the text of all twelve
volumes of A. A. Verschaffelt's Nouvelle Iconographie des Camellias
(1848-1860). He also authored The Life History of an Alligator and
Autobiography
of an Egret. An avid hunter, he spearheaded efforts to establish the
Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge and Game Preserve, promoted bird banding programs,
and established "Bird City," a refuge on Avery Island that helped save
the snowy egret from extinction.
John S. McIlhenny
He was also an enthusiastic and knowledgeable book collector, and on
his death in 1949, bequeathed a substantial collection of superb illustrated
works of natural history to his nephew John S. McIlhenny. Trained as a
research chemist but freed by family fortunes to pursue his personal interests,
John Stauffer McIlhenny continued to collect beautiful natural history
books, particularly focusing on botany and ornithology. "Mr. Mac," as he
was affectionately known around the library, donated this enhanced collection
to the Louisiana State University Libraries in 1971 and continued to add
to the collection until his death in 1997.
Comprising some 6,000 volumes, the McIlhenny Collection spans five centuries,
ranging from the Libri de re rustica, published by Aldus Manutius
in 1514, to the monumental Banks' Florilegium, published by Alecto,
1980-1988, in thirty-four volumes including 738 engravings of plants collected
on Captain Cook's first voyage around the world in the H.M.S. Endeavor,
1768-1771.
Among the most outstanding holdings in the McIlhenny Collection is the
unique "Native Flora of Louisiana" collection of more than 230 original
watercolor drawings by renowned Australian botanical artist Margaret Stones.
Stones (b. 1920) was principal illustrator for Curtis's Botanical Magazine
from
1958 until her retirement in 1983. She has received the Royal Horticulture
Society's Veitch Silver Memorial Medal and Gold Memorial Medal. In 1986,
she was awarded an honorary doctorate of science from LSU.
The "Native Flora" collection began in 1976, when Louisiana State University
commissioned the artist to create six watercolor drawings of native Louisiana
plants, which were to be a lasting legacy of the University's bicentennial
celebration. Response to the initial six watercolors was so enthusiastic
that the project rapidly grew into a major commission
Malus angustifolia
garnering statewide support. LSU Professor of Botany Lowell Urbatsch
was chosen to work with Stones on the selection of plants to be portrayed.
Because Stones works only from living plant materials, she was to visit
Louisiana many times during the next fifteen years, rendering its flora
in exquisite detail, while enjoying the celebrated hospitality and cuisine
of its people. The "Native Flora" collection, officially finished in 1991,
has continued to grow through the generosity of the artist, who donates
drawings each time she returns. Flora of Louisiana, a illustrated
catalog of two hundred of the drawings, with text by Urbatsch, was published
by the LSU Press in 1991; in addition, a set of four full-sized color prints
is available from the LSU Libraries (Contact the author for details and
an order form).
Selections from the "Native Flora of Louisiana" collection are often
exhibited on the LSU campus and have been shown at the Smithsonian Institution,
the Bodleian Library (Oxford, England), the Fitzwilliam Museum (Cambridge,
England), and the Edinburgh Botanic Garden Gallery. In 1996, the National
Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia, held a major retrospective of
the artist's work, which included twenty drawings borrowed from the Louisiana
collection.
Stones' Working Drafts
The curator of the McIlhenny Collection regularly shows parts of the
"Native Flora" collection by appointment to visitors and classes. Perhaps
the most frequent classes to visit are from the School of Landscape Architecture,
whose students find the collection helpful when learning about native plants
for use in landscaping. Aspiring botanical artists often visit to study
Stones's technique.
The McIlhenny Collection is administered as part of the LSU Libraries'
Special Collections division, housed in Hill Memorial Library on the LSU
campus in Baton Rouge. Its holdings are listed in the Libraries' online
catalog (available via the Libraries' homepage at http://www.lib.lsu.edu/).
Researchers interested in botanical history may find other materials of
interest in Special Collections, especially in the Louisiana and Lower
Mississippi Valley Collections (LLMVC). LLMVC holds first editions of virtually
all the reports of European explorers of the area. Extensive manuscript
holdings in LLMVC that document the lives of
nineteenth-century Louisianians necessarily include many passing references
to plants and gardening. Of particular interest are the papers of Brother
Arsene Brouard, who taught at St. Paul's College in Covington, Louisiana
from 1919 to 1925, and collected hundreds of plants while there, including
sixty he believed to be previously unrecorded in Louisiana (inventory available
at http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/findaid/b3568.html
)
Nemastylis geminifolia
Although the "Native Flora" collection is shown only by appointment,
no appointment is necessary to use most of the materials included in Special
Collections. Researchers are welcome during regular library hours (9 to
5 Monday - Friday, 9 to 1, most Saturdays). No affiliation with LSU is
required, but those wishing to use the collection must fill out a brief
reader registration form and present a picture ID. More information about
using Special Collections is available at http://www.lib.lsu.edu/special/.
Elaine Smyth
Curator, Special Collections
LSU Libraries
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70803-3300
esymty@lsu.edu
225/578-6547; fax 578-9425
News from the Society
Annual Reports
Business Manager's Report
Financial
The Business Office (Huntington Bank) currently has $12,284.27 in the
checking account, $77,968.63 in the American Century Money Market account
and $129,826.02 in the meetings account (Bank One).
For the fiscal year ending Sept. 30th, all areas were very
close to budget. The decision was made to transfer only $30,000 from members
instead of the $70,000 as budgeted, as there was not an immediate need
for cash.
We are ahead of budget on receipts, under budget on Business Office
expenses due to a shift in expenses on labor, over budget on labor for
the Editorial Office due to the increase in signatures for the Journal
and on track or slightly under budget for production.
Business office is now tracking expenses for the following accounts:
Huntington for business office checking, Bank One for the meeting checking,
American Century for money market and the OSU account. All (but OSU) are
being tracked through QuickBooks.
Processed and tracked over $775,000.00 in the Fiscal Year ending 9/30/2000.
Converted to electronic (spreadsheet) versions of our income ledgers
for members and institutions.
Fully utilizing QuickBooks for payroll, taxes and reporting.
Members
Membership renewal forms for 2001 were mailed to 2522 members (2648
for 2000, 2812 for 1999) including Retired, Life and Corresponding members.
Current membership paid for 2001 is 2396 (2479 from 2000, 2522 from 1999).
Currently, we have 438 (480 from 2000, 582 from 1999) members who have
not yet renewed for 2001 (42 less from 2000). The total number of new members
added since the beginning of the fiscal year was 233 (230 in 2000-new F.Y.,
317 in 1999, 354 in 1998 and 453 in 1997). Of those new members, 22 joined
for 2000, 210 joined for 2001, 1 for 2002. We are still receiving renewals
via mail and fax at a steady rate most forms printed from the web.
The fall mailing to members included the Minutes of the 2000 Business
Meeting, letter from President Gensel, Call for Nominations for Officers
(President-elect and Treasurer), Call for Papers and a notice from the
Genetics section (for which they were billed). The mailing was folded in
half and mailed in a 6x9 envelope which qualified for the best discount
for mailing. The fall mailing was once again handled through a local mail
house, CPMM. Domestic pieces were bulk mailed by CPMM and foreign were
sent via airmail out of the business office.
Second notices were sent via email BCC from the business office to 521
members with an attached .pdf renewal form to members who listed an email.
For those 49 members we had no email for, we generated and mailed a postcard.
Plans are to send out this reminder in December of this year. Renewal forms
in .pdf and .doc were also placed on the website.
The spring mailing to members included the letter from the President
with the proposed model for membership dues, Call for Symposia, Call for
Discussion Sessions, Call for Field Trips, Call for Nominations for Corresponding
Members, Bylaws Ballot (Art. II, 1, i) and the ballot for President Elect
and Treasurer.
Institutional Subscribers
The executive committee recommended the price of institutional subscriptions
increase for 2002 by $90 across the board for the print copy of the AJB
and $600 for adding the electronic version. Prices for 2002 for a printed
volume of AJB are $295 for domestic, $305 Canada and Mexico, $320
for other foreign.
Currently, there are 1790 institutional subscribers down 51 from 1841
of this time last year.
Publications
Cost of production for AJB V87, 2000 was $101.27 per volume
(V86 was $80.64, V85 was $80.21 and did not include the e-AJB).
The cost per volume includes the labor and expenses of both the
Business Office and Editorial Office, which is probably an unfair comparison
since the business office had additional labor expenses due to the annual
meeting. Total circulation for V87 (2000) of the AJB was 4155, 4313
in 1999, 4574 in 1998, 4648 in 1997, and 4622 in 1996). Regular institutional
subscriptions were down by 61 and member subscriptions were down by 97.
JSTOR released the electronic version of all of the back issues of AJB
from 1914-1994. Available to institutions that subscribe.
Since our contract for the print version of AJB expires at the
end of this year, RFPs were mailed out to potential printers and bids were
collected and distributed to the publications committee.
Excess inventory at Allen Press was purged and billing spread out throughout
the year. Estimated cost for purging was $9000. Storage costs will be greatly
reduced.
Miscellaneous
Completed an operational audit in late November with our CPA Mary Dawson.
Mailed out new membership recruitment posters to campus representatives
as identified by past Membership and Appraisal Committee chair, Leo Bruederle.
Completed mailing for the Endowment Fund in autumn for Jack Horner _
to be repeated every other year.
Purchased a new computer in September.
Added a dedicated fax line, call waiting and voice mail.
The 2001 renewal notice had check boxes for hard copies of the Membership
Directory and the Abstracts. To date, 833 individuals are requesting the
Directory and 446 individuals are requesting the Abstracts.
Assisted with writing/rewriting job description and posting the new
meetings manager position.
Converted our student position to a University Student position. Previously
paid through the business office directly.
Worked with Dave Kramer, OSU printing facilities and McGraw-Hill on
new posters.
Attended Access classes in order to convert our Foxpro programs and
databases to Access.
Respectfully submitted, Kimberly E. Hiser, Business Manager
Membership Tiers Committee Report
The BSA Council established an ad hoc committee in August 2000, to investigate
restructuring memberships in the BSA. In part, this investigation was triggered
by a need to modernize the Society, to address ways of modernizing memberships
and to compete more effectively with he newly renamed American Society
of Plant Biologists (formerly ASPP).
This is the stated charge of the committee:
The Ad Hoc Committee on Membership Options/Tiered dues/Journal is charged
to assess the impact of tiered membership options and increased electronic
subscriptions of AJB on the financial standing and membership levels of
the Society and to suggest strategies for implementation of same, if that
is desirable, and/or of strategies designed to increase membership within
a sound financial framework. The Committee is to report on its findings
by the Spring 2001 Executive Committee meeting.
Present conditions:
1. Members of the Botanical Society of America receive subscriptions
to the print copy of the American Journal of Botany as a privilege of membership.
This policy reflects the commitment of the Society to provide publication
of refereed research results and to disseminate these results to members
through the Journal. Currently, members who opt not to receive their subscription
copy of the Journal receive no adjustments to their membership rate. An
online version of the Journal is available free of charge on the Internet.
2. The dues paid to the Society reimburse only a portion of the costs
of subscriptions, ranging from ~90% for professional members (~85% for
overseas professional members), to ~35% for students (~30% for overseas
student members). Increases in the membership of the Society actually increase
the financial burden to the Society. At present, the deficit between dues
and costs of providing a hard copy journal is covered from monies received
for institutional subscriptions and from the general fund of the Society.
3. For 2001, professional membership dues are $85 and student membership
dues are $35. Family membership dues are $5 more in each category. (Family
memberships provide separate mailings of all membership materials and one
joint copy of the Journal and Plant Science Bulletin.) Corporate and sustaining
membership categories, at $150 and $250 each, respectively, have been underutilized.
4. Members not wanting to receive a print subscription to the Journal
receive one despite our cost savings. Potential members have complained
that the cost of BSA membership is too high and that a print copy of the
American Journal of Botany is not a universally attractive addition to
the membership package.
5. A significant number of botanists who pay for subscriptions personally
are ineligible for institutional reimbursement for professional society
memberships. On the other hand, many of these same institutions will reimburse
employees for journal subscriptions.
6. Membership in BSA is required of only one author on co-authored manuscripts.
Membership is required when the manuscript is submitted for review and
also during the year of publication (except for Special Papers). Each member
is entitled up to eight (8) free printed pages per volume. Each printed
page over the eight free pages per author is assessed full page charges.
Authors are asked to pay full publication costs if they have funds, although
few authors do repay some of these costs. Authors may add up their total
of free pages on co-authored papers.
7. Currently, the American Journal of Botany and Plant Science Bulletin
are provided free-of-charge through the Internet. The licensing agreement
for use of the American Journal of Botany Online are unrestricted for scholarly
use, but restrict additional use in excess of this to be accompanied by
a print subscription to the American Journal of Botany. Furthermore, no
access charge may be levied by a third party for providing access to our
"free" site.
Discussion:
Members are increasingly concerned about the high cost of memberships
and have become more discriminating as to which memberships will be renewed
and which will lapse. BSA has a remarkable ~95% renewal rate, but has not
competed well in attracting new members. With the renaming of the American
Society of Plant Physiologists (ASPP) to the American Society of Plant
Biologists (ASPB), we have reasons to suspect that competition for new
members will increase.
One of the goals of this committee is to propose a formula for membership
dues and journal subscriptions that will allow production of the American
Journal of Botany to become self-supporting. This is crucial if we are
to maintain the financial health of the Journal and the Society. The cost
of providing the Journal online plays a relatively small role in these
discussions because these
costs are fixed and are relatively independent of the number of users.
The online version provides close to the same utility of the print version
for research usage and high quality reprints can be produced using current
technology printers for study use.
Thus, one possibility is that basic membership dues provide access only
to the on-line journal. Those wishing a print copy of the journal would
receive it for an additional fee. Print subscriptions for students and
emeritus members would continue to be subsidized but these members would
have to bear a greater percentage of actual cost.
The Botanical Society of America is becoming increasingly involved in
outreach educational activities. Consistent with the expansion of these
outreach activities, it would be appropriate to offer preferential rates
to K-12 teachers.
Recommendations:
Costs of supporting the Journal
1. Membership in the Society would not include a print copy of AJB,
but would include the Plant Science Bulletin, meeting and membership announcements,
and the online AJB.
2. Membership rates and print copy subscription fees would be set at
a level or levels that fully cover the costs of producing and mailing the
journal, as well as the administrative costs of running the Society. Student
memberships with a print subscription should increase from the current
35% of the cost of providing a regular subscription to 67% of the actual
cost.
3. To encourage an increase in the membership, free access to the American
Journal of Botany Online should in the future be provided only to the BSA
membership and institutional subscribers to the electronic version. Password
controls should be erected at the HighWire Press web site with a tentative
target date of late fall 2001, with sales of electronic access to institutional
subscribers beginning in January 2002. Tables of contents, abstracts and
search engines should continue to be available at no cost to users. To
access the full content of the AJB—including PDF reprints and full text
HTML—will require individual passwords or institutional membership.
4. Rates for institutional access to the American Journal of Botany
Online will initially include a print copy of the Journal. Current models
can predict changes in print subscriptions reasonably accurately. In the
future online subscription may diverge from print subscriptions in the
future.
5. The cost of institutional subscriptions to the electronic version
of the Journal should reflect potential lost revenue from potential BSA
members not joining the Society because they can access the Journal free
through their institutional membership.
6. Late renewal of print subscriptions after January 10 requires that
issues of the Journal be mailed from Allen Press' warehouse. Since there
are warehouse access and storage charges, these requests involve special
costs and inconvenience. Therefore, memberships and membership renewals
entered with print subscription after January 10 will require a
$25 processing fee to cover the additional costs of shipping and handing.
(Introduction of a late processing fee reiterates a recommendation from
Mary Dawson's operational audit of BSA in December 2000.)
7. Members publishing in the Journal should continue to remain eligible
for eight (8) free pages per year. However, each manuscript should be eligible
for no more than twelve (12) free pages per paper, regardless of the number
of co-author members. Invited special papers shall be granted fifteen (15)
free pages.
8. No changes should be made in the status of life members and corresponding
members at this time. These members should be asked very politely from
time-to-time to let the business office know if they ever choose to waive
the print copy.
Outreach efforts to new member categories
9. A new category of memberships should be established for K-12 teachers.
(This directly complements the efforts of the Education Committee to form
a significant partnership with publishers. McGraw-Hill has discussed complementary
memberships for K-12 teachers with David Kramer. The current plan could
produce hundreds of new members of BSA, for which McGraw-Hill has offered
us $30 per member.)
10. A sophisticated package of sustaining and corporate membership benefits
was developed by Wayne Elisens, Scott Russell and Kim Hiser. Attachment
#1 provides the schedule of corporate benefits. The committee supports
immediate implementation of this plan.
11. Electronic access to membership records, including personalized
email reminders, should implemented in 2001. Reminders should be issued
periodically by e-mail from September through the first week of January
urging prompt renewal to decrease costs to BSA and members. Expiration
dates should also be available by email request from the website.
12. A secure server should be implemented to provide 24/7 access to
credit card processed membership applications. This server would also provide
sales of BSA memorabilia from the Business Office.
Proposed model for membership dues and subscriptions:
This model is based on Year 2000 assumptions regarding membership numbers
and Year 2001 increased costs.
Membership subscriptions
Base
AJB Total
Student
w/o subscription
$30.00 $0.00
$30.00
w/ subscription
$30.00 $35.00
$65.00
Professional
w/o subscription
$45.00 $0.00
$45.00
w/ subscription
$45.00 $55.00
$100.00
Emeritus
w/o subscription
$35.00 $0.00
$35.00
w/ subscription
$35.00 $35.00
$70.00
Teachers (K-12)
w/o subscription
$30.00 $0.00
$30.00
w/ subscription
$30.00 $35.00
$65.00
Institutional subscriptions Hardcopy
Electronic Total
Domestic subscribers
w/o electronic access
$295.00 $0.00
$295.00
w/ electronic access
$295.00 $600.00
$895.00
Canada & Mexico subscriber
w/o electronic access
$305.00 $0.00
$305.00
w/ electronic access
$305.00 $600.00
$905.00
Foreign subscribers
w/o electronic access
$320.00 $0.00
$320.00
w/ electronic access
$320.00 $600.00
$920.00
Life memberships and corresponding memberships are revenue neutral and
will not be affected by this change.
Membership dues and subscription rates for 2002 need to be determined
by vote at the BSA general business meeting (August 15, 2001).
Institutional subscriptions for 2002 need to be reviewed and
approved by the EC at the Spring Business Meeting (February 23-25, 2001).
Instituting controlled access at the HWP site for 2002 requires
at least six-month notification and payment of ~$12,000 up-front for code
generation. (Deadline: June 2001)
Bylaw change needed to institute K-12 teacher membership category
to accompany Spring mailing.
Membership Tiers Committee: Scott Russell, Chair; Kathleen Shea
; Edith Taylor ; Maxine Watson ; Ed Schneider, ex officio; Kim Hiser, ex
officio
BSA CORPORATE SPONSORSHIP PACKAGE
Cost: $300 annual fee (includes $150 corporate membership)
Benefits:
1) 20% discount for ads in the hardcopy AJB
Hardcopy AJB Advertising Rates (all B&W unless indicated)
Sponsor outside back cover $600, $1000 color; full page $440;
half-page $220
Regular outside back cover $750, $1250 color; full page $550;
half-page $275
2) 20% discount for ad boxes in electronic AJB (vendor provides graphic)
Electronic AJB Introductory Advertising Rates
Sponsor $80/3 months $300/year
Regular $100/3 months $375/year
3) 20% discount for ads in the Final Program and for Tote-bag Insertions
at the annual Botany conference.
Advertising and Insertion rates for Annual Botany conference
Sponsor $250 full page ad; $140 half page ad; $200 insertion
fee
Regular $300 full page ad; $175 half page ad; $250 insertion
fee
4) $150 discount for exhibit booth at annual meeting
Basic exhibit booth rates
Sponsor $800
Regular $ 950
5) Posting on the `Virtual Mall' on the BSA website for Corporate Sponsors.
Links from AJB and BSA websites. (available only to corporate sponsors)
6) One-page vendor-provided insertion with the spring or fall mailing:
$300 / piece (8-1/2 x 11 inches) (available only to corporate sponsors)
7) Multiple, unlimited access to online BSA membership database (regular
access allows only 20 retrievals). Mailing labels printed by BSA Business
Office @ 20% discount.
Minimum value for sponsors who purchase one ad (AJB or meeting) and
one booth at annual conference, savings = $200 to $300 + virtual mall posting
+ membership database
Inquiries should be directed to: Business
Manager; Business Office; 1735 Neil Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1293 Phone/Fax:
614 - 292-3519, E-mail: bsa-manager@botany.org
Publications Committee
Two topics occupied the Publications Committee this year: (1) monitoring
progress on the multi-year process of reducing the backlog of accepted
ready-for-press manuscripts for the AJB, and (2 ) soliciting, screening
and ranking bids for a new contract to print The American Journal of
Botany.
1. Backlog Reduction
According to figures provided by AJB Editor-in-Chief, Karl J.
Niklas, the backlog of accepted manuscripts waiting to be printed has been
reduced by ~35% since the adoption of the larger issue-size. However, the
number of new submissions has increased compared to the past two years.
The net result is that unless more pages are published per volume, the
Editorial Office will find it very difficult to reduce the backlog substantially
and quickly.
Recommendation: To continue progress in reducing the backlog
and to speed up the process, we recommend that the larger issues approved
and funded in 2000 be continued through 2002 (Volume 89). Furthermore,
we recommend that two additional signatures per issue (2 signatures/issue
x 16 pages/signature x 12 issues/year) be funded for 2002 (Volume 89).
2. Printing Contract for The American Journal of Botany
A request for bids for the printing contract for AJB was sent
out to five firms on May 1, 2001. The firms solicited were AGS [Advanced
Graphics Systems], Allen Press, Cadmus, Hopkins Printing, IPC Communication
Services, and Sheridan Press. Completed bid packages were received by June
1, 2001, and varied greatly in terms of completeness and elaborateness.
Copies of the relevant portions of all bids were distributed to the Publications
Committee for review and comment. The major
criteria for selecting a printer for AJB are quality, comprehensiveness,
timeliness, reliability, and competitive pricing. As of August 2, 2001,
the choice has been narrowed to two finalists, and a recommendation from
the Publications Committee to the Executive Committee is expected within
a week.
-Judy Jernstedt, Chair,
Publications Committee
Merit Committee Report
Three letters of nomination were received. Two of these were supported
by ancillary materials, but supporting materials for the third were not
received prior to the BSA's reporting deadline. Thus, the nominator and
committee agreed that letters and a CV supporting this third candidate
will be forwarded to the 2002 Merit Award Chair for consideration next
year.
The Committee recommended that Carol and Jerry Baskin be given the 2001
Merit Award for their extensive contributions to the field of seed ecology,
including more than 300 publications and a well-received book. This result,
together with a formal citation was provided to BSA Chair Pat Gensel on
July 2, 2001.
- Linda E. Graham, Chair, Merit Awards Committee
Pelton Award Committee
The Conservation and Research Foundation reported that sufficient funds
were not available in the Jeanette Siron Pelton Fund to make an award in
2001. Accordingly, we did not make a solicitation for nominees for this
year's award and there will be no award. Although we have not yet received
notification from the Conservation and Research Foundation for 2002, under
typical conditions distributions are available in alternate years and we
anticipate an award next year.
- Scott D. Russell, for Michael Christianson, Chair
Sections
Developmental and Structural
Ecological
Economic Botany
Genetics
Paleobotany
Phytochemical
Pteridological
Systematics
Tropical Biology
Midcontinent
Northeastern
Pacific
Developmental and Structural Section
At our business meeting last year we elected Larry Hufford as Program
Convenor and Darlene Southworth as Treasurer. Our sponsored symposium,"Open
Space", was a lively success. This year there will be a number of discussion
sessions on topics of general interest, embedded throughout the general
program. Our section listserv continues to be used as a message board,
but there has been little interest shown todate in establishing a discussion
group. We will be sponsoring two symposia at the Albuquerque meeting.
-Jean Gerrath, Chair, Developmental and Structural Section
Ecological Section
After sponsoring four symposia at IBC in 1999, the symposia sponsored
no symposia at the meetings held in Portland, OR in 2000. We had hoped
to sponsor two symposia at the 2001 annual meeting, one on conservation
ecology and the other on plant developmental ecology and evolution. Unfortunately
the conservation symposium had to be cancelled due to conflicts with other
meetings, but we are looking forward to the symposium organized by Katherine
Preston and Ted Wong on plant developmental ecology. A well-formulated
symposium proposal has been submitted for the 2002 annual meeting by Jeff
Karron. The topic of that symposium is Mimulus mating systems.
The award for best student paper at the 2000 meeting was won by Theodore
Wong, Stanford University for a paper, coauthored with David Ackerly, entitled
"How sensitive should plants be to cues? Theoretical studies of plastic
reproduction schedules". We were pleased to see that the numbers of submissions
to the competition are significantly higher this year. Thus, we are especially
grateful to the panel of judges, and to Pam Diggle who agreed to Chair
the selection committee.
For the first time, we made use of the newly formed sectional email
list to obtain nominations for section officers. All of the candidates
listed on the ballot were nominated in this way. And we thank each of the
candidates for agreeing to run for section office. While it was tempting
to hold the election via email, as well, we found enough errors in the
email list to make a paper ballot seem more appropriate. Elizabeth Lacey
will mail the ballot to section members around September 1, 2001,
The attrition of section membership continues, with current membership
hovering around 425.
-Maxine Watson, Chair, Ecological Section
Economic Botany Section
1) At the Botany 2000, "New Frontiers in Botany" Meeting in Portland
the Section hosted a Luncheon/Lecture on Tuesday, August 8. The luncheon
speaker was Walter Lewis of Washington University and the Missouri Botanical
Garden. Walter presented a paper titled " Pharmacology of Neotropical Plants:
Research Among the Aguaruna Jivaro of Amazonian Peru".
2) Following the Luncheon/Lecture, Section President Felix Coe of Tennessee
Technical University chaired the section meeting.
3) The Economic Botany Section will not be hosting a symposium at the
Botany 2001, "Plants and People" Meeting in Albuquerque. We look forward
to continuing to strengthen interest in the Section during the coming year
and expect to support a full symposium and continue the Student Award program
in 2002 in Madison.
4) The Section will host a Luncheon/Lecture at the Albuquerque meeting
with the luncheon highlighted by a lecture by Gary Nabhan (Plenary Lecturer)
titled, "Ethnobiological Education and Conservation Based in Indigenous
Communities: Successes in the Sonoran Desert and Colorado Plateau".
5) Treasurer's Report: As of May 2001 the Economic Botany Section had
$248.71. All of the expenditures of the last fiscal year were related to
travel support for the Luncheon/Lecture speaker (Walter Lewis) at the Portland
meeting. Of this reported balance, expected expenditures for this year
include: $248.71 to be used for the luncheon to be held on Monday, August
13th between 11:30 and 1:00 pm.
-Daniel Harder, Secretary Treasurer, Economic Botany Section
Genetics Section Report
R. Joel Duff received the 2000 Margaret A. Menzel Memorial Award at
the BSA banquet in Portland,OR for his paper entitled "The fate of conserved
ribosomal DNA and protein coding gene clusters during the evolution of
land plant mitochondrial genomes." The paper was co-authored by Mark
Davis and Angela Boyle at the University of Akron.
Joel has the dubious honor of being the last recipient of a $100.00
Menzel Award as the Section voted toincrease the award to $200.00 beginning
in 2001. In addition to this award, there will be a Genetics Section
Poster Award of $100.00 beginning in 2001. Both awards include a
ticket to the BSA banquet.
The section also voted to create a Graduate Student Research Award of
$500.00. Thanks to Richard Whitkus and R. Joel Duff who composed
this committee, read the proposals, and agreed on a recipient to be announced
at the BSA banquet in Albuquerque.
Lastly, Randy Small has agreed to stand for election as Secretary/Treasurer.
After the minor matter of a vote, he will be duly installed.
- Jeri W. Higginbotham, Chairperson, Genetics Section
Paleobotanical Section
The Paleobotanical Section currently has 347 members (260 regular members,
14 emeritus regular members, 53 affiliate members, 4 emeritus affiliate
members, and 16 honorary members. Current officers are Kathleen Pigg, Chair;
Steven Manchester, Secretary-Treasurer; Wilson Taylor, Editor, with new
Chair and Secretary-Treasurer to be elected at the 2001 Business Meeting
of the Paleobotanical Section.
The Section has an active program for Botany 2001, including 51 contributed
papers and posters submitted by members of the Paleobotanical Section.
A paleobotanical dinner and auction will be held Monday, August 13, 2000,
at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History, for which 68 people have registered.
Prior to the Paleobotanical Dinner, there will be a tour of the Paleontological
Collections of NMNH at 4:00 pm, courtesy of Spencer Lucas. The annual business
meeting of the section will be held August 14th at 8:30am. Two paleobotanically
oriented field trips are scheduled in association with the Albuquerque
conference: "Paleoecology of the K/T Boundary in the Raton Basin, New Mexico
and Colorado," Saturday-Sunday, Aug. 11, 12, led by Gary Upchurch, and
"Pennsylvanian floras of the Albuquerque area," Sunday, August 12, led
by Sidney Ash and Gene Mapes.
The Bibliography of American Paleobotany for 2000, including the current
section membership directory, has been published and is being distributed
to all members and institutional subscribers. Others may purchase copies
for $18 each.
The Paleobotanical Section continues to receive donations in support
of endowment funds, including the Cookson, Becker, Cichan, and Remy funds.
Each year, proceeds from the sale of buttons (this year: "dead plants tell
no lies") go to the paleobotanical endowment.
The section web site, maintained by Charles Daghlian, may be accessed
directly at http://www.dartmouth.edu/~daghlian/paleo/
. In the past year, a PaleoNews page was added allowing members to submit
news items directly. Recent entries to the PaleoNews page include images
from the Oregon paleobotanical field trip associated with the Botany 2000
conference (linked from Aaron Liston's web site), as well as timely announcements
and biographical sketches.
-Steven R. Manchester, Secretary-Treasurer, Paleobotanical Section
Phytochemical Section
The Phytochemical Section planned and obtained funding for the symposium
"Why leaves turn red: The function of anthocyanins in vegetative organs."
There will be 10 speakers. This was our only undertaking.
-James W. Wallace, Chairperson
Pteridological Section
At the Botany 2000 Meeting in Portland, Oregon, the Pteridological Section
of BSA co-sponsored, along with the American Fern Society a symposium entitled,
"Biology and conservation of the Ophioglossaceae: A tribute to Warren "Herb"
Wagner. Fourteen papers were presented at the symposium. In addition, 18
contributed papers and 2 posters were presented.
The Edgar T. Wherry Award for best paper presented was given to Patricia
Sanchez-Baracaldo, University of California, Berkeley, CA, for her paper
entitled, "A recent radiation of neotropical fern genera in páramo
ecosystems".
The Pteridological Section contributed $400 to the publication of The
Annual Review of Pteridological Research, Volume 13, 1999.
-Tom A. Ranker, Secretary-Treasurer, Pteridological Section
Systematics Section
The section sponsored (or co-sponsored with ASPT) two symposia at the
Boany 2000 Meetings. "New frontiers in plant systematics - The next 50
years" (half-day), organized by Tod Stuessy (Institut für Botanik,
Universität Wien) and Wayne Elisens (Department of Botany & Microbiology,
University of Oklahoma) was supported for $500 from BSA. "Historical biogeography
of the Northern Hemisphere" (half-day), organized by Paul S. Manos (Department
of Botany, Duke University) and Michael J. Donoghue (Harvard University
Herbaria) was also supported for $500.
The section will be sponsoring two symposia at Botany 2001. Supported
are the half-day symposium entitled "Linnaean taxonomy a viable system
for the new millennium?" (organized by Jerrold I Davis, L.H. Bailey Hortorium
and Department of Plant Biology, Cornell University), and the half-day
symposium entitled "Biogeography and phylogeny of Caribbean plants" (organized
by Timothy McDowell, Department of Biological Sciences, East Tennessee
State University, and Peter W. Fritsch, Department of Botany, California
Academy of Science).
During this past year, the section saw the resignation of Sterling Keeley
from her office as Secretary of the Systematics Section. The office of
Secretary remains vacant.
Over the next year we would like to established a section email/listserve.
This listserve will create a means for communication, provide for greater
interaction among section members and hopefully help attract new members.
- J. Mark Porter Chair, Systematics Section
Tropical Biology Section
For the Albuquerque meeting, the Tropical Section received three paper
abstracts and one poster abstract, and as last year, these were transferred
to appropriate other sections. The Tropical Section is considering joining
forces with the Ecology Section, which is about the same size as the Tropical
Section, so that talk sessions will have enough presentations to take actually
place.
In 2001 and 2002, the Section will be supporting Bruce Kirchoff's "Open
discussion" initiative, and it has suggested a potential topic for the
2002 open discussion, namely "Models for collaborations between botanists
inside and outside the tropics."
The discussion will be led off by John Kress, the former president
of the Association for Tropical Biology, and a colleague from a developing
country. Aspects to be discussed could include (1) how to find/recruit
students and collaborators from tropical countries, (2) funding, (3) existing
models for collaborations, and (4) tropical research stations looking for
collaborators (institutional or single). The Sections is also hoping to
co-sponsor a symposium proposed for the 2002 AIBS meetings on "Tropical
intercontinental disjunctions: Gondwana break-up, immigration from the
boreotropics, and transoceanic dispersal" (provided the BSA's council accepts
the symposium proposal).
Last not least, the Section has up-dated its (slim) web presence on
the BSA home page (thanks to Scott Russell).
-Susanne Renner, Chair, Tropical Biology Section
Midcontinent Section
For the past year the Midcontinent Section of BSA has been inactive.
At the Botany 2001 meetings, opinions will be sought to ascertain whether
there is any interest in having a regional meeting with presented papers,
etc. during the 2001-2002 year. Emphasis of this meeting on participation
and paper presentation by graduate students would add to the value of the
meeting for providing another local presentation forum, establishing collaborations,
and promoting awareness of botanical research activities in the midcontinent
region. It will be necessary to determine if a meeting of this kind would
be attended and how much participation there would be.
- Rob Wallace, Chairperson, Midcontinent Section
Pacific Section
A Meeting and Light Breakfast of the Pacific Section members attending
the Botany 2001 meeting in Albuquerque has been scheduled from 700 to 830AM
on Wednesday August 15. The location is in Fiesta 1-2 of the Hyatt. Current
and potential members of the Section who may be attending the meeting are
being contacted by email to encourage their attendance and to participate
in the meeting. I hope to engender further interest in developing the Section,
its membership, and enhancing current activities, and perhaps solicit volunteers
with creative ideas to advance the Section and the BSA.. It would be helpful
for Council members to attend, if circumstances permit.
- Dieter Wilken, Interim Chair, Pacific Section
Northeastern Section
The annual Joint Field Meeting of the Northeastern Section of the Botanical
Society of America, the Torrey Botanical Society, and the Philadelphia
Botanical Club took place at Wesley College in Dover, Delaware, June 24-28.
Dr. William Kroen (Biology Department, Wesley College) provided assistance
as the local host.
William McAvoy (Delaware Natural Heritage Program) planned the itinerary
for the three days of field trips. They included sites in central Delaware
(Killens Pond State Park, Cape Henlopen State Park, Blackbird State Forest)
and eastern Maryland (Adkins Arboretum at Tuckahoe State Park, Big Marsh
at Echo Outdoor School). The plant communities included examples of upland
forest, swamp forest, shrub swamp, seasonal pond (Delmarva bay), fresh
marsh, salt marsh, dune, and beach. William McAvoy led a field trip at
one of the sites each day and provided the species lists and maps that
were distributed to the participants. The other field trip leaders were
Jack Holt and Janet Ebert (Botanical Consultants, Chadds Ford, PA), Keith
Clancy (Delaware Native Plant Society), and Brent Steury (National Park
Service, Washington, D.C.)
Evening lectures were given by William McAvoy and Keith Clancy, by Robert
Naczi and Susan Yost (Claude E. Phillips Herbarium, Delaware State University),
and by Victor Soukup (University of Cincinnati and Ohio Native Plant Society).
In addition, Arthur Tucker (Delaware State University) hosted a tour of
the new building for the Phillips Herbarium; and James McClements of Dover
invited the participants to examine his cultivated collection of American
and Eurasian forest perennial herbs.
The field meeting was chaired jointly by Tim Draude and Larry Klotz.
There were 65 participants, representing 11 northeastern states plus Florida,
California, and the District of Columbia. Next year's meeting is provisionally
scheduled for Ohio.
-Karl Anderson, Treasurer, Northeastern Section
Association for Systematic Collections
During 2000-2001 the Association for Systematic Collections was involved
in several tasks. The major activity of the current year was the annual
meeting of ASC held in Chicago, IL at the Field Museum and Sears Tower
8-9 June 2001. I was not able to attend the meeting, but the wrap-up of
the meeting is detailed in the June 2001 ASC Newsletter (see also the ASC
website at www.ascoll.org).
Over 210 members and VIP guests attended, a record number. Speakers and
presenters from nearly 65 museums and organizations participated in two
days of panel meetings, breakout sessions, a poster presentation session,
as well as live Web demonstrations. The second day of the meeting and the
evening reception was held in the Plant Hall at the Field Museum. The keynote
speaker was Dr. Jose Sarukhan from Mexico who spoke on "Museum Data: Fossilized
or Living Information?" The new president of ASC is Dr. Meredith Lane from
the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. The 2002 meeting is planned
for Washington, DC 6-8 June at the Smithsonian Institution.
The second item of importance in ASC this past year was the ratification
by members for a new organizational name—Natural Science Collections Alliance
or NSC Alliance. The name change will be introduced this summer with the
completion of a new logo and letterhead. The newsletter will be redesigned
and renamed and a new URL will be introduced. The reason for a name change
was to make the organization and its aims more understandable to the lay
public, policymakers, and other scientists.
Throughout the year ASC continued to distribute, in addition to the
printed ASC Newsletter, an on-line bi-monthly newsletter of ASC activities,
called Washington Initiative, which highlights of recent news about systematic
collections, as well as actions in Congress affecting members. The electronic
newsletter is available to ASC member institutions and societies, and can
be sent to interested recipients on request.
The ASC board of directors has identified issues and seeks volunteers
to serve on task forces and committees to address the topics of Education
and Outreach, Government and Media, Informatics, and Accreditation of Collections.
Various requests for information received from ASC were forwarded to
BSA Business Manager Kim Hiser.
-Laurence E. Skog, BSA Representative to Association for Systematic Collections
Farewell to Business Manager, Kim Hiser
November 30, 2001 was the last day on the job for BSA Business Manager,
Kimberly E. Hiser. After 9 years in the position, Kim is leaving to spend
more time with her 3½ year-old daughter, Katie, and husband, David,
and, eventually, to pursue other career interests.
Kim was hired in December, 1992, as the first full-time staff employee
of the BSA. This new position of Business Manager was created when Prof.
Bob Essman, BSA Manager of Publications, officially retired from the faculty
of the Botany Department at Ohio State University and from his years of
BSA service. Kim had done hourly work for the Manager of Publications,
who also happened to be her father, starting in 1984. One of her first
tasks when hired was to computerize the BSA mailing lists—back in the early
days of personal computers! Kim left for a stint as a Research Assistant
in the seed corn industry in 1987, but returned to the BSA Publications
Office in 1990. Her intimate knowledge of the inner workings of the Publications
Office made her an obvious candidate for the new position, and after a
full search, screening of applicants, and interviews, Kim was hired. She
has been with the BSA ever since.
Anyone who has ever had a problem with a missing issue of AJB, lost
a dues notice, requested a section mailing list, or bought a t-shirt or
mug at a meeting, knows Kim and her cheerful and helpful manner. In addition
to assisting BSA members and officers, Kim was also responsible for paying
the bills from our printer, Allen Press, filing quarterly taxes for Business
Office and Editorial Office employees, dealing with subscription agencies
for institutional subscriptions to AJB, and organizing the dreaded U.S.
Postal Service biennial audit. She also responded to miscellaneous botanical
inquiries from the public, especially school children around the time of
science fairs.
Kim is an avid backpacker and veteran Ski Patrol member. She and her
family are looking forward to pursuing these interests further in her "retirement,"
and when Katie gets big enough to carry her own pack, as opposed to being
carried herself, they intend to explore more of the back country and wilderness
of the U.S.
The BSA is very grateful for the 9 years of devoted service Kim has
provided as our Business Manager. We wish her well in the next phase of
her life, and she will be sorely missed.
News from the Sections
The new officers for the Physiological section are:
Chair
Denise Seliskar, Halophyte Biotechnology Center, College of Marine
Studies, 700 Pilottown Rd, Lewes, DE 19958. 302-645-4366
seliskar@udel.edu
Program
Henri Maurice, Biology Department, U of Southern Indiana, 8600 University
Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana 47712-3596. 812-461-5231 hmaurice@usi.edu
Treasurer
Peter Straub, Biology Program, Richard Stockton College of NJ, PO Box
195, Pomona, NJ 08240. 609-652-4556 pete.straub@stockton.edu
Announcements
Award Opportunities
2002 Lawrence Memorial Award
The Award Committee of the Lawrence Memorial Fund invites nominations
for the 2002 Lawrence Memorial Award. Honoring the memory of Dr. George
H. M. Lawrence, founding Director of the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation,
the annual Award of $2000 is given to support travel for doctoral dissertation
research in systematic botany or horticulture, or the history of the plants
sciences, including literature and exploration.
Major professors are urged to nominate outstanding doctoral students
who have achieved official candidacy for their degrees and will be conducting
pertinent dissertation research that would benefit significantly from travel
enabled by the Award. The Committee will not entertain direct applications.
A student who wishes to be considered should arrange for nomination by
his/her major professor; this may take the form of a letter which covers
supporting materials prepared by the nominee.
Supporting materials should describe briefly but clearly the candidate's
program of research and how it would be significantly enhanced by travel
that the Award would support. Letters of nomination and supporting materials,
including seconding letters, should be received by the Committee no later
than 1 May, 2002 and should be directed to: Dr. R. W. Kiger, Hunt Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University, 5000 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
USA. Tele (1412) 268-2434.
Jeanette Siron Pelton Award
The Pelton Award Committee is actively seeking nominations for the 2002
Jeanette Siron Pelton Award in Plant Morphogenesis. This prestigious award
includes a $1,000 prize and certificate given in recognition of outstanding
contributions in the study of plant morphogenesis. The method of research
used to provide provide such contributions may include molecular biology,
cell biology, and/or organismal biology. It is anticipated that the award
winner will attend the Botany 2002 meeting at Madison, Wisconsin, and present
a special address in the Developmental and Structural Section's program.
Previous award winners are: R.H. Wetmore (1969), C.W. Wardlaw (1970), P.B.
Green (1972), P.K. Hepler (1975), B.E.S. Gunning (1978), L.J. Feldman (1980),
T.J. Cooke (1983), T. Sachs (1985 ), S.D. Russell (1988), E.M. Lord (1989),
R.S. Poethig (1993), E.M. Meyerowitz (1994), S. Hake (1996), D. Kaplan
(1998), and B. Scheres (2000). Special consideration in the past
has been given to younger investigators (under 40 years of age) in consideration
of the circumstances of the bequest, which may be waived in the case of
particularly noteworthy candidates. The award is not restricted as to sex,
nationality, or society affiliation of the recipient. A nominating letter
should describe the nature of the nominee's contributions to the field
of plant morphogenesis and include the full citations of key papers or
books relevant to the nomination. Please send materials to Dr. Scott D.
Russell, Chair, Pelton Award Committee, Department of Botany & Microbiology,
University of Oklahoma, Norman OK 730190245 (email:
mailto:srussell@ou.edu, Fax 14053257619). Review of nominees will begin
January 31, 2002.
2001-2002 Botanical Society of America YOUNG
BOTANIST AWARDS
The Botanical Society of America requests nominations for the Young
Botanist recognition Awards for 2001-2002. The purpose of these awards
is to offer individual recognition to outstanding graduating seniors
in the plant sciences and to encourage their participation in the Botanical
Society of America. All nominees with strong records of achievement (at
least a B average and other activities) will receive a Certificate of Recognition,
and have their names published in the Plant Science Bulletin. The
top 25 nominees, whose selection will be based primarily on the accomplishments
described in recommendation letters, will receive a Certificate of Special
Achievement from the Society.Nominations should document the student's
qualifications for the award (academic performance, research projects,
individual attributes) and be accompanied by two or more letters of
recommendation from faculty who know the students well. The selections
will be made by a committee chaired by the Past-President, Dr. Patricia
Gensel. Nominations should be sent to: Dr. Patricia Gensel, Dept. of Biology,
CB #3280, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3280 no later
than 15 February 2002.
Timothy C. Plowman Latin American Research
Award
The Botany Department at The Field Museum invites applications for the
year 2002 Timothy C. Plowman Latin American Research Award.
The award of $1,500.00 is designed to assist students and young professionals
to visit the Field Museum and use our extensive economic botany and systematic
collections. Individuals from Latin America and projects in the field of
ethnobotany or systematics of economically important plant groups will
be given priority consideration.
Applicants interested in the award should submit their curriculum vitae
and a detailed letter describing the project for which the award is sought.
The information should be forwarded to the Timothy C. Plowman Award Committee,
Department of Botany, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago,
IL 60605-2496 USA and received no later than 30 November 2001. Announcement
of the recipient will be made no later than 31 December 2001.
Anyone wishing to contribute to The Timothy C. Plowman Latin American
Research Fund, which supports this award, may send their checks,
payable to The Field Museum, c/o Department of Botany,
The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605-2496
USA. Make certain to indicate the intended fund.
Premio de investigación Latinoamericano Timothy C. Plowman
El departamento de Botánica en "The Field Museum" invita aplicaciones
para el premio de investigación Latinoamericano Timothy C.
Plowman 2002. Este premio de $1,500.00 fue diseñado para
apoyar a estudiantes y profesionales jóvenes en visitas al museo
de Field y utilizar sus extensas colecciones de botánica económica
y sistemática. Se les dará consideración especial
a individuos de Latinoamérica y a proyectos en los campos de etnobotánica
ó sistemática de plantas económicamente importantes.
Las personas interesadas en aplicar a este premio deberán proveer
su curriculum vitae y una carta detallando el proyecto para el cual el
premio se utilizará. Esta información debe ser enviada al
Timothy C. Plowman Award Committee, Department of Botany, The Field Museum,
1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605-2496 USA y ser recibida
antes del 30 de Noviembre de 2001. El ganador del premio será anunciado
antes del 31 de Diciembre de 2001.
Cualquier persona que desee contribuir al Fondo de investigación
latinoamericano Timothy C. Plowman, el cual apoya este premio,
puede enviar su cheque, pagadero a "The Field Museum, c/o Department of
Botany, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605-2496
USA". Asegúrese de indicar el fondo al cual se destina su contribución.
Call for Proposals: Karling Graduate Student
Research Award
Purpose and Eligibility
The purpose of this award is to support and promote graduate student
research in the botanical sciences. To be eligible, one must be a member
of the Botanical Society of America (BSA), a registered full-time graduate
student, have a faculty advisor who is also a member of the BSA, and not
have won the award previously.
Proposal Guidelines
The proposal shall consist of 1) a title page (must include: title
of proposal, name of student, student's institutional and departmental
affiliation, year of student's study, and student's sectional affiliation
within BSA); 2) an Abstract; 3) a Narrative (must include: a description
of the research, including appropriate conceptual background, purpose or
objective, brief outline of methodology, and potential contribution or
significance to an area of the botanical sciences); 4) a Budget detailing
how the funds will be used (the Abstract, Narrative, Budget and any tables
or figures should not exceed five single-spaced pages); 5) a Bibliography
(up to two pages); and 6) a Biographical Sketch (up to two pages). Proposals
should include one inch margins all around and use a font size of not smaller
than 12 point. In addition, proposals should be accompanied by a letter
of support from the student's advisor.
Award Level and Announcement
Each award provides $500. Award winners will be announced at the BSA
Banquet held in Madison Wisconsin in August 2002. Funds for the awards
come from interest on the Karling and the BSA Endowment Funds, and from
the sale of BSA logo items. The award process can be quite competetive;
the funding level for the 1998 competition was about 22 percent.
Submission
Proposals and supporting letters should be postmarked no later than
March 15, 2002. Students should submit six (6) hardcopies of the complete
proposal and arrange to have the letter of support sent to the Chair of
the Karling Graduate Student Research Award Committee at the following
address: Dr. Gene Mapes, Director, Environmental Studies, The Ridges, #133
TEB, Voinovich Center for Leadership and Public Affairs, Ohio University,
Athens, OH 45701. email: mapesg@ohio.edu
Phone: 740/593-9526 Fax: 740/593-0924.
Courses/Workshops
ANT COURSE 2002
Southwestern Research Station (SWRS), Portal, AZ August 6-16, 2002
Website:
http://www.calacademy.org/research/entomology/Ant_Course/ant_course.html
COURSE OBJECTIVES. —ANT COURSE is designed for systematists, ecologists,
behaviorists, conservation biologists, and other biologists whose research
responsibilities require a greater understanding of ant taxonomy. It emphasizes
the classification and identification of more than fifty ant genera of
North America. Lectures will include background information on the ecology,
life histories and evolution of ants. Field trips are structured to teach
collecting and sampling techniques, and associated lab work provides instruction
on specimen preparation, sorting and labeling. Information on equipment/supply
vendors, literature, and people resources is also presented.
COURSE SIGNIFICANCE.— Ant Course is a unique opportunity to acquire
training that is unavailable elsewhere. This course will provide students
with 1) the confidence and skills to identify the major ant genera of North
America; 2) an understanding of modern specimen processing and curation
techniques; 3) an appreciation for the biological diversity of ants, and
4) experience keying to the species level.
SPONSORS. — The E.O. Wilson Foundation & The Schlinger Foundation.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION.—ANT COURSE will be taught from August 6 16,
2002 at the Southwestern Research Station in Portal Arizona. The Station
is centered amid the richest ant fauna in North America. This will be an
ongoing course, offered annually.
PARTICIPANT ACCEPTANCE CRITERIA.—ANT COURSE is open to all interested
individuals. Priority will be given to those biologists for whom the course
will have a significant impact on their research. An entomological background
is not required. We aim to include students with a diverse interest in
biology, including ant systematics, ecology, behavioral biology and conservation.
The high instructor to student ratio will allow students to receive individual
attention. ANT COURSE is presented in English and limited to 24 participants.
FELLOWSHIPS. — Four fellowships are available for 2002. Two fellowships
cover tuition fees and two fellowships cover station fees.
INSTRUCTORS: 2002 Instructors to be announced Spring 2002
For application form and additional information contact: ANT COURSE,
Dept. of Entomology, California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park,
San Francisco, CA 94118-4599, You may also email the application
to: bfisher@calacademy.org.
Please put "Ant Course application" in the subject line of the email.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: APRIL 1, 2002
Four fellowships are available for 2002. Two fellowships cover tuition
fees and two fellowships cover station fees. If you wish to apply for a
fellowship please have the person writing your letter of recommendation
indicate why you need to apply for the fellowship.
FEES.
Tuition for the 10-day COURSE is $400 for current graduate students
and $600 for non-students to be paid by all participants on being informed
of their acceptance. Tuition covers partial overhead costs of the workshop.
In addition, Southwestern Research Station (SWRS) fees for this period,
covering dormitory room and board, are $378, payable to SWRS personnel
on departure from the Station on Aug. 16. Transportation costs between
home and Tucson (air) or SWRS (auto) are to be borne by all participants
or their home institutions.
THE HIGHLANDS BIOLOGICAL STATION
2002 COURSE OFFERINGS
The Station offers several courses each summer at the advanced undergraduate-graduate
level dealing with the special biological features of the Southern Appalachians
and with areas of study that are appropriate for investigation at a mountain
field station. Credit for all courses is available through either UNC-Chapel
Hill or Western Carolina University.
Biology of Plethodontid Salamanders. May 20 - June 1 Three
semester hours. Steven G. Tilley (Smith College)
The Southern Appalachians are renowned for the diversity of their salamander
fauna. This course acquaints students with plethodontid salamanders and
shows how studies of these animals have enhanced our understanding of a
series of major evolutionary and ecological topics. Each topic will include
lectures, field and laboratory exercises, and discussions of original research
papers. Field trips to significant salamander locations highlight the course.
Prerequisites: general biology, ecology, or permission of instructor.
Biology of Birds. June 3-15 Three semester hours. Rob Bierregaard
(UNC-Charlotte)
Bird diversity is remarkably high on the Highlands Plateau, which includes
a wide range of plant community types over a nearly 4000-foot range in
elevation. This basic course in ornithology covers morphology, systematics,
ecology, and behavior of birds. Numerous field trips in the local area
will acquaint students with the rich bird fauna of the region.
Prerequisites: general biology, ecology, or permission of instructor.
Biology of Freshwater Fishes. June 17-29 Three semester hours.
Edward F. Menhinick (UNC-Charlotte)
The Highlands Plateau is the wettest place in eastern North America,
with abundant clear-flowing mountain streams and waterfalls that grade
into slower-flowing bottomland rivers. Fish vary within these different
habitats and within the different river drainages of the area. This course
involves collection, identification, ecology, and fisheries biology of
freshwater fishes. Resource management, conservation, and effects of pollution
are also covered.
Prerequisites: general biology, ecology, or permission of instructor.
Behavioral Ecology of Social Insects. July 1-13 Three semester
hours. James T. Costa (Western Carolina University)
The Southern Appalachians host an impressive cross-section of the social
arthropod world, making the Highlands Plateau an ideal locale for a field-oriented
exploration of the life history and behavioral ecology of arthropods from
across the sociality spectrum. Field trips will be supplemented with lectures
and readings. Topics for lecture and discussion will include social-evolutionary
models, social insect nutritional ecology, defensive mechanisms, communication
systems, phylogenetic studies of social evolution, and empirical techniques
for studying social behavior.
Prerequisites: General biology, entomology (recommended), or permission
of the instructor.
Fleshy Fungi of the Highlands Plateau. July 15-27 Three
semester hours. Andrew S. Methven (Eastern Illinois University)
The Southern Appalachian Mountains are world-renowned for their incredibly
rich diversity of fleshy fungi. This course introduces students to the
fleshy ascomycetes and basidiomycetes that occur on the Highlands Plateau
during peak mushroom season. Emphasis will be placed on the analysis of
macro- and micromorphological features to aid in the identification of
taxa. The daily routine will consist of a morning lecture on systematics,
ecology, and phylogeny of fleshy fungi followed by a field trip until early
or mid-afternoon. Collections will be examined and identified after returning
from the field, providing an opportunity to assemble an impressive collection
of fleshy fungi for classroom instruction or research.
Prerequisites: General biology, ecology, or permission of instructor.
List of tentative courses for summer 2003:
Mayflies, Stoneflies, and Caddisflies — John Morse (Clemson University)
Conservation Biology of Amphibians — Ray Semlitsch (University of Missouri)
Conservation Biology of Plants — Peter White (UNC-Chapel Hill)
Forest Ecosystems — Tom Wentworth (North Carolina State University)
Southern Appalachian Flora — Steve Broyles (SUNY - Cortland)
Bryophytes — Paul Davison (University of North Alabama)
Costs
Tuition: $400 per two-week course, charged to all students. Registration
fees (applicable only to students who wish to register for credit): either
UNC-Chapel Hill, $80 registration fee; or Western Carolina University,
$35 application fee and $54 registration fee. (These fees are subject to
change on short notice.) Courses may be taken without credit. Housing:
$40/week.
The Highlands Biological Foundation, Inc., offers limited financial
aid, typically a half-tuition scholarship available to no more than 1-2
qualified students per course. Further information on specific courses,
financial aid, and application forms can be obtained by writing to Dr.
Robert Wyatt, Executive Director, Highlands Biological Station, P.O. Box
580, Highlands, North Carolina 28741. Forms can also be downloaded from
our website at www.wcu.edu/hibio.
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
Grants-in-Aid. A number of grants-in-aid are available to predoctoral
graduate students and postdoctoral investigators for the support of research
on the habitats and organisms of the Southern Appalachians. Grant recipients
are expected to spend time in residence at HBS, as both they and other
researchers and students benefit from such interaction. Support may be
awarded for one to twelve weeks. Applications for grants are reviewed by
the Board of Scientific Advisors in March of the year for which support
is requested. Application forms can be obtained from the Station office
or downloaded from our website. They must be returned before 1 March. Applicants
will be notified in early April, following final approval by the Board
of Directors.
Awards are based on the period of residence at HBS according to the
following schedule: Predoctoral, $250/week; Postdoctoral, $400/week. Recipients
of grants-in-aid are provided research space without charge.
Scholarships. A number of named scholarships have been endowed
at the Station and are described below. These represent honors awarded
to particularly meritorious projects. They do not provide monies in addition
to the basic stipend, which is calculated simply on the basis of number
of weeks in residence.
Thelma Howell Memorial Scholarship. Dr. Thelma Howell served
with distinction as Executive Director of the Station from 1946 to 1972.
Upon her death in 1979, the Highlands Biological Foundation, Inc., established
a scholarship fund in her memory, to support investigators at HBS.
William Chambers Coker Fellowship in Botanical Research. Dr.
W. C. Coker, Professor of Botany at the University of North Carolina, served
as the second Director of the Highlands Biological Station from 1936 to
1944. His wife, Louise V. Coker, through a bequest of her will in 1983,
established the William Chambers Coker Fellowship in Botanical Research
to be awarded annually to an investigator studying plants or fungi.
Ralph M. Sargent Memorial Scholarship. Dr. Ralph Sargent, Professor
of English at Haverford College, was a naturalist, botanist, and conservationist
who had a long association with the Station. Upon his death in 1985, a
scholarship was established by Dr. Sargent's family and friends to support
students conducting research at the Station.
Lindsay S. Olive Memorial Scholarship. Dr. Lindsay Olive of the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was a distinguished botanist
and mycologist. A scholarship was established in his memory in 1993 by
Ruth Gershon and Sanford Cohn of Atlanta and supported through generous
gifts from Ms. Gershon, Mr. Cohn, and Anna Jean Olive. The scholarship
is awarded annually to a student whose research reflects the interests
of Dr. Olive.
Charles W. Ash Memorial Scholarship. Dr. Charles Ash was a statistician
who had a strong interest in the natural world. Following his death in
1993, a scholarship was established in his memory through the efforts of
his brother, Andrew Ash, other members of his family, and friends. The
scholarship is awarded annually to a promising student whose research reflects
Dr. Ash's interests in statistics and experimental design.
All applicants for grants-in-aid are eligible for the Coker, Howell,
Sargent, Olive, and Ash awards, subject to any
constraints described above. They will be awarded by the Highlands Biological
Foundation, Inc., upon recommendation of the Board of Scientific Advisors
and approval by the Board of Directors of the Station. Announcements of
the awards are made in early spring of each year, concurrent with notifications
of grants-in-aid.
Symposia, Conferences, Meetings
Gordon Conference
The Second Gordon Research Conference on Floral Scent: Biology, Chemistry
and Evolution, will take place March 3-8, 2002, in Ventura, CA. All posters
are welcome. To see the program, apply and register, see www.grc.org.
To contact the organizing chair, Heidi Dobson:
dobsonhe@whitman.edu.
XVIIth International Congress on Sexual Plant
Reproduction
The XVIIth International Congress on Sexual Plant Reproduction will
be held at Maria Curie-Sklodowska University at Lublin, Poland, from July
9-13, 2002. The theme of the congress is Sexual Plant Reproduction in Nature
and Laboratory. The contact person is: Dr. Ewa Szczuka, Department of Plant
Anatomy and Cytology, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Akademicka 19,
20-033 Lublin, Poland. E-mail: plantrep@biotop.umcs.lublin.pl
American Institute of Biological Sciences
53rd Annual Meeting - "Evolution: Understanding Life on Earth"
22-24 March 2002, Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, 1401 Lee Highway, Arlington
VA 22209
Researchers, Educators, and Students:
The 2002 AIBS annual meeting, "Evolution: Understanding Life on Earth,"
presents an excellent opportunity for biologists to share the latest developments
in evolution research and education. Attendees will hear distinguished
plenary speakers present synthesizing lectures from the forefront of their
fields, then will join those speakers and other equally notable scholars
in informal discussion groups. The rest of the meeting's program includes
a session on online resources for research and education; a session on
the central role of organismal biology; contributed posters; a diversity
scholars competition; and a presentation by Darwin scholar and stage performer
Richard Milner of his popular musical, "Charles Darwin: Live and in Concert."
Speakers and discussion leaders include: Francisco Ayala, Rodger Bybee,
Joel Cracraft, Niles Eldredge, Douglas Futuyma, Peter and Rosemary Grant,
Alison Jolly, John Jungck, Joe Levine, Paula Mabee, Kenneth Miller, Loren
Rieseberg, Eugenie Scott. Topics include: evolutionary mechanisms
and patterns, replication studies, genomics and development, conservation
and population biology, formal education K-16, public education, anti-evolution,
public policy and politics, and faith-based issues.
Register now at www.aibs.org, or call 703-790-1745; e-mail:
admin@aibs.org.
Other News
FROM THE LABORATORY TO THE PARLOR: SCIENTIFIC
INSTRUMENTS IN PHILADELPHIA, 1750 1875
Through MARCH 2003, American Philosophical Society - The First Public
Display In Recently Renovated 212YearOld Philosophical Hall since 1811.
At that time, from 17941811, Charles Willson Peale's natural history museum
was housed in the building. Now, the 212yearold Philosophical Hall, adjacent
to Independence Hall in Philadelphia, will once again become a years, and
the first in its recently renovated building. This initiative also marks
the establishment of a fulltime curator for the Society's fine arts and
object collections.
FROM THE LABORATORY TO THE PARLOR: Scientific Instruments in Philadelphia,
17501875, explores the significance of scientific instruments in the development
of the American colonies and the early republic, with a specific focus
on Philadelphia.
Through the display of instruments together with period books, catalogues,
engravings, maps, portraits and even translations of American Indian languages
the exhibit illuminates the role that science played in the drive to create
a Europeanstyle America, develop local and international commerce, and
establish social as well as intellectual prestige for the New World devotees
of what was then known as "natural philosophy."
Comprised of ninetynine artifacts, including fortysix instruments and
rare objects, fortyfive archival pieces including broadsides, letters,
books and diaries, and eight fine arts pieces, (paintings, prints, one
watercolor and one plaster bust), the exhibit includes fifteen loan items
from such institutions as The Library Company of Philadelphia, The Rosenbach
Museum & Library, the University of Pennsylvania, the Library and Mutter
Museum of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, and the Carnegie Institution
of Washington. Several of the loan items will be replaced by substitutions
from the same or other institutions during the run of the exhibit.
In the 18th century, scientific instruments were used as both tools
and toys. In the laboratory they provided the means for measuring and mapping
the North American continent, exploring astronomical phenomena such as
the TRANSIT OF VENUS in 1769,and examining the newlyvisible structures
of flowers and fleas. Instruments enabled the development of commerce in
the new society, providing the means to standardize weights and measures,
and to assess taxes on such products as imports and alcohol. In the home,
they provided status for the early amateurs of science owning a globe,
microscope or electrical machine not only linked one symbolically to the
international community of natural philosophy but provided entertainment
for guests in the form of amusing experiments or parlor games.
For more information please call Sue Ann Prince at 215. 440. 3442.
Positions Available
THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN - VICE PRESIDENT
FOR BOTANICAL SCIENCE
The New York Botanical Garden is soliciting applications from outstanding
candidates for the position of Vice President for Science. The appointee
will hold an endowed chair (Pfizer Curator of Botany) at the full curatorial
rank (equivalent to full professor) in the Garden's International Plant
Science Center. In addition, the appointee will hold a tenured faculty
position in the Department of Biology at New York University.
The successful candidate will possess a Ph.D. in Biology, and have an
established research record in modern molecular and genomic approaches
as applied to plant systematics and/or economic botany. An essential talent
required will be the ability to creatively blend The New York Botanical
Garden's unique biodiversity collections assets and deep expertise in plant
and fungal diversity with the evolving molecular and genomics technologies.
S/he will be a dynamic, collaboratively-minded individual with proven skills
in interdisciplinary research team building. This is especially important
as the Garden engages in a number of collaborative relationships with other
organizations such as The Plant Genomics Consortium of The New York Botanical
Garden with Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and New York University and the
joint molecular systematics research program with the American Museum of
Natural History.
In addition, the Garden's Vice President for Science is one of the nation's
highest profile spokespersons for the importance of basic research in the
plant sciences, with an emphasis on the significance of plant biodiversity.
The individual in this position will be responsible for representing NYBG
and plant science in many venues, in government relations and to the private
foundation community. In addition, the Vice President for Science must
be a fluent and enthusiastic interpreter of plant science to a public audience.
The appointee must have managerial skills, as the Garden's Vice President
for Science will oversee science programs, e.g., the Institutes of Systematic
Botany and Economic Botany and The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Program
for Molecular Systematics Studies. This person is also a key member of
the Garden's senior management team and must interact effectively within
the broader organizational framework. Applicants should send a curriculum
vitae and statement of research interests, and the names and contact information
for at least three references to Dr. Dennis Wm. Stevenson, Co-Chair, Vice
President Search Committee, attn. Human Resources Department, The New York
Botanical Garden, Bronx, NY 10458 USA. Position open until filled; review
of applications to commence on January 1, 2002. The New York Botanical
Garden is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer.
RIDER UNIVERSITY — LAWRENCEVILLE, NJ
The Biology Department at Rider University invites applications to fill
two tenure track positions in Plant Biology /Ecology and Marine/Organismal
Biology. Successful applicants should have broad training in their respective
fields. Candidates must have a Ph.D. and a strong record of research accomplishments,
post-doctoral research training and demonstrated interest and ability to
teach undergraduates. Teaching responsibilities include both nonmajor and
major introductory level courses and upper level courses in the area of
expertise. Faculty are expected to develop research programs that involve
students. In addition, contributions may be made to Marine Science, Environmental
Science, and Biochemistry programs, as well as teacher training initiatives.
For more information visit our website: www.rider.edu.
Queries should be directed to Dr. James Riggs, Chair, at riggs@rider.edu.
Applications should include a curriculum vitae, detailed statements
of teaching interests and research goals, and three letters of reference,
sent to Ms. Rosemary Molloy, Manager of Employment - Human Resources, Rider
University, 2083 Lawrenceville Road, Lawrenceville, NJ.
Review of applications will begin on December 20, 2001 and continue
until positions are filled.
Department of Botany and Microbiology - University
of Oklahoma
Applications are invited for four tenure-track positions to begin in
Summer 2002 at the ASSISTANT PROFESSOR level. The Department seeks
outstanding individuals who will contribute to its research, teaching,
and service missions, work collaboratively with faculty colleagues, and
whose research focuses on: (Search #1) Plant Development/Plant Genomics,
addressing fundamental aspects of plant development and/or the influence
of environmental stress on plant development and growth using modern tools
of molecular analysis; (Search #2) Molecular Microbiology,
using state-of-the-art methodologies to study cellular events at the molecular
level in microbial systems or model microorganisms; (Search #3)
Molecular
Ecology, using molecular approaches to understand the ecological principles
that govern the structure and function of microbial systems, their relationships
to hierarchical ecological levels, and/or the molecular basis of interactions
with macrobiota; or (Search #4)
Geomicrobiology, studying
the role of microbes in geomicrobiological and biogeochemical processes
related to global climate change, focusing on the microbial production
and consumption of one or more important greenhouse gases.
Qualified candidates must possess a Ph.D., or equivalent degree, and
relevant postdoctoral experience, and provide evidence of a strong ability
to develop independent, extramurally funded research as well as a strong
commitment to teaching at the graduate and undergraduate levels. Applicants
should send a current c.v., representative reprints, statements of research
plans, teaching interests and philosophy, and the search # to which the
application pertains, and arrange to have three letters of reference sent
to Dr. Gordon Uno, Chair, Department of Botany and Microbiology, 770 Van
Vleet Oval, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019 (inquiries to guno@ou.edu).
Review of applications begins November 15, 2001 and will continue until
positions are filled.
Successful candidates have opportunities to collaborate with a dynamic
faculty possessing strengths in functional genomics and proteomics, microbial
physiology, microbial pathogenesis, ecology, global change, phytoremediation
and bioremediation, plant structure, and systematics. Resources include
an electron/confocal microscopy facility, a sequencing facility, a microarray
facility, and a planned genomics research institute. More information about
the faculty, department, and searches may be obtained at: http://www.ou.edu/cas/botany-micro/
Black Hills State University - Assistant Professor
- Plant Biology
Full-time, tenure-track position for a Ph. D. to teach general biology,
plant biology and develop an upper level course in area of expertise. Background
and research interests in organismal plant biology, and willingness to
develop a research program with undergraduates is expected. Send curriculum
vitae, a statement of teaching and research interests, copy of transcripts
and three letters of reference by December 15, 2001
Apply To
Mail: Dr. Mark Gabel, Black Hills State University, 1200 University
Street Unit 9003, Spearfish, SD 57799-9003
Fax: (605) 642-6762
TDD: 1-800-877-1113
Web Site: http://www.bhsu.edu
Via Email: MarkGabel@bhsu.edu
Plant Molecular Genetics
The Department of Biological Sciences invites applications for a tenure-track
Assistant Professorship in Plant Molecular Genetics to begin August 16,
2002. Desirable areas of specialization include development, cell biology,
functional genomics and host-pathogen interactions. The successful applicant
is expected to develop an extramurally-funded research program, contribute
to training of B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. students, and participate in our M.S.
Biotechnology Sequence. Postdoctoral experience required. Teaching responsibilities
include an undergraduate genetics course for majors and a graduate course
in plant molecular biology. To assure full consideration, please send CV,
copies of 3-4 publications, 3 letters of recommendation and a brief statement
of research and teaching goals by December 3, 2002 to: Dr. Alan Katz, Genetics
Search Committee Chair, Department of Biological Sciences, Campus Box 4120,
Illinois State University, Normal, IL 61790-4120.
Additional information at website www.bio.ilstu.edu.
Illinois State University is an equal opportunity/affirmative action university
encouraging diversity.
All positions offer excellent benefits. Women and members of underrepresented
groups are encouraged to apply. The University of Oklahoma is an Equal
Opportunity Employer.
GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS IN BRYOLOGY
Department of Plant Biology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale,
IL 62901-6509
Graduate assistantships are available at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale
for bright, motivated students interested in studying the biology and systematics
of liverworts, as participants of an NSF-funded PEET (= Partnership for
Enhancing Expertise in Taxonomy) project. Under the mentoring of Dr. Barbara
Crandall-Stotler and Dr. Raymond Stotler, student theses and/or dissertations
will focus on monographic and phylogenetic studies of the pivotal simple
thalloid taxa of the Pallaviciniineae and Pelliineae. The project may provide
opportunities for field work in North America, Latin America and New Zealand,
as well as participation in national and international conferences and
workshops. Degrees are offered through the Department of Plant Biology
and typically require 2 years of study for an M.S. or 4 years for a Ph.
D. The Department offers a selection of more than 40 graduate courses and
has excellent laboratory facilities. A detailed description of the department
may be found at http://www.science.siu.edu/plant
biology/index.html.
The project provides training in standard taxonomic methods, including
nomenclature and herbarium curation, as well as extensive involvement in
modern approaches of systematics, such as morphometric methods for analyzing
variation patterns, tissue culture techniques, SEM and/or TEM, starch gel
electrophoresis and DNA sequencing methods. The application of computer
technology to data gathering and dissemination is also integral to student
training. This includes, but is notn image-capturing systems, database
development and various formats of electronic data analysis and presentation
via the World Wide Web.
Each assistantship provides a monthly stipend and complete tuition for
the duration of graduate study. To obtain further information regarding
application procedures, please contact:
Dr. Barbara Crandall-Stotler, Department of Plant Biology, Mail Code
6509, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901
PH (618)-536-2331; FAX (618)-453-3441;
email: crandall@plant.siu.edu
Postdoctoral Fellowship in Plant Molecular
Systematics
Department of Plant Biology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale,
IL
A postdoctoral fellowship is available, beginning March 1, 2002 to participate
in studies of the molecular evolution and systematic relationships of simple
thalloid liverworts as part of an NSF funded PEET project. The goals of
the project are to circumscribe the 17 genera of the suborders Pelliineae
and Pallaviciniineae using a combination of morphological and molecular
characters, to assess patterns of genetic variability in cosmopolitan taxa,
and to resolve the phylogenetic relationships among the genera of simple
thalloid hepatics and the other major groups of liverworts. Qualifications
include a Ph.D. in plant biology, with a strong research background in
molecular systematics and familiarity with DNA sequencing techniques. Duties
of the position are to oversee the collection and analysis of molecular
data, to assist in the training of students in molecular techniques and
to work effectively as a member of a research team. As a member of this
PEET team, the postdoc will be both a trainer and a trainee, who will gain
valuable knowledge about the biology of one of the earliest groups of land
plants. Additional information about the project and its research team
can be found at http://bryophytes.plant.siu.edu
.
Interested applicants should send a curriculum vitae, a brief statement
of research background and the names of two references to Dr. Barbara Crandall-Stotler
Department of Plant Biology, Mail Code 6509, Southern Illinois University,
Carbondale, IL 62901-6509; e-mail: crandall@plant.siu.edu.
The review of applications will begin December 1, 2001 and will continue
until the position is filled.
Book Reviews
In this issue:
Development/Structure
Integrative Plant Anatomy. Dickison, William
C. - Lytton John Musselman..............................................................157
Shape and Structure, from Engineering to Nature.
Bejan, Adrian- Laurent Maurice Meillier.....................................158
The Monumental Impulse: Architecture's Biological
Roots. Hersey, George - Roger D. Meicenheimer.....................159
Ecology
Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus. Richardson,
David M. (ed) - James P. Riser II...............................................160
Invasive Plants of California. Bossard, C.C.,
J.M. Randall and M.C. Hosovsky. - Rebecca Irwin............................161
The Tropical Deciduous Forest of Alamos: Biodiversity
of a Threatened Ecosystem in Mexico. Ribichaux, Robert H.
and David A. Yetman.- Sarah Delle Hultmark....................................................................................................162
Economic Botany
Advances in Chickpea Science. Maiti, R. and
P. Wesche-Ebeling (eds) - Lytton John Musselman ..........................163
African Traditional Medicine: A Dictionary of Plant
Use and Applications. Neuwinger, H.D. - Dorothea
Bedigian ...........................................................................................................................................................164
The Illustrated Rhododendron. Halliday,
Pat. - Samuel Hammer.............................................................................165
Medicinal Plants of the World: Chemical Constituents,
Traditional and Modern Medicinal Uses. Volume 2.
Ross, Ivan A. - Michelle A. Briggs.....................................................................................................................165
Mistletoe: The Genus Viscum. Bussing,
Arndt. - Douglas Darnowski......................................................................166
History
Linnaeus: Nature and Nation. Koerner, Lisbet.
- John Z. Kiss.................................................................................167
Mycology
Fungal Conservation. Moore, M., M.M. Nauta, S.E.
Evans, and M. Rotheroe (eds). - Samuel Hammer..................167
Lichens. Purvis, William. - Scott LaGreca...............................................................................................................168
Pteridology
Fern Grower's Manual: Revised and Expanded Edition.
Hoshizaki, Barbara Joe and Robbin C. Moran.
- Marshall D. Sundberg......................................................................................................................................169
Systematics
The Cactus Family. Anderson, Edward F. - Doug
Darnowski..................................................................................170
Field Guide to Indiana Wildflowers. Yatskievych,
K. - Donna R.R. Resetar.............................................................170
Plant Galls of India. Mani, M.S. - James E. Eckenwalder........................................................................................172
Poppies: A Guide to the Poppy Family in the Wild.
Grey-Wilson, Christopher. - Una Smith.....................................173
The Trees of Sonora, Mexico. Felger, Richard,
Matthew Johnson and Michael Wilson and Flora of the Gran
Desierto and RioColorado of Northwestern Mexico.
Felger, Richard S. - Grady Webster...................................173
Wildflowers of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont,
in Color. Besette, Alan E., Arleen Rainis Besette,
William Chapman, and Valerie Conley Chapman. - Bryan
Drayton......................................................................175
Teaching
The Cambridge Illustrated Glossary of Botanical
Terms. Hickey, Michael and Clive King. - James L Smith II ..........176
A Class-Book of Botany. 17th ed. Dutta, A.C.
revised by T.C. Dutta. - James L Smith II.......................................176
Integrative Plant Anatomy. Dickison,
William C. 2000. ISBN 0-12-215170-4 (Hardbound $69.95) 533pp +xviii. Academic
Press, 525 B Street, Suite 1900, San Diego, California 92101-4495.-From
the poignant dedication at the beginning, "As I was writing the final chapter
of this book, I realized that I was living the final chapter of my life"
to the helpful glossary that concludes this modern treatment of plant anatomy,
Integrative Plant Anatomy is a painstakingly researched, well-written contribution
to plant science. It is also unique in combining traditional descriptive
aspects, so essential to understanding plant biology and so undervalued
in most undergraduate curricula, with applied plant anatomy. In this way,
it bridges the gap between earlier, largely descriptive aspects, to satisfy
the post-modernists' desire to see facts applied in the real world. Tragic
that the author's death in 2000 preceded the appearance of the book although
he was able to go over the proofs shortly before he died.
I want to emphasize the clarity of presentation found throughout Dickison's
final work. Each chapter begins with a concise overview of the topic. Reading
this prepares the reader for what follows. Examples are ample, not encyclopedic,
and clearly discussed.
Initially, I was put off by the title because of the trend in textbooks
and monographs to present scientific findings as "integrative." How wrong
my perception was. This is a truly integrative approach. The scope
of the book ranges from the foundation of plant anatomy, careful description,
to strictly applied aspects—such as determining the kind of wood found
in a Stradivarius violin. This is a massive undertaking which Dickison
accomplished with skill and grace, covering a broad range of topics. (But
why were parasitic plants and phytoliths omitted?)
The first half of Integrative Plant Anatomy deals with the organization
of the plant body. This part of the book will be of particular value to
those scientists who need to gain appreciation of plant structure but may
not have the background. A vast corpus of basic research is distilled,
terms are carefully defined, major concepts discussed— all well illustrated.
I only wish that the figures, at least in my copy, were as clear as
the prose. They appear to have been digitally produced at low resolution.
Despite this shortcoming, the figures are relevant and drawn from a wide
range of sources using both light and electron micrographs. A few colored
plates are included with little benefit to the book.
Evolutionary aspects of plant anatomy were one of the author's main
interests for all of his research career. As a result, section II of the
book dealing with evolutionary, physiological, and ecological plant anatomy
is an important contribution. In the evolution and systematics chapter,
Dickison provides a cogent, lucid review of
evolutionary plant anatomy. It is certainly one of the best chapters
in an excellent book.
Section III, Economic and Applied Plant Anatomy is a helpful overview
of the role that plant anatomy plays in genetics and plant breeding, plants'
response to pathogens; economic uses of fibers for wood as well as forage
and animal nutrition. These chapters are not only well crafted and drawn
from classic and contemporary literature, they make for enjoyable reading
and engaging examples for class use. The best known forensic use of wood
anatomy involves the ladder used in the Lindbergh kidnaping and is rightfully
included. Read the book to find how other, lesser known crimes, have been
solved using a knowledge of plant cells and tissues!
Wood anatomy was one of Dicksion's passions as is evident in this work.
Knowledge of wood anatomy can help document ages or sources of materials
used in ancient buildings, musical instruments, even pieces of art. I was
surprised that information on phytoliths and their importance in archeobotany
was not included.
Integrative Plant Anatomy is bound to join the ranks of such classics
as Esau's Plant Anatomy. It should be in every library and will find utility
as a text book. Anyone teaching general biology or botany will want it
on their shelf. - Lytton John Musselman, Department of Biological Sciences,
Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia 23529-0266.
Shape and Structure, from Engineering to Nature.
Bejan, Adrian. 2000. ISBN 0521790492 (Cloth US$110.00) 0521793882 (Paper
US $39.95) 324 pp Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, New
York, NY 100114211. This work is based on a fascinating attempt to link
engineered systems with the natural (animate and inanimate) architectures
that surround us. In this book Adrian Bejan focuses on the deterministic
relationship between the improvement of performance and the generation
of geometry in a bounded system. Three major tenets compose the foundation
of this intellectual exercise. The author first starts from engineering
principles to predict geometric forms found in nature. Second the author
uses a naturally engineered system such as tree shaped flows to improve
our ability to create artificial dentritic flows. The third component deals
with the role of engineering in human society. Once a noble science, engineering
has been taken for granted by permeating all aspects of our existence.
The author strongly believes that engineers are destined to "play a role
in the quest for rational basis a principle for the generation of geometric
form in nature."
The book is divided in 12 chapters, it contains a useful table listing
exhaustively the mathematical, physical and engineering symbols used. Each
chapter ends with a problem (solutions not provided) and reference sections.
The end of the book contains author and subject indices. This work is definitely
addressed to a public with a solid base in mathematics and engineering.
The first three chapters address the theoretical understanding of what
governs mechanical and thermal structures. The natural shapes we are taking
for granted are not dead but in constant desequilibrium, from the tree
network or rivers, the cross section of blood vessels to the "watermelon
slice" (cross section) of rivers. The fundamental principle of this book
is that the spatial and temporal structure exhibited by nature is "the
result of a global process of optimization subject to global and local
constraints". It is introduced in this work as the constructal law.
Constructal theory is a mean to rationalize macroscopic features, objectives
and behavior. Well known global constraints are the mass and volume of
a system under study. Local constraints could be illustrated by the maximum
allowable stress in a cantilever beam. The geometry of the system is the
result of optimized global and local constraints. Shape and structure are
the mechanisms for achieving the design objective. Chapters four six and
eight deal with dentritic forms from heat to fluid trees ending with an
interesting study on rivers and ducts. The objective of the optimization
process in river drainage basins is to "construct the path (or assembly
of paths) that provides minimal resistance to flow or, in an isolated system,
to maximize the rate of approach to internal (volumetric) equilibrium".
Although, if minimal global resistance is the keystone component then the
finest details of the resulting flow path may vary according to unknown
incidental local factors labeled more simply chance. The flow of a river
is fascinating. The river channel tends to acquire a sinusoidal shape with
a wavelength proportional to the channel width. Actually, the width of
the channel is proportional to the maximum depth. The river channel or
delta has a dentritic organization based on the areatopoint flow access
optimization. One of the major position taken by the author is that natural
patterns are not fractal. The real image is Euclidean. Chapter seven is
an incursion on the complex topic of turbulent flow governed by two regimes
where low and high resistance are intertwined. The tour de force made by
the author is that turbulent flows are governed by constructal theory as
well. Chapter nine and ten look at structure in power systems and time.
Systems such as power generation and refrigeration are reviewed. Power
plants are systems where "irreversibility is reduced and power production
per unit fuel is maximized when the resistances encountered by these flows
are reduced". Example of structure in time is the rhythmic breathing and
heart beating of all animals. The observed proportionality between beating
frequency and animal body mass raised to the power of approximately 0.25
is derived theoretically. To predict the relation between breathing time
and body size we need the following components:
1. Relationship between metabolic rate and body size
2. Relationship between the mass transfer contact area and body size.
Chapter eleven takes a look at transportation and economic structures.
By minimizing cost in pointtoarea or areatopoint transport the author is
able to derive the growth of dentritic transportation routes. Furthermore,
by maximizing revenue it is possible to anticipate the expanding dentrites
of transport routes. Every detail of the geometric structure is deterministic.
It is the result of invoking the principle of parsimony.
The last chapter summarizes the engineering principles illustrated in
this book by looking at shapes with constant resistance. This work would
gain by improving organization and illustrations. The vocabulary utilized
is definitely not for the novice and mathematical terms, variables should
be defined with more rigor. More care should be taken in labeling the axis
of graphs as well as providing scale and units.
Demonstration of the mathematical theorems should be more explicit.
Where are the solutions to the problems provided? The author could include
at the end of each chapter a conclusion insert outlining the main mathematical
findings supporting his conclusions. At times it is arduous to follow the
author's objectives and leading conclusions. This is a complex book geared
for an engineering audience. The book would gain popularity if the author
drew more examples out of the biological and botanical sciences. Hence
the multidisciplinary nature of this work could be improved. Laurent Maurice
Meillier, Oakland, CA. USA.
The Monumental Impulse: Architecture's Biological
Roots Hersey, George. 2001. ISBN: 0-262-58203-1 (pbk US$ xx.xx) 244
pp. The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. _ A basic premise espoused in this book
is that humans have incorporated various construction features inherent
in biological molecules, cells, plant and animal body parts, and animal
domiciles in architecture. The author considers many animal artifacts as
monuments, since they are often larger than and have utility beyond the
life spans of the individual builders. Many analogies are suggested between
the functions of biological and architectural structures - some of these
were appealing, whereas others, particularly those that attempted to develop
analogies between abstractions such as evolution, cladistics, and fractals
seemed overly contrived. The author hesitantly suggests that there are
homologous suites of "building genes" that are shared between various animals
and humans that could explain the convergence of form and function in structures
these organisms construct. An unexplained paradox inherent in this view,
that there are very few mammals that build such monumental structures as
do humans, insects, and birds, leaves the author, and the reader, to wonder
whether the building instinct has a genetic or learned (environmental)
basis. Animal and human architecture is further examined as extended phenotypes
in which structures are considered to be enlargements of the builders'
bodies which serve more complex behavioral functions in social interactions.
The author endeavors to examine these thematic premises sequentially
from a consideration of organic molecules, viruses, cells, plants, molluscs,
insects, birds (with a nod toward "virtual?" dinosaurs), and mammals. The
extended phenotype concept is examined in three chapters devoted to consideration
of architectural constructs in terms of establishing territorial boundaries
and representing giant male and female genitalia. Hindu readers might take
offense at the authors comparison of their religious temples to giant penises.
The "biology" of architectural reproduction is examined within a weak framework
of Mendelian genetics and the fractal nature of DNA and buildings. An attempt
at cladistic analysis of architectural evolution, while intriguing, lacks
the rigor of well defined multiple character states associated with the
taxa (buildings) under consideration. These latter ideas may ultimately
result in more rigorous analytic treatments in the future.
The potential readership of this book should have a background in architecture,
since the text is filled with architectural references and concepts that
are primarily assumed to be familiar to the reader. The black and white
illustrations used throughout the book are highly variable in quality.
Many of them are reproduced at such small scale and resolution that their
illustrative utility is diminished. I would be hesitant to recommend this
book to the architectural readership because the biology/botany content
is replete with errors. For example, nucleic acids are confused with proteins,
latex is identified as a nonbiotic molecule, viruses are said to have been
visualized by Leeuwenhoek and that they use their tail fibers to walk.
The misrepresentations in the chapter entitled "Leaves and Flowers"
are numerous: Spiral phyllotaxis is confused with whorled phyllotaxis,
and a system of phyllotactic pattern designation is utilized throughout
the discussion, which may be familiar to crystallographers, but certainly
is not used by botanist. Fern croziers, tendrils, and shoots are obfuscated
in reference to the same structural elements. Pinnately compound leaves
are confused with "distychous" arrangement of parts. High order phyllotactic
patterns in capitula are misinterpreted in terms of contact parastichies
and the architectural examples have no relationship to actual or misinterpreted
botanical examples. This chapter would have benefitted greatly from pre-publication
critique by a botanical reviewer.
In summary, I find little content in this book to recommend its purchase
by botanists or biologists. It may have some use to architects who are
looking for formative ideas on new theoretical approaches toward understanding
human constructions. _ Roger D. Meicenheimer, Department of Botany, Miami
University, Oxford, Ohio.
Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus.
Richardson, David M. (ed.) ISBN 0-521-55176-5 (Cloth US$160.00) ISBN 0-521-78910-9
(Paper US$54.95) 527 pp. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. - -
Trees of the genus Pinus form a very important group of plants to
both humans and natural ecosystems, especially in the northern hemisphere,
but increasingly in the southern hemisphere as well. Not since Mirov's
seminal work, The Genus Pinus (1967), has anyone tackled a comprehensive
overview of the biology of pines. Yet, since Mirov's contribution, many
significant advances have been made in our understanding of pine ecology,
genetics, taxonomy, and biogeography. Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus
intends to present a current synthesis of this research. As pointed out
in the preface, reviewing these two broad topics for a genus as much studied
as Pinus is an ambitious task, but a modern review of the biology
of Pinus has been long overdue.
Richardson has admirably compiled a vast array of research (he cites
over 68,000 references regarding this relatively small genus of 111 species)
contributed by many authors from several different fields into an incredibly
informative and useful reference text. Generally speaking, there are some
editorial mistakes, but on whole, Richardson has done an excellent job
in editing this comprehensive overview of the state of knowledge on pines.
I am sure that Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus will become
the standard pine reference for years to come; it provides a much needed
and long awaited updating of Mirov's classic text. I would recommend this
book to anyone interested in conifers and pines in particular, forestry
or even the ecology of one of the more dominant genera of plants in the
northern hemisphere.
The book is divided into six sections. Richardson and Rundel's introduction
clearly lays out the goals for the volume and provides a thorough overview
of the following chapters, but does contain some small, but nonetheless
distracting errors. The second section, Evolution, Phylogeny and Systematics,
is a formidable topic due to a fragmentary fossil record and lack of species
level phylogenetic reconstructions, but the authors do an admirable job
tackling it. However, I found a few small nomenclatural problems with the
final taxonomic conclusions in Price, Liston and Strauss' phylogeny and
systematics chapter. As this is a book primarily on ecology and biogeography
and due to the uncertain status of many pine taxa, it is understandable,
although disappointing, that the authors chose not to undertake creating
a key to the species of Pinus. Millar's overview of the early evolution
of pines is particularly informative and condenses a widely distributed
literature into a manageable review. The third section on historical biogeography
is a Quaternary history of pines around the world derived mainly from pollen
studies. Perry, Graham and Richardson present interesting speculations
on the evolutionary history of Mexican and Central American pines. This
is a useful review of the available fossil evidence and points out how
little is known about the evolution of this assemblage of incredibly diverse
pines. The fourth section, Macroecology and Recent Biogeography, presents
three interesting case studies and helps to bring the discussion up to
the present. Lanner and Van Devender's recent history of pinyon pines in
the arid southwestern USA summarizes the Holocene range fluctuations of
several pine species as determined by packrat midden analyses. Stevens
and Enquist's demonstration that pine distributions support Rapoport's
Rule test an important macroecological hypothesis and was one of the more
engaging chapters.
Ecological Themes, the fifth section, is the largest and most diverse
group of chapters in the book. Owing partially to the breadth of topics
covered, and to the continual evolution of hypotheses regarding those topics,
unfortunately, I found it is also the most error-prone of the sections.
Ecosystems that are driven by fire disturbances, as are most Pinus-dominated
ecosystems, are of particular interest to researchers and there is a large
literature on the fire ecology of pine forests. Chapter 11 reviews this
literature and presents a general overview of pine/fire interactions. The
discussion of the fire regimes of pines is too generalized at times (in
both chapters 11 and 12), ignoring local and regional differences that
exist in many of the wider ranging species. For example, other hypotheses
exist for P. ponderosa population dynamics, i.e., that it is recruitment
driven, not mortality driven as outlined by the authors. Additionally,
most of our western forests (USA) have been dramatically altered by , in
some areas, over 100 years of Euro-American resource use and management,
making it difficult to ascertain the "natural" state and dynamics of pine
ecosystems. In Chapter 16, Read presents a readily accessible synopsis
of the fungal associates of pines and his coverage of mycorrhizal associations
is illustrative of the advances that have been made in pine research. The
following chapter further elaborated on pine/soil interactions but contained
some errors; the most notable being the use of endomycorrhizal roots when
the proceeding chapter distinguished between endo-and ectomycorrhizal roots,
the latter being the type of symbiosis found in pines.
The final section on pines and humans concerns the economic (and ecological)
importance of Pinus to society. Pines have provided humans with
natural resources for thousands of years, such as timber and fiber for
paper, and researchers will find a concise overview of that utilization
in Chapter 20. The following chapter on the incredible journey of P.
radiata is a fascinating story that, as told, would have benefited
from a reduction of forestry jargon which many ecologists and biologists
will find difficult to read. While it may seem strange to ecologists from
the northern hemisphere to think of pines as weeds, pines have become a
serious ecological problem in many southern hemisphere countries and the
last chapter by Richardson and Higgins on pines as weedy invaders rounds
out the biogeographical component of this book and complements the discussions
of the ecology of natural populations presented earlier.
As with any book of this nature and scope (40 contributing authors!),
there are bound to be some editorial errors. A few picture captions needed
closer scrutiny and the taxonomy of the chapters was not always consistent
with that proposed in Chapter 2. Although I would have liked to have seen
a little more rigorous editing, none of these minor errors impact the usefulness
or conceptual organization of this book. Ecology and Biogeography of
Pinus is well illustrated throughout with numerous high-quality black
and white photographs and figures.
In addition to a general subject index there is a separate "Index of
biota and taxa." Non-Pinaceae taxa are further identified by family or
other taxonomic designations (as in the case of invertebrates and vertebrates)
making this index particularly useful. A glossary defines many of the technical
terms used in the text, but unfortunately not all terms used in the text
made it into the glossary. Finally, there is an interesting glossary of
English common names for pines. For some of the pines from non-English
speaking countries, these names seem contrived and not particularly useful.
As with so many scientific books these days, the price of the hardback
unfortunately puts this book out of the reach of most students and probably
many professionals. Fortunately, it has been released in a more affordable
paperback edition _ still not inexpensive, especially considering the less
durable nature of paperbacks. In fact, I would have liked to have seen
a more substantial binding in the hardback version also; libraries may
find themselves rebinding this book relatively soon.
Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus represents a tremendous effort,
not only on David Richardson's part, but also from the contributing authors.
It has been over thirty years since anyone has attempted a synthesis of
the biology of the genus Pinus and Richardson has competently tackled
this long overdue task. Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus has more
than met his goal of providing "an informative overview of the current
understanding of the ecology and biogeography of the genus Pinus.
Ecology
and Biogeography of Pinus is a definitive single-volume modern resource
that I strongly recommend to anyone working with, or interested in, pines
and their biology. _ James P. Riser II, Department of Biology, University
of Colorado at Denver, Denver, CO.
Literature cited:
Mirov, N.T. 1967. The Genus Pinus. Ronald Press, New York.
Invasive Plants of California's Wildlands.
Bossard, C. C., J. M Randall, and M. C. Hoshovsky. 2000. ISBN 0-520-22546-5
(cloth) ISBN 0-520-22547-3 (paper) 359 pp. University of California Press,
Berkeley, CA. _ The spread of non-native plants throughout the world has
hit nearly epidemic levels. Second only to habitat destruction, biological
invasions are a leading cause of loss of biodiversity worldwide. Even relatively
pristine parks, preserves, and wildlands are not immune to the threat of
invasion.
California, in particular, with its "variable topography, geology, and
climate", has become a host for 1,045 non-native plant species, many of
which have rapidly spread throughout the state causing severe ecological
and economic disaster. Invasive Plants of California's Wildlands
provides species accounts for 78 non-native plants that are listed by the
California Exotic Pest Plant Council (CalEPPC) as Invasive Plants of Greatest
Ecological Concern as of 1996.
The book is organized into two sections. In the first section, the reader
is provided with a current review of the impacts of non-native plants on
wildlands. This review includes the following: (1) the impact of invasive
plants on ecosystem processes, such as nutrient cycling, fire and hydrological
cycles, and erosion, (2) the displacement of native species by invasive
species, (3) the loss of native genotypes through hybridization between
native and invasive plants, and (4) the facilitation of invasion of non-native
animals by non-native plants. The authors continue with a discussion of
the characters and traits of successful plant invaders and the types of
habitats that are most invisible. The authors finish this section with
a detailed account of management tools to control invasive plant species,
including physical, biological, and chemical control. One strength of this
work is the authors' promotion of integrative efforts that use multiple
methods, combined with long-term monitoring, to control and eradicate non-native
species from ecosystems.
The second portion of the text consists of species accounts for the
78 non-native plant species listed by CalEPPC. Each species account consists
of a description of the focal plant, where to find it in California (both
habitat type and region), where it originally spread from, what environmental
and economic problems it causes in California, how it reproduces, and how
to control it. The species accounts are clear, concise, and provide excellent
references for the 78 most problematic non-native plants in California
without superfluous technical jargon.
The 78 non-native plant species described represent approx. 26 plant
families, include terrestrial and aquatic plants, and consist of trees,
shrubs, grasses, and perennial and annual herbs. What struck me after reading
the 78 species accounts was the enormous variety of economic and ecological
problems these plants are associated with, most notably, the displacement
of native plants and animals and changes in ecosystem processes (i.e.,
fire regimes, hydrological cycles). In addition, there is striking variation
in where the plants spread from (i.e., South America, Asia, Europe, Africa,
Australia, New Zealand, and range expansion within California) and the
means by which the plants traveled to California. Plants such as Bromus
tectorum (cheatgrass) were accidentally introduced into California
in contaminated grain seed, other species were intentionally introduced
as ornamentals in gardens, such as Delairea odorata (cape ivy),
or as ground cover to stabilize banks, such as Carpobrotus edulis
(highway iceplant), others have escaped cultivation (i.e., Digitalis
purpurea (foxglove)), while many aquatic plants were introduced for
use in aquaria and water gardens and later escaped cultivation, such as
Myriophyllum
aquaticum (Brazilian water milfoil).
Although the work has many strengths, it also suffers from two major
weakness. First, the authors failed to include a concluding chapter that
summarizes and synthesizes the species accounts. After reading 78 species
accounts, they kind of blend together. Do the species all share some common
characters or reproductive strategies? Or do all of the species have distinct
characters? Was there one common control method that worked for all species?
The reader is left to make tables and tally up how many species reproduce
vegetatively, how many species are toxic to cattle, etc. Second, the book
does not have an index. Therefore, it is impossible to search the book
based on key-words.
Despite these two minor weaknesses, the strength of the book clearly
lies in the descriptions of the species and where they are found. These
descriptions will help readers recognize invasive plants in their counties,
towns, and even in their own back yards. And hopefully the detailed control
methods listed for each invasive species will empower land owners and managers
to take action against invasive plants. This book is meant for anyone _
students, researchers, land managers, lay persons. In addition, many of
the species listed, such as Cirsium arvense (Canada thistle) and
Euphorbia
esula (leafy spurge), are not only problems in California but are also
problems in other US states and in other countries. Therefore, this book
is meant for a broader readership than just Californians. As invasive plants
continue to make a lasting impression on the California landscape, this
text is a much-needed reference for anyone who enjoys the wildlands of
California and North America, academic or otherwise. - Rebecca Irwin, Institute
of Ecology, Ecology Building, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602
The Tropical Deciduous Forest of Alamos: Biodiversity
of a Threatened Ecosystem in Mexico. Robichaux, Robert H. and David
A.Yetman. 2000. (Cloth US $50.00) 260 pp. The University of Arizona Press,
355 Euclid Ave, Suite 103, Tucson, AZ 85719. - Readers of the recent update
(or the original) of Howard Scott Gentry's Rio Mayo Plants and/or
David Yetman's Scattered Round Stones, will find this book enthralling
and indispensable. For such readers this book is a new box of bright tiles,
which will enhance our colorful mosaic panorama of the ecology of Sonora.
For those with no particular prior interest in Sonora this is currently
the definitive English description of Mexico's Tropical Deciduous Forest
(TDF).
This slender book contains an enormous amount of information about this
little known ecosystem. This delineation of the TDF, its people and flora
move south of Gentry's Rio Mayo almost to the border of Sinaloa. It contains
excellent plant, amphibian, reptile, mammal and bird lists. The references
at the ends of the chapters are a comprehensive list of the literature
on Sonoran ecology and ethnology.
Chapter 1, Introduction and Prospect describes paradise. Then introduces
a "simple case history" that leads the reader inexorably into the reasons
why this unique ecosystem is being rapidly destroyed. The serpents in Alamos'
Eden are narcotraficantes and absentee cattle lords. The former bring the
lawlessness associated with the trade. The cattle lords clear huge areas
of forest and plant alien buffelgrass (Pennisetum ciliare). Wherever this
South African import is planted it destroys the native flora and makes
restoration of the original flora almost impossible. Readers of David Yetman's
other books on Sonora will add yet more torn pages to their memento mori
of a world utterly passing away. Hope for this particular area lies in
the fact that part of it is a Wildlife Refuge. (However the funding for
such refuges is usually quite meager.)
Chapter 2, Structure and Functioning of Tropical Deciduous Forest in
Western Mexico, is a concise and thorough introduction to this little known
ecosystem. The Sonoran TDF is its most northern extension. The TDF of Chamela,
Jalisco (about the same latitude as Mexico City) is pristine and well studied.
Data from Chamela is used for this chapter and when data is available for
Alamos it is compared with that from Chamela.
Chapter 3, Vegetation, Flora and the Seasons of the Río Cuchujaqui,
describes a whole ecosystem in sixty pages. For botanists this is the heart
of the book. Long winter evenings can be spent comparing the plant list
of the Rio Cuchujaqui at the end of the chapter with Gentry's Rio Mayo
plants. A bit more geological and edaphic information might have helped
those who have not read "Rio Mayo Plants." This is elegant descriptive
prose.
Chapter 4, Monte Mohino, Mayo People and Trees in Southern Sonora, brings
vividly to life the people and their relationship to their trees. There
seem to be few trees for which they found no use. This interesting material
is somewhat disorganized. The alternation in the text between Scientific
and Common Names is confusing but each of the isolated common names can
be found in the Index and reattached to the Scientific. The "Appendix of
Ethnobotanically Useful Trees and Columnar Cacti of the Mayo Region" organizes
the material under Scientific Names but Spanish names are not marked (S)
while Mayo names are marked (M). If the Spanish name is the same as the
Mayo name this is not noted, just omitted. There is another "Appendix of
Trees of the Mayo Region by Scientific, Mayo and Spanish Names," so it
is possible to ascertain from this list whether the Spanish and Mayo names
are identical. Common names are important for those doing research in the
area but the Scientific Names are more familiar to English speaking readers.
Most of these Genera are familiar to those with knowledge of the more northern
flora of Sonora.
Chapter 5, Crop Diversity Among Indigenous Farming Cultures in the TDF,
records the careful selection over many years, of crops for particular
areas. The "Conclusions" suggest that support and preservation of the lifestyles
of traditional agriculturists is as compelling as the need for wilderness
protection. But buffel grass continues to enshroud the land.
Chapter 6, Amphibians and Reptiles of the Sierra de Alamos with an appendix
on Mammals. These lists contain Scientific, English and Spanish Common
Names. Collection of this information began in the 30?s so this list should
be almost definitive, though the authors consider it a work in progress.
Chapter 7, Birds of the Tropical Deciduous Forest of the Alamos, Sonora,
Area . Sonora has a very rich avifauna and the TDF certainly contains a
large number of birds. The breeding ranges in the Appendix 7.2 indicate
that the area birds have both far north and far south ranges. Buffelgrass
cannot be helpful to their survival.
For those who have no familiarity with Sonora's flora this is an excellent
introduction. For those who have serious interests in the area it is an
absolute necessity. - Sarah Delle Hultmark hultmark@btcbci.com
Advances in Chickpea Science. Maiti, R.
and P. Wesche-Ebeling, editors. 2001. ISBN 1-57808-156-4 (Hardbound $92.00)
360+xx. Science Publishers, Inc., Post Office Box 699, Enfield, New Hampshire
03748.-Most Americans know chickpeas, Cicer arietinum, as the garbanzo
beans from salad bars or from houmos, a popular dip made from chickpeas
and sesame paste. But in the Middle East and India, chickpeas are more
than an accouterment to a meal, they are an important source of protein.
According to the editors, the book is to be " . . . a teaching guide
as well as a tool to provide information and motivation to students and
researchers." We are told that most of the scientific information and illustrations
were obtained by the senior editor during a sabbatical stay at ICRISAT
(The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi_Arid Tropics).
There are ten contributors, nine are from Mexico, and one is from Australia.
The book covers most aspects of the crop's biology including seeds and
germination; productivity; mineral nutrition and root biology; nitrogen
fixation; climatic factors; food quality; diseases; breeding; and biotechnology.
A vast amount of literature has been examined and results summarized.
Some of the pages (at least in my copy) are smudged; many of the figures
are not clear. Most of the images were downloaded from the ICRISAT web
site and are of unacceptable quality.
Advances in Chickpea Science will be of interest to agronomists and
food scientists. The high price of the book will certainly limit its value
in developing countries which are the biggest producers of the crop. -
Lytton John Musselman, Department of Biological Sciences, Old Dominion
University, Norfolk, Virginia 23529-0266.
African Traditional Medicine: A Dictionary
of Plant Use and Applications. Neuwinger, H.D. 2000. ISBN 3-88763-086-6
(Cloth DM 198) 589 pp. Medpharm GmbH Scientific Publishers, Birkenwaldstrasse
44, 70191 Stuttgart, Germany. - Indigenous and local peoples, especially
in Africa, hold significant levels of knowledge about their lands and resources,
little known to the rest of the world. African Traditional Medicine is
a compendium that bears a comprehensive and magnificent witness to the
perspectives of traditional people about healing practices with plants.
The author asserts, in the first sentence of his introduction, that
this book is purely a reference book. Plants are arranged alphabetically
by their scientific names. All the important medicinal plants and most
of those of only local use or minor importance are included. However, information
about active principles has been consistently omitted: that is not the
purpose of this book.
This dictionary, the first of its kind, seems to be reasonably inclusive,
as far as the number of species covered. The sources consulted to prepare
this compilation are primarily scientific journal entries and monographs.
The literature cited draws upon most of the standard reference works. Neuwinger
points out that many of the written texts he cites exist in limited editions
and are difficult to find outside Africa. He commended, particularly, the
excellent research of Adjanohoun, Aké Assi and their collaborators
on indigenous plants in the French-speaking countries of West Africa. Published
sources are supplemented occasionally, but not consistently, with information
from herbarium labels.
Neuwinger conceived of this reference work mainly for scientists working
the fields of phytochemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry, searching for
medicinally active plants for further research. It will certainly be of
interest to botanists, anthropologists and ethnobotanists.
Inevitably any work of this magnitude will have small flaws. Several
citations within a botanical entry are missing from the list of references.
It would be helpful to add volume and page numbers to each author's name
in the body of the text, to assist the reader to retrieve the citation.
As it stands now, the author's name alone is given, while the References
sometimes cite multiple entries, and the user cannot distinguish the correct
one without checking each record. This can be a serious problem especially
in the event that a user wants to request a citation by interlibrary loan,
if the sources are not available locally.
At current exchange rate of $1=2.27 DM, the price of the book seems
quite reasonable. It is well bound for long-term use, and has a comfortable
size. Bound separately, there is a supplemental pamphlet called African
Traditional Medicine: Search System for Diseases, wherein one can search
for disease conditions listed alphabetically, from abdominal pain and abortifacient,
to yaws and yellow fever. - Dorothea Bedigian, Department of Biology, Washington
University, St. Louis, MO.
The Illustrated Rhododendron.
Halliday, Pat. 2001. ISBN 0-88192-510-1. (cloth $US 69.95). 268pp. Timber
Press, 133 SW Second Avenue, Suite 450, Portland, Oregon 97204. — As a
somewhat bedraggled graduate student in cryptogamic botany I used to relax
by sneaking into the stacks at the Botany Library at Harvard and pore over
the luscious illustrations in Curtis's Botanical Magazine. The dusty bindings
of its volumes belied the balm of the illustrations within. The composition
and color of the drawings brought life onto the old pages of the Magazine,
there in the dark of Divinity Avenue. The illustrations were truly inspiring,
and while I was working on my dissertation they breathed more than a little
life into me. Pat Halliday, a veteran of some 40 years at Kew Gardens in
London, has chosen over 120 plates from the Botanical Magazine for this
book. They represent her choice of the most attractive illustrations of
Rhododendron in the collection. One may infer from the pleasure they broadcast
that our author spent more than an hour or two herself, luxuriating among
the stacks at Kew.
Now, rhododendrons are something of a matter of taste. Here in New England,
at least among cultivated varieties, some people consider rhododendrons
to be overachievers, trying too hard to produce a bit of beauty from the
rocky, acidic soil. I barely gave them a second look myself until Peter
Stevens once showed us the strings of pollen he coaxed out of ready anthers,
a gift that I passed on to my own botany students. Earlier this year in
a hospital room in Canberra, Australia, a colleague of ours, Heinar Streimann,
also a cryptogamist, lay on his deathbed. A friend had brought him a rhododendron
cutting from his glasshouse, a species from the Highlands of Papua New
Guinea that Heinar and Peter might have brushed against in the course of
their prodigious fieldwork there. The subtle change in the light and the
gentle scent that the cutting brought to the room were almost palpable.
It gave us visitors, as well as our dying friend a welcome bit of refreshment.
The illustrations Pat Halliday has included in this volume accomplish much
the same thing. They take us to a world a bit less hurried, a bit less
worried, and a good deal more sensuous than our own vale of tears. My favorites
are the many illustrations by Walter Hood Fitch, active in the mid nineteenth
century, who managed to capture each splendid shadow in his delicately
sketched paintings. But if we are tempted to dismiss them as rushed sketches
we must ask, how else to render the evanescent inflorescences before their
beauty fades? Fitch's prints balance the floral morphology and the disposition
of each angle with the ethereal color of the species. His work is sublime.
Halliday's comments introduce the species, discussing the aesthetics,
the taxonomic history, and cultural requirements of each. The illustrations
are accompanied by a short description with distribution and habitat notes
that give the book just the scientific panache that we expect from Timber
Press. There is a short but useful glossary, an appendix of the Rhododendron
species that have appeared in Curtis's Botanical Magazine from 1787 to
the present, and a brief bibliography that will send interested readers
to the stacks themselves. Clearly, the volume at hand goes beyond the author's
stated goal of providing just a book of "pretty pictures." While it hardly
pretends to fulfill the role of a monograph, there is little doubt that
thisbook will bring pleasure to whoever peruses it. I was lucky to get
it for review. I recommend The Illustrated Rhododendron for giving or for
reference. —Samuel Hammer, College of General Studies, Boston University,
871 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215. cladonia@bu.edu.
Medicinal Plants of the World: Chemical Constituents,
Traditional and Modern Medicinal Uses. Volume 2. Ross, Ivan A. 2001.
ISBN 0-89603-877-7. Humana Press, Totowa, New Jersey. 487 pp. - I won't
deny it - - plant secondary chemicals intrigue me. Aspects of biochemical
production, their medicinal or poisonous potential, and their ability to
keep bacteria, fungi, herbivores and even other plants at bay all fascinate
me. Given this viewpoint, we're on to the main question of all book reviews
- - what does the book cover?
From an ethnobotanical perspective, the book is priceless. Medicinal
Plants of the World covers information about 24 specific plants in a straightforward
fashion. Each chapter covers one plant and is referenced from a wide range
of chemical and biological journals - - many which you couldn't find even
in big libraries. Each chapter includes the common plant names in places
like the USA, and its name in up to 60 other exotic locales like Guinea,
Tanzania, South Africa, India, Surinam, etc. From these places, the author
includes information on published traditional medicinal uses. Ross's method
of information delivery - - alphabetical lists prevail throughout - - makes
it easy to scan the traditional use information and identify potential
research questions. For example, Anacardium occidentale leaves are
used in a tea to treat diabetes in Brazil, Jamaica and Thailand. Ross also
includes a taxonomic plant description, the origin and distribution of
the plant, and a listing of all the identified chemical constituents. Finally,
each chapter has a list of the plant's published pharmacological activities,
including known toxicity assessments. Sections covering these activities
are well defined, so if you are interested in the ability of Vitex agnus-castus
(chaste tree) to promote fertility or the antiviral activity of Azadirachta
indica (Neem), you can find it quickly.
The 24 plant species include some we think of as dietary and not medicinal
- - although it's now obvious that other cultures have a completely different
viewpoint about them! Some of these plants include Anacardium occidentale
(cashew), Ananas comosus (pineapple), Lycopersicon esculentum
(tomato) and Musa sapientum (banana). Other inclusions are both
dietary and beneficial, like Allium cepa (onion), or are used as
spices, like Myristica fragrans (nutmeg and mace) and Laurus
nobilus (bay tree).
Some other chapters cover plants that are locally considered herbal
medicines, like Echinacea angustifolia, Ephedra sinica, Eucalyptus globulus,
Ginkgo biloba, Glycyrrhiza glabra (licorice root), Hypericum perforatum,
Matricaria chamomilla, and Tanacetum parthenium. Some discuss
plants that exhibit both medicinal and poisonous properties, like Ricinus
communis. Still other chapters include exotic plants, some which have
no common name in the United States (e.g. Morinda citrifolia and
Tribulus
terrestris).
Would it make a good course textbook? No. Its encyclopedic nature does
not refer to any evolutionary theories (e.g., why plants make these compounds),
ethnobotanical methods or biological principles (e.g., what increases chemical
production). However, I feel the book will be a welcome addition to college
libraries, or personal collections of anyone interested in ethnobotany,
natural compound chemistry, pharmacognosy, food science, medical botany,
or economic botany. Would I like it on my shelf? Most definitely. Ross's
book is a great reference and information source on these plant species,
and I fully intend to find the first volume. - Michelle A. Briggs, Lycoming
College, Willaimsport, PA. 17701.
Mistletoe: The Genus Viscum. Büssing,
Arndt. 2000. ISBN 90-5823-092-9 (Cloth US$105.00) 265 pp. Harwood Academic
Publishers, Amsteldijk 166, 1st Floor, 1079 LH Amsterdam, The
Netherlands. - Mistletoe the Genus Viscum, forms the sixteenth volume in
the series Medicinal and Aromatic Plants Industrial Profiles from Harwood
Academic Publishers. A collection of fifteen articles by a variety of authors,
this work informs the reader about a range of aspects of the cultivation
and use of mistletoe, perhaps best known from the European species Viscum
album, with a strong emphasis on medical uses.
Mistletoes, broadly considered, come from the two related families of
the Santalales, Loranthaceae and Viscaceae, many of which are hemiparasitic,
deriving some nutrients from host plants while also photosynthesizing.
At least a few members of the Viscaceae are widely known for their use
in Christmas decorations or for their older association with European druids.
Nevertheless, species in these families also come from North and South
America, Africa, Asia, and Australia.
The first chapter serves as an introduction to these plants, followed
by chapters which consider the mistletoes of various regions from Africa
on one hand to Korea and other parts of East Asia on another. After the
fifth chapter, a collection of chapters consider sensible topics such as
cultivation of mistletoes and their hosts for commercial purposes, the
chemical constituents of mistletoes, and medical uses both from modern
allopathic studies and from more traditional ethnobotanical sources. The
various active ingredients from lectins to viscotoxins receive coverage.
These chapters are somewhat uneven—e.g. covering all of the cultivation
of mistletoes in one chapter while devoting another entire chapter just
to differences in the activities of natural and recombinant mistletoe lectins.
Also annoying is the inconsistent terminology used throughout for the partially
parasitic nature of misteltoes, including "semiparasitic" and "half-parasitic"
along with the more common and more accepted "hemiparasitic."
This work could have been much better if its focus was clearer. The
review of all mistletoes devolves to a concentration mostly on Viscum album
from Europe. Clearly the book was meant to focus on this species, which
the authors note to be used in commercial medicinal preparations mostly
in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. True, this species may be the one
best known in the literature and about which more may be found outside
ethnobotanical work. However, more illustrations of other mistletoes and
consideration of their potential, or a recasting of the title of the volume
and of the introductory chapter, would have been more appropriate. Since
Viscum is a member of the Viscaceae and is the subject of most chapters,
the mistletoes of the Loranthaceae, such as the tree-form hemiparasictic
Australian genus Nuytsia, receive light treatment.
Though a number of typographic errors and other minor errors can be
found throughout Mistletoes the Genus Viscum, Chapter 3 notably is not
well written, particularly because of the choppy style, with abruptly introduced
factual information.
This work will be of interest to those working on ethnobotany and with
lectins, as well as college and university libraries. Some of the introductory
material and selected chapters would make appropriate readings in some
courses, though not introductory courses unless a single article were presented.
_ Douglas Darnowski, Washington College,
Linnaeus: Nature and Nation. Koerner,
Lisbet . 2001; Harvard Univ. Press; ISBN: 0674005651 (Paperback $19.95)
- Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was an important Swedish scientist who is a
hero to most botanists. As an example, during my time as post-doctoral
associate at Ohio State University in the late 1980's, I noticed that one
botany faculty member was known to dress like Linnaeus during college football
games!
Of course, Linnaeus is most famous for his creation of the binomial
system and his publication of Species Plantarum in 1753. He was
a naturalist and taxonomist who also authored many other works including
Systema
Naturae (1735) and Flora Lapponica (1737). In addition to his
career as a botanist, Linnaeus received a medical degree from Holland.
Back in Sweden as a medical doctor, Linnaeus first specialized in treating
syphilis, which apparently introduced him to a wealthy aristocratic clientele.
His initial faculty appointment was as a Professor of Medicine at Uppsala
University in Sweden in 1941, but a year later, the position was changed
to one for a Chair in Botany.
While it provides the basic facts of Linnaeus' life, this book was written
as a scholarly biography by a science historian. For this reason, I think
that the book will be difficult and tedious for most botanists to read
because of the disciplinary jargon throughout the book. As an example of
such a passage, the author, in discussing how Linnaeus applied his ideas
toward economics writes (on p. 97): "More often, like the German cameralists
in their uncompromising moments, Linnaeus felt that states should be autarkies,
withdrawing altogether from the commercial bonds tying them to peoples
and places not politically subjugated to them." Such sentences are typical
of the book.
Nevertheless, if one is really interested in Carl Linnaeus, there are
many interesting events discussed in the book. Linnaeus was notorious for
sending his students on far-flung collecting trips throughout the world,
and about half of them died during their journeys. Thus, the author discusses
the complex, intricate relationship between Linnaeus and his students.
There also is an interesting chapter on how Linnaeus was deeply affected
by his field travels in Lappland both in his scientific and economic thinking.
The author mentions many unsavory details about Linnaeus' life ranging
from anonymously writing favorable reviews of his own books to attempting
to swindle a scientific society by doubling his expenses for field work.
The book includes several appendices, one of which is an elaborate chronology
of the protagonist's life, and extensive scholarly footnotes. Despite the
above caveats, I would recommend this book for those botanists who want
a better understanding of forces that shaped the intellectual life of one
of the most influential scientists in our field. The book also is recommended
for acquisition by all university libraries.- John Z. Kiss, Department
of Botany,
Fungal Conservation. Moore, M., M. M. Nauta,
S. E. Evans, and M. Rotheroe, eds. 2001. ISBN 0 521 80363 2 (cloth $US
95). 262pp. Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, New York,
NY 10011-4211. — I looked forward to the publication of Fungal Conservation,
hoping for a book that would address in part the critical shortage of biodiversity
literature that has come to characterize mycology. Perhaps that unfortunate
shortage is nowhere better represented than in this limited collection
of papers. Biodiversity, which should be the focus of any conservation
question, is treated explicitly in only one paper. The focus of that paper
is an explanation of a nationwide biodiversity plan in the United Kingdom,
which includes only a handful of fungal species. The paper is characteristic
of this volume.
In general, relatively few taxa are covered in the book. Further, the
essays predominantly outline perceived issues of fungal conservation in
the developed world, effectively ignoring most of the biosphere. Europe,
and to a much lesser extent North America, are given the major voice in
this collection. A multi-authored paper by a group of forest managers and
mycologists (Molina et al.) from Corvallis, Oregon is probably the strongest
work of the bunch. It lays out a wide set of conservation problems and
attempts to construct broad-ranging strategies for solving them. The Corvallis
group addresses questions of community ecology, population biology, and
biodiversity management.
The authors draw on a growing body of theoretical and practical work
surrounding management issues and apply them to fungal problems. Not surprisingly,
the task is monumental, given the vastness and diversity of the forests
of western North America. For all the exploration that has occurred over
the past century or so, these forests are probably still poorly circumscribed
from a fungal biodiversity perspective. Yet a holistic approach of the
sort Molina et al. have employed is essential if we are to understand and
learn to creatively manage the diverse fungal world. Other than their chapter,
the contributions in this volume are mostly concerned with relatively tiny
ecosystems in less than a dozen European countries. One asks why the country-by-country
approach was taken, as the result is too often an alphabet-soup recounting
of national conservation strategies and bureaucracies. Some attempts to
address global problems are included in an introductory essay, but these
consist of little more than cursory comments, most of which are covered
in various chapters.
It may be indicative of the current international state of affairs that
the developing world is severely underrepresented in this volume, with
the notable exceptions are Cuba and Kenya. There is also a short contribution
on genetic strains of edible fungi in China. Was this appropriate for inclusion
in a volume on fungal conservation? A further problem is that the bulk
of the text in this book is devoted to macrofungi. Of these, fleshy basidiomycetes
are given most of the attention. Microfungi, which are less well circumscribed,
are predictably given less play. Lichens, which make up a large percentage
of the ascomycetes, are barely mentioned at all. This is a fatal oversight
in my opinion, given the central role that lichenized fungi have played
as indicators of environmental health over the past several decades.
To an extent, the summary of fungal conservation work in this book reflects
the condition of mycology. Fungal biodiversity and fungal biology are both
poorly understood. Yet these disciplines are central to any terrestrial
conservation program. Conservation efforts perforce depend upon a vibrant
taxonomic community in order to provide an approximate reflection of the
species that are `out there.' But for better or worse, fungal alpha taxonomy
has taken a back seat to investigations into phylogenetic questions. Phylogeny
is of interest within an evolutionary framework. It may also elucidate
monophyletic groups, leading to more reliable classification systems. But
phylogenetic studies and their attendant focus on molecular evidence tend
to take the focus off of species-level work `on the ground.' Conservation
efforts require a more complete understanding of the diverse species and
lifestyles that make up the fungi, but right now the funding is going to
other kinds of studies. Ultimately, efforts like those discussed in this
book show the potential long-range limitations of this approach. Fungal
Conservation is a book that describes management plans and practice involving
relatively few fungi in relatively few places, mostly in the developed
world. It reflects an incomplete approach to fungal diversity and its role
in the biosphere.— Samuel Hammer, College of General Studies, Boston University,
871 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215.
Lichens. Purvis, William. 2000. ISBN 1-56098-879-7
(Paper $US14.95) 112 pp. Smithsonian Institution Press, 750 Ninth Street
NW Suite 4300, Washington, DC 20560 - A book that makes lichens accessible
to a general audience is a notable accomplishment, and this work is the
perfect compliment to recent, technical publications such as Brodo et al.'s
Lichens of North America (2001) and Gilbert's Lichens (2000). Purvis is
the principle author of The Lichen Flora of Great Britain and Ireland (1992);
indeed, the British have a long tradition of lichenology, and a broad knowledge
of their lichen flora. Who better to put lichens in the public eye? This
book does exactly that: it is an appealing, generously illustrated, and
concise (only 112pp.) introduction to these often-overlooked but fascinating
organisms.
I was preparing a lichen lecture for a basic biology class while reading
this book, and it was a great help in organizing my presentation. The first
ten pages explain what a lichen is, and present important facts about their
component fungal and photosynthetic symbionts. They explain that a lichen
has a unique, highly-organized thallus that is completely different from
that of the individual (cultured) symbionts. This helps differentiate these
obligate symbioses from more casual fungal/algal associations (such endophytic
fungi growing in seaweeds) or disease situations. The chapter on lichen
biodiversity is good; Purvis organizes this section by "fruiting body",
providing appealing illustrations of "mushroom lichens" (lichens formed
by basidiomycetes), "pin lichens" (bearing maezidia), and "flask lichens"
(bearing pseudothecia). This is a better, more natural approach to diversity
than the typical explanation of foliose, fruticose, and crustose forms
that is found in most lichen texts. It is strange, however, that these
latter three terms are avoided throughout the book; at least a brief discussion
of them should have been attempted if the reader is to ever (hopefully,
eventually) use identification keys.
The remainder of the book covers lichen ecology, with chapters on lichens
in forests, lichens in extreme environments, and biomonitoring. The discussion
of lichens in southern rain forests is very good; this habitat is hardly
ever considered in other general lichen books. And it is refreshing to
see Pacific Northwest lichen biomonitoring projects getting their due-most
treatments of lichen biomonitoring only discuss Europe (which is where
lichen biomonitoring originated). Perhaps the best thing about these chapters
is their story-telling style: lessons in lichen ecology are presented using
examples. In a section on arctic tundra lichens, for instance, the dominance
of reindeer lichens in such areas is punctuated with the story of the 1986
Chernobyl accident, and how these lichens, by virtue of their ability to
concentrate airborne pollutants, poisoned the native people there via reindeer,
which feed upon these lichens. Another strong point here is that Purvis
generously extols the virtues of herbaria for lichen ecology work: historical
specimens make a good base-line for measuring pollution levels in cities,
and for monitoring amounts of ozone depletion in the skies over Antarctica.
There are a very few problems with this book that bear mentioning. Although
the illustrations and photographs are the most appealing things about the
book, too many of them (as well as examples used in the text) seem to feature
Xanthoria parietina, the common, maritime, orange lichen which graces the
cover. In addition, a very few are mislabelled or confusing. One example
will suffice: the bottom lichen on p. 15 should be labelled as containing
green algae, not cyanobacteria. Of more serious concern are some biased
viewpoints in portions of the text. For example, evidence is presented
that supports the idea that an individual lichen thallus may comprise more
than one genetic individual. This subject needs further investigation,
e.g. DNA fingerprinting studies; the evidence presented in favor of genetic
mosaicism is circumstantial at best, and it is still very much a matter
of opinion. In any case, though, even if genetic mosaicm does occur in
lichens, it is certainly the exception, not the rule (which is something
the text omits). Another omission can be found in the section on lichen
evolution: while it is certainly true that lichenization has occurred multiple
times, it is also true that most lichens are, in fact, more closely related
to other lichens than to non-lichen fungi (take, for example, the large
lichen orders Arthoniales and Lecanorales). Reading this section might
lead one to believe that lichenization (and de-lichenization) has happened
randomly in the course of fungal evolution, which is not true. This important
point is rarely mentioned when discussing molecular systematic studies
of lichens.
All in all, however, this is a very good, well-organized book that invites
readers to further explore lichenology. Most of the book focuses on ecology,
which is appropriate, because general audiences tend to be most interested
in that. The illustrations are high-quality, the text-boxes are interesting,
and the chapter on practical projects give some good (if sometimes overcomplicated)
ideas for student research. I strongly recommend this book for any botanist's
bookshelf or coffee-table. - Scott LaGreca, Farlow Herbarium of Cryptogamic
Botany Harvard University.
Works Cited
Brodo, I.M., S.D. Sharnoff, and S. Sharnoff. 2001. Lichens of North
America. Yale University Press, New Haven.
Gilbert, O.L. 2000. Lichens. The New Naturalist, Harper Collins, London.
Purvis, O. W., B. J. Coppins, D. L. Hawksworth, and D. M. Moore. 1992.
The lichen flora of Great Britain and Ireland. The Natural History Museum,
London.
Fern Grower's Manual: Revised and Expanded Edition.
Hoshizaki, Barbara Joe and RObbin C. Moran. 2001. ISBN 0-88192-495-4 (Cloth
US$59.95) 624 pp. Timber Press, 133 S. W. Second Avenue, Suite 450, Portland,
OR 97204-3527. - The primary audience for this book is gardeners, commercial
growers and horticulturalists who have a particular interest in growing
ferns, but it will also be an indispensable resource for teaching botanists
who want to make living ferns and fern allies available for student study.
The first 12 chapters provide the basic background for successful fern
cultivation, beginning with a summary of fern morphology and life cycle
and how to collect specimens. The chapters on cultural needs, soils and
fertilizers are a good basis for growing any type of plant in pots or in
beds. They would be a good "manual of operation" for non-professionals
interested in running a greenhouse for personal use or to provide classroom
materials. Home landscapers will be most interested in the recommendations
for transplanting specimens, and appreciative of the notice of legalities
and permissions that will probably be required. Botanists will appreciate
the instructions for spore culture, which usually do not require permits,
and are easier to collect and transport (spores of most species remain
viable for a year or more). An added benefit, according to the authors,
is that spore-grown plants tend to adapt better to cultivation.
The bulk of the book, fully 2/3 of the 600+ pages, is devoted to identification
and cultural requirements of more than 700 species and cultivars of ferns
and fern allies cultivated in the United States. Species are listed alphabetically
and virtually every entry is provided with silhouette and line drawings
(including bar scales) to clearly illustrate key features. Entries include
plant size and cultural conditions, detailed descriptions of vegetative
features and provenance of non-native species. Although not nearly as detailed
as the descriptions in Flora of North America volume on Pteridophytes (Flora
of North America Editorial Committee, 1993), the information provided here
is easy to read and interpret and describes the salient features of the
fern in question. My only disappointment with the book is the lack of keys
to aid in identification. However, the literature cited includes citations
of general and regional keys and floras, both national and internationational,
that would fill this need. This book is well worth the reasonable cost
and I especially recommend it to botanists charged with overseeing a college
greenhouse where it will be well-used both in the classroom and in the
headhouse. - Marshall Sundberg, Emporia State University.
Work Cited
Flora of North America Editorial Committee. 1993. Flora of North
America North of Mexico. Vol. 2. Pteridophytes and Gymnosperms. Oxford
University Press.
The Cactus Family. Anderson, Edward F. 2001.
ISBN 0-88192-498-9 (Cloth US$99.95) 776 pp. Timber Press. 133 S. W. Second
Avenue, Suite 450, Portland, OR 97204-3527. - The Cactus Family enthralls
the reader with over 700 pages of information on the Cactaceae, all presented
in a smoothly flowing format. Numerous high quality photographs illustrate
the species of the various genera of this family which is nearly endemic
to the New World.
The book opens with several compelling pages on searching for cacti
in arid South America, and then turns in the same chapter on "Distinctive
Features of Cacti" to considering the many characteristic properties which
cacti display, from anatomy to physiology to habit. Along the way many
interesting facts spice the story, and specialized features of the Cactaceae,
such as their possession of betalains and the highly modified shoot known
as the areole. Numerous photographs illustrate this introductory chapter,
even before the author can move to descriptions of particular species.
Then follows a chapter on "Ethnobotany of Cacti" which considers the
various uses to which cacti have been put by native peoples. Some of the
most well publicized and familiar uses, such as the function of peyote
cacti in religious ceremonies and the role of Opuntia as a source of food,
receive lengthy treatment before broader cases are considered. Among these
latter fall the production of dye from cochineal bugs, cacti as weeds around
the world as in South Africa, and what has to be one of the most striking
ethnobotanical facts (see p. 55), ranking with how one contracts kuru for
the power to simultaneously fascinate and revolt.
Anderson then offers shorter chapters on the `Conservation of Cacti"
and "Cultivation of Cacti," taking in the former a very reasonable stance
in favor of conservation when possible and rescue when that is the only
option. The latter chapter, written by Roger Brown, offers basic information
on important points such as soil mixtures and appropriate and safe pesticides.
All of the above occupies the author for the first 100 pages or so,
at which point comes a chapter on "Classification of Cacti." This includes
discussions of the basics of taxonomy and the history of the taxonomy of
cacti from before Linnaeus to Berger and beyond. This precedes a scheme
which lists the genera of the Cactaceae by Subfamily and Tribe, with the
characteristics of the latter group. Then immediately following is "The
Cacti" with careful descriptions of individual genera and species, copious
illustrated with high quality photographs.
Appendices with maps relevant for understanding the biogeography of
cacti and a list of botanical gardens and arboreta with significant collections
of cacti round out The Cactus Family along with an excellent glossary and
listing of the literature on cacti.
The Cacti moves effortlessly throughout from topic to topic, and the
photographs, both in number and quality, are outstanding. One reservation
some might have is the neutral to slightly positive view presented of hallucinogenic
experiences that come with taking peyote or the San Pedro cactus. Some
students might be led into trouble by this, but this is a relatively minor
flaw in an otherwise fascinating book. College and university libraries
will do well to order a copy, along with any amateur or professional interested
in cacti. The book, because of the photographs among other reasons, would
be useful for undergraduate and graduate courses. - Doug Darnowski, Washington
College.
Field Guide to Indiana Wildflowers. Yatskievych,
K. 2000. ISBN 0-253-33828-X (cloth), ISBN 0-253-21420-3 (paper), 357 pp.
Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Ind. - This publication is the only
current field guide to Indiana wildflowers, and as such, it is a welcome
addition to the Hoosier natural history literature. According to the publisher,
the qualities of this publication include "completeness, strong visual
presentation, and simplicity of terminology." (back cover). The publisher
further states, "this book will be useful to a broad audience—from the
most inexperienced amateur to professionals in many fields." The purpose
of my review is to test these claims.
The first issue is that of completeness. The author lists and describes
1, 564 species, a remarkable accomplishment for any field guide. She attempts
to include all the herbaceous species that have been recorded for Indiana,
except grasses, sedges and rushes. Only a few woody species are included
"if they are small and might be mistaken for herbs or if there are just
a few woody species in an otherwise herbaceous genus." (p. xi). Personally,
I wish more woody species had been included. For example, an amateur viewing
Steeplebush (Spiraea tomentosa) from a boardwalk in a bog might
not realize that it is a woody shrub and would be frustrated trying to
find it in this guide. Even so, the strength of this book is its completeness.
Yatskievych appropriately includes a number of introduced species and garden
escapes. Known hybrids are also noted, which is very useful.
To evaluate this publication as a working field guide, I field tested
it. I especially wanted to test its usefulness for "the most inexperienced
amateur." On several outings, I used the author's "flower finder guide"
(pp. xxiv-xxx) as if I were a total novice at identifying flowers trying
to identify some common flowers. For comparative purposes, I attempted
to identify the same plants using Newcomb's Wildflower Guide, by
Lawrence Newcomb (Little, Brown & Co., 1977).
The field guide is organized by groups of visually similar species.
A photograph represents each "visual group". There are 640 photographs,
usually one or more for each genus. To identify a flower using the flower
finder guide, the user first puts the flower into one of eight broad groups
according the shape of the flower or number of petaloids. Within each of
the broad groups, the floral variations are illustrated with line drawings.
Each line drawing includes the scientific name and species number of the
representative flower of the "visual group." The botanist turns to the
group representative and works through the description of that species
and the other species in the group to identify the flower at hand.
I found the flower-finder guide very difficult to use. Although the
eight broad categories work, but there are an insufficient number of line
drawings to cover all the visual groups within each broad category. Yatskievych
tries to compensate for this with lists of other representative species
in the group, but these lists can be very long. For example, Swamp Loosestrife
(Decodon verticillatus) has five petals, but it doesn't really look
like any of the 45 line drawings in the five-petal group. There is a list
of 51 other plants to try, but no visual clues to help me narrow the list.
A beginner would have to start at the beginning and look up each one. Decodonverticillatus
was number 14 on this list. Finding Spotted Joe-Pye Weed (Eupatorium
maculatum) and some of the other Asteraceae
using the flower
finder was even more frustrating. Even working backward, looking them up
in the index first, then trying to find their numbers in the flower-finder
guide, I was unable to determine which line drawing I should use as my
guide. I was able to use the flower finder guide to find Kalm's Lobelia
(Lobelia kalmii) because I knew I was looking at a lobelia and two
lobelias have line drawings in the guide. I'm not sure a total novice would
think the flower I saw looked like the line drawing of Lobelia siphilitica
or Lobelia cardinalis, even though the drawings represented
these two species superbly. By contrast, using Newcomb's simple key, I
quickly found the correct flower every time.
Like the line drawings, the photographs in this field guide are well
done. Most of the photographs illustrate important identifying characteristics,
which cannot be said for many field guides that rely on photographs. The
layout is very attractive and the printing is clear. The use of various
type fonts (bold for flower numbers, italics for scientific name, upper
case for common name, etc.) makes the guide very readable. These features
and the organization by "visual groups" support the publisher's claim of
"strong visual presentation." Because I was familiar with all the flowers
in my field test, I was able to locate them in the guide using the excellent
index. Once there, I was able to use the guide to determine if I was looking
at a common species or something more unique. Obviously, a more general
field guide like Newcomb's cannot do this. There was one minor production
error; the paperback edition does not have a printed ruler on the last
page as described in the preface (p. xii).
Yatskievych's plant descriptions are very thorough, and follow a formula
outlined in the preface. I especially like notation of state status. However,
I take issue with the publisher's claim that the guide uses "simple terminology."
The plant descriptions use botanical terms, which are difficult for a beginner.
Sometimes botanical terms cannot be avoided, so again, I compared the Yatskievych's
glossary to Newcomb's. While Newcomb needs 105 botanical terms in his glossary
to describe the flowers, shrubs and vines in his guide, Yatskievych needs
176. Even though her glossary is very complete, it doesn't help much, since
the definitions also use botanical terms. Newcomb's definitions are far
easier for an amateur to understand. For example, Newcomb defines umbel
as "a flower cluster in which all the flower stalks radiate from the same
point, like the ribs of an umbrella." Compare this to Yatskievych's definition,
"An unbranched inflorescence with pedicillate flowers attached in a +-
radial pattern at the tip of the peduncle . . . " (p. xxii).
This is an excellent guide for experienced botanists who can
identify most plants to generic level and find their "visual group" using
the index. Anyone interested in Hoosier botany should purchase this for
its completeness and the quality photos and descriptions, but amateur botanists
may want to carry Newcomb with them into the field. I recommend that every
public and academic library in Indiana and bordering states purchase Field
Guide to Indiana Wildflowers. Donna R.R. Resetar, Moellering Library,
Valparaiso University, Valparaiso IN.
Plant Galls of India. Mani, M. S. 2000. ISBN
1-57808-131-9 (cloth US$112.00) xviii + 477 pp. Science Publishers, Inc.
PO Box 699, Enfield, NH 03748. — Gall making, the hijacking of plant growth
to form feeding and breeding shelters for the gall makers, is a way of
life that is at once common and geographically and taxonomically widespread,
while at the same time being remarkably hit or miss. Galls can be formed
by bacteria, fungi, nematodes, mites, and insects from a number of different
orders, among others, and they may be formed on roots, stems, buds, leaves,
flowers, fruits, or seeds of host plants spanning the range from ferns
to orchids and composites. Still, the great majority of galls are formed
by gall makers from a handful of families (eriophyid mites, cecidomyiid
gall midges, cynipid gall wasps, and several families of aphids) and a
minority of plant species are known to harbor galls. Galls are often communities
in miniature, with interactions between the host plant, a primary gall
making insect, fungal associates, other insect inquilines, parasitoids
and diseases, and vertebrate and invertebrate predators, providing rich
material for evolutionary studies. One has only to think of the enormous
range of work done on Eurosta solidaginis galls of goldenrod to
recognize the potential. On top of that, some galls can reduce crop yield
or quality, so you might expect these conspicuous deformations of plants
to be well known taxonomically, if not necessarily biologically.
In fact, while many galls have been described, there are a surprising
number of gall makers known only as larvae or as adults, but not in both
phases. This frequent lack of connection between life history stages is
largely due to the difficulties of rearing out adults from collected galls
or of connecting presumptively gall making adults caught in general collecting
to any particular host plant of gall. The situation isn't made any easier
by the fact that plant taxonomists typically try to avoid galled organs
when making plant collections. Thus the majority of the primary literature
on galls and gall makers is to be found in entomological journals or in
the publications of natural history museums.
In contrast to the primary literature, with its focus on the gall makers,
there is at least a modest secondary literature of semi-popular books describing
and picturing the galls in a region. Plant galls of India belongs
to this literature. The author of this book, like those of most such
books, has devoted much of his career to galls and gall makers. Many of
the roughly 800 galls gathered in this compendium were originally described
by Mani and coworkers over the course of some 50 years. Again, as with
most gall books, including for North America, E. P. Felt's (1940) general
Plant
galls and gall makers and R. J. Gagné's (1989) more specific
Plant feeding gall midges of North America, the galls are arranged
by host plants. About 450 host plant species are (mostly) alphabetically
arranged under 90 plant families. The plant families (mostly) have the
composition and arrangement of the Bentham & Hooker system used in
J. D. Hooker's (1875—1897) 7 volume Flora of British India. Ironically,
some of the broad family circumscriptions of this system, relatively unfamiliar
to North American botanists raised on Engler and Prantl or Cronquist, are
returning with avoidance of paraphyletic families (for instance, including
Aesculus
in Sapindaceae).
Each family with more than one included gall has a key to the galls
described. The keys are fully dichotomous and based generally on the external
characteristics of the galls. Of course, you have to know the identity
of the host plant or you will have no hope of identifying a gall using
the keys. Specialized terminology is kept fairly light and there is a glossary
for the few unusual terms that are used. Each key is followed by the listing
of species with descriptions of their attendant galls. I can't quite figure
out what sequence the galls within a species follow. Sometimes they are
in the order that they fall out in the key. At others, they appear to be
organized by the taxonomy of the gall makers. Still others depart from
either scheme, or even seem chaotic. All of the galls are numbered, in
another mysterious sequence that reflects neither the taxonomy of the host
plants nor that of the gall makers, nor do the numbers seem to follow the
history of the author's experience with them.
The only apparent practical use of the gall numbers is to shorten the
captions of the illustrations. There are about 300 illustrations gathered
at the end of the book, including drawings and black and white close-up
photographs. These figures cover only about a third of the galls described
in the text. They vary in quality. The drawings are very good, but they
sometimes show internal details not covered in the text, and it is sometimes
difficult to go from figure to text (as in figs. 97—108) because some captions
contain no reference to the host plant and there is no index of gall numbers.
The galls in the figures mentioned are found on mango, which is given special
treatment in the text in a detailed guest contribution by M. D. V. Parthasarathy.
The photographs were probably originally sharp, but many have gotten fuzzy
through over-reproduction. Even so, they are good enough to help with identification.
This isn't a book that belongs, ready to hand, on the shelf of every
botanist and entomologist in North America. Still, for those who are interested
in galls, it provides interesting comparisons to galls formed by related
insects and mites on this continent. There is also the potential for identifying
galls on herbarium material from India and vicinity. And who knows when
some of these galls might turn up as introductions here, given the enormous
world trade in tropical fruits and house plants. — James E. Eckenwalder,
University of Toronto, Department of Botany, 25 Willcocks St., Toronto,
Ont. M5S 3B2, Canada.
Poppies: A Guide to the Poppy Family in the
Wild and in Cultivation. Revised edition, 2000. Grey-Wilson, Christopher.
ISBN 0-88192-503-9 (hardcover US$37.95) 256 pp. + 32 color plates. Timber
Press publishes this book in the United States and Canada under license
from its UK publisher B. T. Batsford ( http://www.batsford.com/; ISBN 0-71348-501-9).
- In 1993, the first edition of this book was remarkable for its many spectacular
color photographs of gorgeous poppies in full bloom. Today, this book is
still remarkable. The photographs, most by the author, are of outstanding
quality, showing not only the stunning beauty of these plants, but also
their habitat in the wild, growth form, and details of leaf, flower, and
fruit morphology. This book is packed with detailed information about every
genus of the poppy family, and many species as well. Particularly strong
are the notes on native habitat, morphology, history in cultivation, and
horticulture. Both the text and drawings are consistently detailed and
accurate. The first edition is good enough to have been used as a primary
source of morphological data for systematic analyses of Papaveraceae (Loconte
et al., 1995; Jork and Kadereit, 1995), and I can attest that much of this
data occurs in print nowhere else.
This new edition is even better. It is 50 pages longer, the taxonomy
is more current (Papaveraceae has received considerable taxonomic attention
in the past decade), and there are many new and even better photographs.
Among these are several that show bizarre cultivars both new and old: poppies
that look just like common chrysanthemums; and the famous Papaver somniferum
`Hen and Chickens', a homeotic mutant in which the stamens are replaced
by reduced gynoecia. (Sadly, there still is no photograph of Bocconia,
a Caribbean endemic that bears a striking resemblance to a medium-sized
palm tree.) Most thoroughly revised are the treatments of the two largest
genera Meconopsis and Papaver, plus Arctomecon, Eschscholzia,
and Glaucium.
I bought the first edition of this book in 1994 and have enjoyed it
ever since; I am delighted to also have a copy of the new edition. If anyone
on your gift list is fond of poppies, buy them this book. And buy a second
copy for yourself. — Una Smith, Los Alamos National Laboratory, MS K-710,
Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545.
Literature Cited
JORK, K. B., AND J. W. KADEREIT. 1995. Molecular phylogeny of
the Old World representatives of Papaveraceae subfamily Papaveroideae with
special emphasis on the genus Meconopsis.
In U. Jensen and
J. W. Kadereit [eds.], Plant Systematics and Evolution Supplementum, 9.
Systematics and evolution of the Ranunculiflorae, 171-180. Springer-Verlag,
New York.
LOCONTE, H., L. M. CAMPBELL, AND D. Wm. STEVENSON. 1995. Ordinal and
familial relationships of ranunculid genera. In U. Jensen and J.
W. Kadereit [eds.], Plant Systematics and Evolution Supplementum, 9. Systematics
and evolution of the Ranunculiflorae, 99-118. Springer-Verlag, New York.
The Trees of Sonora, Mexico.—Felger, Richard,
Matthew Johnson, Michael Wilson. 2001. ISBN 0-19-512891-5 (cloth, US $125.00).391
pp. Oxford University Press, New York.
Flora of the Gran Desierto and Río Colorado of Northwestern
Mexico. Felger, Richard S. 2000. ISBN 0-8165-2944-5 (cloth, US $ $75.00).
673 pp. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.
Richard Felger is already well known for his extensive botanical writings
on the desert Southwest of Arizona and adjacent Sonora, especially People
of the Desert Sea: Ethnobotany of the Seri Indians. Now he has produced
two volumes that make an important contribution to the botany of the North
American desert realms.
The Trees of Sonora, Mexico is mainly a flora with keys to families,
genera, and species; botanical descriptions; references; and discussions
about the habitats in which the trees occur. Most of the species are illustrated
by line drawings, some reprinted from classic sources such as Sargent's
Silva
of North America, but many are originals by L. B. Hamilton and M. B.
Johnson. These are supplemented by photographs of trees in their natural
habitat. Citations of author and place of publication of plant species
names are not provided but can be traced through the references. Instead,
Latin names are followed by vernacular names in indigenous languages—a
valuable feature.
The floristic part of the book is preceded by a 25 page introduction
that includes topographic and vegetation maps; climatic diagrams; and a
discussion of the vegetational communities illustrated by photographs of
representative landscapes and schematic vegetation profiles. The total
number of tree species in Sonora is given as 285—this is low in proportion
to the total flora of 5,000 species but not unexpected in such an arid
environment. Floristic relationships in comparison to other regions are
not discussed, a regrettable lack. However, there is an interesting Appendix
on habitat distributions of the trees of Sonora indicating the communities
in which each species occurs, from mangroves and thorn scrub to mixed conifer
forest. The reader is thus able to gain a rather graphic picture of the
impressive vegetational diversity across Sonora.
The book clearly reflects the long-term field work that has been accomplished
by Felger and other botanists in Tucson, especially at the Desert Research
Institute. The treatments of some families such as the Cactaceae and figs
(Ficus) constitute detailed essays in desert natural history. It
is interesting to contrast the treatment of the oaks (Quercus) with
that recently published in Changing Plant Life of La Frontera by
Richard Spellenberg (who was consulted during the preparation of Trees
of Sonora. The nomenclature is identical, but the Felger version has
more local habitat information, whereas Spellenberg gives more quantitative
descriptions and more citations of hybrids . I particularly like Felger's
discussion of the palms (Arecaceae), which is based on a recent article
in Aliso coauthored with E. Joyal . Although we have seen a lot
of books on palms in recent years, this one gives an intimate perspective
on the Sonoran palm flora, with useful features such as a diagram comparing
leaf structure in Brahea, Sabal, and Washingtonia.
The Trees of Sonora is a beautifully produced volume in terms
of typography, reproduction of illustrations, and editing; the Oxford University
Press continues to maintain the high standards it has achieved publishing
botanical texts such as its Flora of North America series.
The Flora of the Gran Desierto and Río Colorado of Northwestern
Mexico is a rather clumsy name for this handsome book; perhaps a better
title would have been Flora of the Gran Desierto and Pinacate. The
photographs in the introductory section should give even the uninititated
reader a vivid impression of what an extraordinary place the Gran Desierto
region is. Pinacate, the blackened cindery peak that rises above the sandy
deserts just below the international boundary, is the "Ultima Thule" of
the deserts of North America. Even though it lies just below Mexican Route
2, it is moated from the world by its lava flows, craters, and dunes. The
aficianado of the desert experience is bound to regard it as a sacred habitat
for its uncompromising harshness, moon-like landscape of craters, and its
counterintuitively rich diversity of desert plant and animal life.
Richard Felger has been one of the most faithful visitors to Pinacate
and the Gran Desierto stretching to the west, and this flora does seem
to be a long-continued labor of love. In the Introduction he cites a considerable
number of collaborators and field companions, although curiously he does
not mention Edward Abbey, with whom he made a trip to the Gran Desierto
(including a climb of Pinacate) in the early 1970s. Perhaps his omission
of Abbey's account of their trip, which he published in Cactus Country
(1973),
is related to a comment by Abbey about Felger's collecting activities:
"Some people collect stamps or beer bottles or wagon wheels; professional
botanists collect weeds, press them between wooden plates, and store them
away in museum files never to be seen by light of day again." However,
Felger no doubt disdained Abbey's cavalier references to the native desert
plants as "weeds," as he went on collecting assiduously. Felger published
his first overview of the vegetation and flora of the Gran Desierto two
decades ago in the periodical Desert Plant Life, followed by a synopsis
of the flora a decade ago. The present considerably expanded book provides
an introduction with two detailed maps of the area and a discussion of
the geology and habitats. It is a measure of the environmental marginality
of the Pinacate region that instead of vegetation types, there is discussion
of specific habitats—dunes, tidal marshes, oases and riverbanks. The total
flora for the area of 15,000 square kilometers is given as 589 species,
which includes 65 introduced species in non-irrigated habitats. The entire
native flora is only 524 species (a select assemblage of survivors!), but
it clearly is not under serious attack by invasive species. The botanical
keys and descriptions are comparable to those used in The Trees of Sonora,
and there are ample illustrations, mostly published earlier. Among the
colleagues Felger acknowledges, it would appear that he is particularly
indebted to James Henrickson for sharing information from his unpublished
Flora of the Sonoran Desert.
A feature of Flora of the Gran Desierto that is not present in
Trees
of Sonora is the citation of herbarium specimens, the vast majority
of which have been made by Felger himself. The specimen citations are an
indication that the Flora of the Gran Desiertomay be considered
a "florula" rather than a flora: it is an intensively documented treatment
of the plants in a restricted area. Considering that it covers 15,000 square
kilometers, the book is perhaps intermediate between the two genres.
Although the number of invasive plant species is low and most of the
area has never been (or never will be) cultivated, there are clear indications
here and there in the text of modification of wetland habitats. Some of
the pozos (small springs) in the sand dune areas, as well as the
tidal wetlands at the head of the Gulf of California have escaped serious
change. The most striking alteration has occurred in the Río Colorado
delta, which has been fundamentally transformed due to diversion of essentially
all the water in the river. Much of the original vegetation in the Ciénega
de Santa Clara has been destroyed and replaced by hypersaline flats or
reconstituted stands of cattail, reed, and bulrush. The Quitobaquito oasis,
located directly on the international boundary and long settled by the
Papago Indians, has survived and is protected in the Organ Pipe Cactus
National Park. Felger provides an interesting sketch of the history of
human intervention and contemporary efforts at conservation of the plant
and animal life, which led in 1993 to the creation to two Biosphere Reserves
within the area of the flora. It is somewhat ironic that preservation of
this area will be greatly facilitated by the inhospitable nature of the
environment. Still, we have to hope that as the Mexican economy improves,
the biosphere reserve status will protect the dunes of the Gran Desierto
from the ravages of dune buggies, and the ghost of Father Eusebio Kino
on the peak of El Pinacate will not be disturbed by construction of a chairlift.
In summary, these two books on Sonoran flora and vegetation are products
of the tradition of desert botany studies that began a century ago with
the founding of the Desert Laboratory by the Carnegie Institution of Washington.
As described by Janice Bowers in an article in Desert Plants (1990),
the Desert Laboratory was for 37 years the most influential ecological
institution in North America, harboring such leading ecologists as Daniel
MacDougal, Frederick Clements, and Forrest Shreve. Although the Laboratory
at Tumamoc Hill was closed down in 1940 and turned over to the inept stewardship
of the U. S. Forest Service, it later underwent a renaissance under the
administration of the University of Arizona. The glorious tradition of
Clements and Shreve continues on at the University campus and at other
institutions in the area such as the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum. With
The Trees of Sonora and Flora of the Gran Desierto, Richard
Felger, has made a significant contribution in building on the tradition
of Forrest Shreve. — Grady L. Webster, Herbarium, University of California,
Davis 95616.
Wildflowers of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont,
in color. Besette, Alan E., Arleen Rainis Besette, William Chapman,
and Valerie Conley Chapman, with botanical drawings by Philippa Brown.
2000. ISBN 0-8156-2803-X (paper US$24.00) 167 p. Syracuse University Press.
- This new guide is full of attractive photographs of flowers from the
three northernmost states of New England. The geographical focus differentiates
it from potential competitors, such as Peterson's Wildflowers of Eastern
North America, or Newcomb's Wildflower Guide, both of which cover a much
wider area. The guide covers "nearly 400" species from the area.
The entries are arranged by color, symmetry, number of petals, and leaf
shape and arrangement. The table of contents directs the user to the appropriate
section of the guide, but does not enable the reader to key out the entries
beyond that: you are directed to the general vicinity, and then must look
about.
The text for each entry is on a page opposite to the photograph. The
texts provide common name, scientific name, family, flowering season, description
of the flower, description of the plant, and habitat; if the plant is threatened
or endangered, this is noted. The text uses some basic botanical nomenclature;
technical terms are defined in a glossary, and distinctive characteristics
of flower anatomy and leaf shape and arrangement are illustrated. There
are indices of common and scientific names. Aliens are not noted, and in
each section herbs, vines, and woody species are mixed.
Given the other good general guides on the market, would I recommend
this for a person newly interested in plants? Well, unfortunately my answer
would be "No." The authors have produced good floral photographs and accessible,
succinct descriptions. Some of the "comments" appended to species descriptions
are interesting, as the brief discussion of the variability of Plantanthera.
The book is enjoyable to browse through. However, if someone were to ask
me to recommend a field guide to help them become acquainted with the wildflowers
of the region, I would recommend Newcomb's guide over this one without
hesitation. My reasons are as follows.
First, the photographs provide a visual representation of the flowers
that allows one to use either the one or the other, depending on one's
facility with verbal descriptions of flowers. The photos do not, however,
provide the same kind of information about the leaves or other characteristics
of the plant. Much of the time this may be redundant, because of the good
verbal descriptions, but if the reader is presumed not to be very familiar
with plants, the photographs should more consistently provide at least
a shadowy hint of the general "look" of the plant. On this score, Newcomb's
or Peterson's, with their use of drawings, is more useful.
Second, and for me more important, the choice of species is eccentric,
and too restrictive to be useful as a stand-alone guide. Widespread species
that one might well encounter in the field are often excluded. For example,
there are 5 species of Solidago described, but these five do not
include Solidago juncea, a conspicuous, early, and widespread species,
or
Solidago rugosa. Similarly, two species of Cornus are included,
but not C. amomum or C. alternifolia, which are widely distributed
as well. Similar comments might be made on genera such
as Rosa,
Vaccinium, Aster, and others. Meanwhile, rare groups, such
as orchids, are very fully represented, and we find four species of Maianthemum.
Thus, this would be a frustrating guide to rely on in the field, since
many plants one would encounter are not present, and instead the book treats
many plants that one may never see in the field.
Thus, this book might well serve as a complement to a more comprehensive
and balanced guide, but does not live up to its billing as "the most comprehensive,
easy-to-use field guide now available" for the wildflowers of the region.
- Bryan Drayton, T E R C, Cambridge, MA 02140.
The Cambridge Illustrated Glossary of Botanical
Terms. Hickey, Michael, and Clive King, 2000. ISBN 0521794013 (paper
US$29.95) 208 pp. Cambridge University Press, The Pitt Building, Trumpington
Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom.— Both of the authors of this glossary
are botanists and educators who have collaborated before on 100 Families
of Flowering Plants (1981, 1988) and Common Families of Flowering
Plants (1997). This glossary contains over 2400 botanical terms often
referring to the accompanying line drawings ranging from the microscopic
to the macroscopic. The intended audience of this book is anyone, beginner
or expert, interested in the terminology of botanical description and botany
in general. This book is user-friendly. The first 46 pages comprise the
glossary of botanical terms with clear, concise definitions and references
to appropriate illustrations. The next 161 pages contain many black-and-white
line drawings illustrating various botanical concepts and terms. The illustrations
are grouped according to particular topics which makes them easy to browse
at your leisure. Simple, clear, and well-labeled illustrations are the
glory of this work. The glossary and illustrations are conveniently used
either together or separately. Beginning students or laypersons may find
some of the terms confusing because they are less frequently used in the
U.S. or because they describe more detail than is usually dealt with in
some introductory texts. The Cambridge Illustrated Glossary of Botanical
Terms is an excellent, useful resource, worthy of attention from students,
teachers, experts, amateurs, and botanical enthusiasts of all kinds. While
this book would be an excellent supplement for a plant identification or
systematic botany course, it is perfectly delightful by itself. This would
not necessarily be a text to use as a supplement to Dutta's A Class-Book
of Botany simply because it costs about twice as much and Dutta's basic
terms with illustrations are presented sufficiently for an introductory
course. _ James L. Smith II, Biology Department, La Sierra University,
Riverside, CA 92515-8247.
A Class-Book of Botany, 17th Ed.
A. C. Dutta., Revised by T. C. Dutta, 2000. ISBN 0195653076 (paper US$14.95)
621 pp. Oxford University Press, Plot A1-5, Block-GP, Sector-V, Salt Lake
Electronics Complex, Calcutta 700 091, India.— Considering this text as
an alternative to a modern U.S. botany text,
three things immediately struck me as I first perused the book. The
first thing to strike me about this book is its lack of color pictures.
The second thing to strike me about this book was its poor quality paper
and printing. The third striking aspect of this book was the archaic appearance
of its content, it looks like a text from half a century ago or more. While
I know that these things do not necessarily belie the quality of the content
of this text, they strike me nonetheless. This book was printed in India
and is obviously meant to be as inexpensive as possible to serve its target
audience, pre-medical and other students in India. As stated in the preface,
the book is written in an easy-to-understand way and is also well illustrated
with black-and-white line drawings and a few photos.
This "thorough" revision includes the "addition of several new topics
and rewriting many portions of the text on the basis of recent research."
Such added topics include: the importance of forests, ecosystems, techniques
of plant breeding and recent advances in botany. Topics being enlarged
and added to the text seem humorously belated and in some instances underdone.
For example, Part IX, entitled Recent Advances in Botany, includes four
chapters each one paragraph long, including: genetic engineering, industrial
microbiology, biotechnology, and tissue culture. These four long paragraphs,
nearly half a page each, include no illustrations and leave much to be
desired in terms of explanation.
Although it hardly seems to be a fair comparison, one might compare
Dutta's A Class-Book of Botany (ACB) with Raven, Evert, and Eichhorn's
Biology
of Plants, 6th Ed. (BOP), that are texts apparently aimed
at a similar or at least overlapping audience. BOP's larger format (10.5
x 9 in. versus 8 x 5 in.) and greater length (944 pp. versus 621 pp.) allow
for more factual content, explanatory prose, and profuse illustration.
A comparison of the approximate percentage of the textual content of each
book dedicated to various topics reveals some interesting facts. The percentage
of each text dedicated to physiology and organismal diversity is nearly
identical, about 18.5% and 32% respectively. ACB tends to emphasize morphology
(28%) and histology (14%) in comparison with BOP (14% and 9% respectively).
About 9% of the content of BOP is dedicated to the topic of ecology, which
receives a scant 2% of ACB's content. The very important, combined topic
of evolution and genetics (3% of ACB) comprises about 12% of BOP's content
and the difference in emphasis is mostly due to differential treatment
of genetics. This apparent neglect of modern genetics is one of the largest
drawbacks of this introductory botany text. Although one could easily argue
that these topics need not be treated in so much detail, since they will
undoubtedly be covered in other courses. Recent advances in botany and
economic botany, which are treated in 3% of ACB, are interspersed throughout
the text of BOP.
In summary, A Class-Book of Botany undoubtedly serves its purpose
in many ways. It is an inexpensive, readable, illustrated text of introductory
botany. Although in many parts it sometimes is written much like a dictionary
or encyclopedia, there are many illustrations and explanatory charts. Considering
this text for use in an introductory botany class, I would praise its coverage
of basic botanical information and warn the potential user of the weak
content in the areas of ecology and genetics. I feel fortunate, if not
guilty, that I and my students are able to afford the luxury of purchasing
lavishly illustrated and well supplemented texts. For some though, this
text may be a very inexpensive and, with supplemental information, sufficient
alternative to the typical botany textbook. . _ James L. Smith II, Biology
Department, La Sierra University, Riverside, CA 92515-8247.
Books
Received
If you would like to review a book or books for PSB, contact the Editor,
stating the book of interest and the date by which it would be reviewed
(1 February, 1 May, 1 August or 1 November). Send E-mail to mailto:sundberm@emporia.edu,
call or write as soon as you notice the book of interest in this list because
they go quickly! - Editor
Bulbs of North America. McGary, Jane (ed) 2001. ISBN 0-88192-511-X
(Cloth US$34.95) 308 pp. Timber Press, Inc., 133 S.W. Second Avenue, Suite
450, Portland, OR 97204-3527.
Conservation of Wood Artifacts: A Handbook. Unger, A., A.P. Schniewind,
and W. Unger. 2001. ISBN 3-540-41580-7 (Cloth US$225.00) 578 pp. Springer-Verlag
New York, Inc. 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Development of Plant-based Medicines: Conservation, Efficacy and
Safety. Saxena, Praveen (ed) 2001. ISBN 0-7923-6871-1. (Cloth US$100.00)
264 pp. Kluwer Academic Publishers, P.O. Box 989, 3300 AZ Dordrecht, The
Netherlands.
DNA Microarrays: Gene Expression Applications. Jordan, B.R. (ed)
2001. ISBN 3-540-41507-6 (Cloth
Advances in Biochemical Engineering/Biotechnology. Volume 72, Plant
Cells. Zhong, J.-J. ( volume editor). 2001. ISBN 3-540-41849-0. (Cloth
US$149.00) Springer-Verlag 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Advances in Botanical Research Incorporating Advances in Plant Pathology.
Volume 34, Biotechnology of Cereals. Shewry, P.R., P.A. Lazzeri, and
K.J. Edwards (eds) 2001. ISBN 0-12-005934-7. (Cloth US$ ) Academic Press,
525 B Street, Suite 1900, San Diego, CA 92101-4495.
Algal Adaptation to Environmental Stresses: Physiological, Biochemical
and Molecular Mechanisms. Rai, L.C. and J. P. Gaur. 2001. ISBN 3-540-41938-1.
(Cloth US$194.00) Springer-Verlag, 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ
07094.
Armitage's Manual of Annuals, Biennials, and Half-Hardy Perennials.
Armitage, Allan M. 2001. ISBN 0-88192-505-5 (Cloth US$39.95) Timber Press,
Inc., 133 S.W. Second Avenue, Suite 450, Portland, OR 97204-3527.
Biological Centrifugation. Graham, J. 2001. ISBN 1-85996-037-5.
(Paper US$39.95) 210 pp. Bios Scientific Publishers Ltd., 9 Newtec Place,
Magdalen Road, Oxford OX4 1RE, United Kingdom. Distributed by Springer-Verlag
New York Inc., 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY.
Biotechnology in Agriculture and Forestry 49: Somatic Hybridization
in Crop Improvement II. Nagata, T. and Y.P.S. Bajaj. 2001. ISBN 3-540-41112-7.
(Cloth US$225.00) 377 pp. Springer-Verlag 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus,
NJ 07094.
Bulbophyllums and Their Allies: A Grower's Guide. Siegerist,
Emily S. 2001. ISBN 0-88192-506-3. (Cloth US$34.95) 284 pp. Timber Press,
Inc., 133 S.W. Second Avenue, Suite 450, Portland, OR 97204-3527.
Bulbs of North America. McGary, Jane (ed) 2001. ISBN
0-88192-511-X (Cloth US$34.95) 308 pp Timber Press, 133 S.W. Second
Avenue, Suite 450, Portland, OR 97204-3527.
Conservation of Wood Artifacts: A Handbook. Unger, A.,
A. P. Schniewind, and W. Unger. 2001. ISBN 3-540-41580-7 (Cloth
US$225.00) 578 pp. Springer-Verlag 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus,
NJ 07094.
Development of Plant-based Medicines: Conservation, Efficacy and
Safety. Saxena, Praveen (ed) 2001. ISBN 0-7923-6871-1
(Cloth US$100.00) 264 pp. Kluwer Academic Publishers, P.O. Box 989,
3300 AZ Dordrecht, The Netherlands.
DNA Microarrays: Gene Expression Applications. Jordan,
B.R. (ed) 2001. ISBN 3-540-41507-6 (Cloth US$79.00) 140 pp. Springer-Verlag
New York, Inc. 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Doing Science: Design, Analysis, and Communication of Scientific
Research. Valiela, Ivan. 2001. ISBN 0-19-507962-0 (Cloth US$75.00)
ISBN 0-19-513413-3 (Paper US$39.50) 294 pp. Oxford University Press, 198
Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4314.
Early American Herb Recipes. Cooke, Alice Brown. 2001 ISBN 0-486-41875-8
(Paper US$9.95) 152 pp. Dover Publications, Inc., 31 East 2nd
St., Mineola, NY 11501.
The Ecology of Trees in the Tropical Rain Forest. Turner, I.
M. 2001. ISBN 0-521-80183-4 (Cloth US$80.00) 298 pp. Cambridge University
Press, 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211.
Elements of Mathematical Ecology. Kot, Mark. 2001. ISBN 0-521-80213-X
(Cloth $110.00) ISBN 0-521-00150-1 (Paper US$39.95) 453 pp. Cambridge University
Press, 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211.
Environmental Molecular Microbiology: Protocols and Applications.
Rochelle, Paul A (ed.) 2001. ISBN 1-898486-29-8 (Cloth US$149.00) 264 pp.
Horizon Scientific Press, P.O. Boz 1, Wynondham, Norfolk NR18 0EH, England.
Distributed by Springer-Verlag New York Inc., 175 Fifth Avenue, New York,
NY.
Flavenoids of the Sunflower Family (Asteraceae). Bohm, Bruce
A and Tod F. Stuessy. 2001. ISBN 3-211-83479-6 (Cloth US$199.00) 831 pp.
Springer-Verlag Wien New York, Sachsenplatz 4-6, P.O. Box 89m A-1201 Wien,
Austria.
Flora of China, Vol 8, Brassicaceae through Saxifragaceae. Zheng-yi,
Wu and Peter H. Raven (co-chairs, editorial committee) 2001. ISBN 0-915279-93-2(Cloth
US$85.00) 506 pp. Missouri Botanical Garden Press, 4344 Shaw Blvd., St.
Louis, MO 63110-2291.
Food, People and Society: A European Perspective of Consumers' Food
Choices. Frewer, L.J., E. Risvik and H. Schifferstein (eds). 2001.
ISBN 3-540-41521-1. (Cloth US$109.00) 462 pp Springer-Verlag, 333 Meadowlands
Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Fungal Conservation: Issues and Solutions. Moore, D., M.M. Nauta,
S. E. Evans & M. Rotheroe. 2001. ISBN 0-521-80363-2 (Cloth US$95.00)
262 pp. Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, New
York, NY 10011-4211.
Global Biodiversity in a Changing Environment: Scenarios for the
21st Century. Chapin III, F. Stuart, Osvaldo E. Sala, and
Elisabeth Huber-Sannwald (eds) 2001. ISBN 0-387-95286-1 (Paper US$49.95)
376 pp. Springer-Verlag, 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Gregor Mendel and the Roots of Genetics. Edelson, Edward. 2001.
ISBN 0-19-515020-2 (Paper US$11.95) 105 pp. Oxford University Press, 198
Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4314.
Handbook of North European Garden Plants: With Keys to Families and
Genera. Cullen, James (ed) 2001. ISBN 0-521-65183-2 (Cloth US$130.00)
ISBN 0-521-00411-x (Paper US$49.95) 640 pp Cambridge University Press,
40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211.
Handbook of Plant and Crop Physiology 2nd ed. Pessarakli,
Mohammad (ed). 2002. ISBN 0-8247-0546-7 (Cloth US$225.00) 973 pp. Marcel
Dekker, Inc. Cimarron Road, P.O. Box 5005, Monticello, NY 12701-5185.
Intrinsic Value and Integrity of Plants in the Context of Genetic
Engineering. Heaf, David and Johannes Wirz (eds). 2001. ISBN 0-9541035-0-5
(Paper) 66 pp. International Forum for Genetic Engineering, Hafan, Cae
Llwyd, Llanystumdwy, Cricieth, Gwynedd. LL52 OSG United Kingdom.
Instant Notes: Plant Biology. Lack, A.J. and D.E. Evans. 2001.
ISBN 0-387-91613-X (Paper US$27.95) 332 pp. Springer-Verlag, 333 Meadowlands
Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants of
California. Tibor, David P. (convening editor) 2001. ISBN 0-943460-40-9
(Paper US$29.95) 388 pp. California Native Plant Society, 1722 J Street,
Suite 17, Sacramento, CA 95814.
Lichens of North America. Brodo, Irwin M., Sylvia Duran Sharnoff,
and Stephen Sharnoff. 2001. ISBN 0-300-08249-5 (Cloth US$69.95) 795 pp.
Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.
Mushrooms of Cape Cod and the National Seashore. Bessette, Arleen
R. , Alan E. Bessette and William J. Neill. 2001. ISBN 0-8156-0687-7 (Cloth
US$59.95) ISBN 0-8156-0688-5 (Paper US$26.95) 174 pp. Syracuse University
Press, 621 Skytop Road, Suite 110, Syracuse, NY 13244-5290.
The Mycota: A Comprehensive Treatise on Fungi as Experimental Systems
for Basic and Applied Research. Vol VIII, Biology of the Fungal Cell.
Howard, R.J. and N.A.R. Gow (eds.) 2001. ISBN 3-540-60186-4 (Cloth, US$159.00)
307 pp. Springer Verlag, 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Nitrogen Assimilation by Plants: Physiological, Biochemical and Molecular
Aspects. Morot-Gaudry, Jean-François (ed). 2001. ISBN 2-7380-0716-3
(Cloth US$118.00) 466 pp. Science Publishers, Inc. P.O. Box 699, May Street,
Enfield, NH 03748.
Orchids and their Conservation. Koopowitz, Harold. 2001 ISBN
0-88192-523-3 (Cloth US$39.95) 177 pp. Timber Press, Inc., 133 S.W. Second
Avenue, Suite 450, Portland, OR 97204-3527.
The Orchids of the Philippines. Cootes, Jim. 2001. ISBN 0-88192-516-0
(Cloth US$49.95) 231 pp. Timber Press, Inc., 133 S.W. Second Avenue, Suite
450, Portland, OR 97204-3527.
Physical Control Methods in Plant Protection. Vincent, C. B.
Panneton, and F. Fleurat-Lessard (Eds.) 2001. ISBN 3-540-64562-4 (Cloth
US$115.00) 329 pp. Springer-Verlag, 333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus,
NJ 07094.
Plant Cell Biology: A Practical Approach 2nd ed. Hawes,
Chris and Beatrice Satiat-Jeunemaitre. ISBN 0-19-963856-5 (Paper US$60.00)
338 pp. Oxford University Press, 2001 Evans Road, Cary, NC 27513.
Plant Genotyping: The DNA Fingerprinting of Plants. Henry, R.J.
(ed) 2001. ISBN 0-85199-515-2 (Cloth US$100.00) 325 pp. CABI Publishing.
CAB International, Wallingford, Oxon OX10-8DE, United Kingdom.
Regulation of Photosynthesis. Aro, Eva-Mari and Bertil Andersson
(eds) 2001. ISBN 0-7923-6332-9 (Cloth US$226.00) 613 pp. Kluwer Academic
Publishers, P.O. Box 989, 3300 AZ Dordrecht, The Netherlands.
Seed Storage of Horticultural Crops. Doijode, S. D. 2001. ISBN
1-56022-883-0 (Cloth US$89.95) ISBN 1-56022-901-2 (Paper US$49.94) 340
pp The Haworth Press, Inc. 10 Alice Street, Binghamton, New York. 13904-1580.
Seventh Catalog of the Vascular Plants of Ohio. Cooperrider,
Tom S., Allison W. Cusick & John T. Kartesz (eds). 2001. ISBN 0-8142-0858-4
(cloth) ISBN 0-8142-5061-0 (paper) 195 pp. Ohio State University Press,
Chicago Distribution Center, 11030 S. Langley Dr. Chicago, IL 60628.
Spatial Patterns in Catchment Hydrology: Observations & Modeling.
Grayson, Rodger & Gunter Bloschl (eds). 2001. ISBN 0-521-63316-8 (Cloth
US$95.00) 404 pp. Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street,
New York, NY 10011-4211.
The Spirochetes: Molecular and Cellular Biology. Saier, Milton
H. Jr., and Jorge Garcia-Lara (eds). 2001 ISBN 1-898486-27-1 (Cloth US$149.00)
222 pp. Horizon Scientific Press, P.O. Boz 1, Wynondham, Norfolk NR18 0EH,
England. Distributed by Springer-Verlag New York Inc., 175 Fifth Avenue,
New York, NY.
Springer Handbook of Enzymes: Class 5 Isomerases, 2nd
ed. 2001. ISBN 3-540-41008-2 (Cloth US$249.00) 752 pp. Springer-Verlag,
333 Meadowlands Parkway, Secaucus, NJ 07094.
Stable Isotope Techniques in the Study of Biological Processes and
Functioning of Ecosystems. Unkovich, Murray, John Pate, Ann McNeill
and D. Jane Gibbs (eds). 2001. ISBN 0-7923-7078-3 (Cloth US$105.00) 289
pp. Kluwer Academic Publishers, P.O. Box 989, 3300 AZ Dordrecht, The Netherlands.
Trees. Ennos, Roland. 2001. ISBN 1-56098-979-3 (Paper ) 112 pp.
Smithsonian Institution Press and the Natural History Museum, Cromwell
Road, London SW7 5BD. United Kingdom.
Wildflowers of Door County: Wisconsin's Unique Floral Preserve.
Mahlberg, Paul and Marilyn. 2001. ISBN 0-253-21453-X (Paper US$18.95) 240
pp. Indiana University Press, 601 N. Morton Street, Bloomington, IN 47404.
Winter Twigs: A Wintertime Key to Deciduous
Trees and Shrubs of Northwestern Oregon and Western Washington.
Gilkey, Helen M. and Patricia L. Packard. 2001. ISBN 0-87071-530-5. (Paper
US$19.95) Oregon State University Press, 101 Waldo Hall, Corvallis, Oregon
97331-6407.
The World According to Pimm. Pimm, Stuart. 2001. ISBN 0-07-137490-6
(Paper US$24.95) McGraw-Hill, Two Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121-2298.
World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions. Edition
2. Brummitt, R. K. 2001. ISBN 0-913196-72-X (Paper US$10.00) 137 pp.
Published for the International Working Group on Taxonomic Databases for
Plant Sciences by the Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation, Carnegie
Mellon University, 5000 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890.
National Invasive Weeds Awareness Week 2002
(NIWAW III) will be held in Washington, DC the week of February 25 -
March 1, 2002. NIWAW III events wil focus on invasive weeds and non-native
species issues and the critical role of federal programs in dealing with
these problems. Specific details for the week are are still being planned,
but will likely include a breakfast briefing on key national invasive weed
issues, meetings with Federal agencies active in invasive weed management,
a poster session showcasing invasive weed problems and innovative management
strategies, a congressional reception, and more. Additional information
is available at www.nawma.org/niwaw.htm
IV Southern Connection Congress. Southern
Temperate Ecosystems and Biota: Contributions towards a Global Synthesis.
Bariloche, Argentina, 1317 January, 2003
( http://www.southernconnection.org.au
)
Works that describe the results of original research in themes as composition,
structure and dynamics of ecosystems, taxonomy, reproductive biology, ecophysiology,
biological interactions, phylogeny, evolution, population genetics, paleobiology,
ecological and historical biogeography, macroecology, biological invasions,
vegetation history, ecosystem conservation, restoration and sustainable
management are welcome. Proposals should be sent to Javier Puntieri (IV
SCC Local Organizing Committee/Symposia):
jpuntier@crub.uncoma.edu.ar, no later
than November 30, 2001.
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