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E-raamat: Frustrating Flowers and Puzzling Plants: Identifying the difficult species of Britain and Ireland

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This book offers a fresh approach to difficult plants that will make you become a more confident botanist. Unlike other wildflower guides, it will help you understand why some plants are trickier to identify than others.



If you have tried to identify wildflowers, you'll already know exactly what is meant by the main title of this book. Although a lot of plants are relatively straightforward to recognise, many others are not. Standard wildflower books tend to provide as much guidance with identifying the easy and distinctive as they do with complex, tricky species. This ingenious book is designed to come to the rescue of the exasperated novice botanist and to help those more experienced who might be stuck on unfamiliar and complex groups.

From willows to water-crowfoots, from eyebrights to dandelion look-a-likes, all of us have struggled with baffling specimens or the seemingly cryptic. Presented here is a fresh new approach to identifying difficult plants by giving you an understanding of the biology behind their complexity. In simple language, you will be directed to the particular parts of the plant that you need to look at most closely. The tabular keys are more user friendly and evolutionarily valid than conventional dichotomous keys, which are often confusing and unwieldy. Each chapter contains illustrations of the plants' key diagnostic features, rather than of entire plants. Other novel aspects include coverage of the historical recognition of complexity within each group, which is used to inform debate about the level of resolution that may be most appropriate for your needs.

This accessible guide is the perfect chance to get to grips with that challenging group you keep saving for 'next year' or for untangling a botanical mystery which keeps repeating itself.

Arvustused

John M. Warren's book tackles the trickiest of taxonomies, helping us understand our umbellifers and suss out our speedwells. It's funny, clearly written and absolutely fascinating. -- Nic Wilson, Guardian country diarist A really useful and readable book which gives you all the fine detail and understanding that is missing from your typical wild plant ID guide. -- David Swales * BNA News Bulletin * People who grow and photograph orchids, particularly indigenous ones, often have an interest in the other wildflowers that grow with them. This book gives a unique method of getting to grips with them. -- Isobyl la Croix * The Orchid Society of Great Britain Journal * ...extremely professionally designed... The compiled identification guides, although based on the flora of Great Britain and Ireland, can also be useful in Central Europe. This is helped not least by the clear characteristic tables and the colored sketches... The appealing layout could, especially for beginners, alert them to the critical groups and the problems involved early on, and encourage in-depth study. -- Bernd Sauerwein * Kochia *

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgments



SECTION I. APOMICTIC SPECIES: SPECIES THAT PRODUCE SEEDS WITHOUT SEX

1 Brambles

2 Dandelions

3 Ladys-mantles

4 Sea-lavenders

5 Whitebeams, rowans and service trees

6 Yellow composites things that look a bit like a dandelion



SECTION II. HYBRIDS: SPECIES THAT HAVE SEX WITH OTHER SPECIES

7 Docks and sorrels

8 Pondweeds

9 Roses

10 Marsh-orchids and spotted-orchids

11 Water-crowfoots

12 Willows



SECTION III. INBREEDERS: SPECIES THAT HAVE SEX WITH THEMSELVES

13 Eyebrights

14 Fumitories

15 Violets and pansies

16 Short white-flowered crucifers: cresses

17 Tall yellow-flowered cabbages, mustards, rapes and rockets



SECTION IV. POLYPLOIDS AND RAPIDLY EVOLVING SPECIES

18 Broomrapes

19 Forget-me-nots

20 Speedwells



SECTION V. SUCCESSFUL FAMILIES WITH LOTS OF SPECIES

21 Dead-nettles, mints and woundworts

22 Blue and purple vetches and peas

23 Umbellifers: carrots, parsnips, Hemlock etc



Glossary

Index
John Warren has had a long academic career researching the origins of botanical diversity and promoting public understanding of science. Having been a senior lecturer in ecology at Aberystwyth University, in 2016 he became Vice Chancellor of the Papua New Guinea University of Natural Resources and Environment. Now retired back in the UK, he is an Associate Tutor for the Field Studies Council.