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Plants - Diversity and Evolution
Martin Ingrouille and Bill Eddie
CUP
August 2006
Hardback 466 pp, 200 line diagrams 50 half-tones 200 colour ISBN 0521790972
£65.00
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Paperback 456 pp ISBN 0521794331
£30.00
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- A celebration of the evolution and diversity of plant life
- Interweaves contemporary ideas with classical interpretations
- Refreshing style, advocating a more ecological and process-oriented approach to plant sciences
- Beautifully illustrated throughout with colour photographs
Plants are so much part of our environment that we often take them for granted, yet beautiful, fascinating and
useful plants are everywhere, from isolated moss colonies on stone walls to vast complex communities
within tropical rainforests. How did this array of form and habitat come about, and how do we humans interact
with the plant kingdom? This unique new textbook provides a refreshing and stimulating consideration of these
questions and throws light in a new way on the complexity, ecology, evolution and development of plants and
our relationship with them. Illustrated throughout with numerous line diagrams and beautiful colour photographs,
the book provides a comprehensive introduction to the fascinating lives that plants lead and the way in which our
lives are inextricably linked to theirs. It will be particularly useful to students seeking a more ecological and
process-oriented approach than is available in other plant science textbooks.
Contents
Preface Acknowledgements
- 1. Process, form, and pattern
- 2. The genesis of form
- 3. Endless forms?
- 4. Sex, multiplication, and dispersal
- 5. Ordering the paths of diversity
- 6. The lives of plants
- 7. The fruits of the Earth
- 8. Knowing plants
Glossary References
To find similar publications, click on a keyword below:
Cambridge University Press
: Recent additions
: biology, general
: plant science
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