ebook img

Review: Heil, K.D., S.L. O’Kane, L.M. Reeves, and A. Clifford. Flora of the Four Corners Region PDF

2013·1.3 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Review: Heil, K.D., S.L. O’Kane, L.M. Reeves, and A. Clifford. Flora of the Four Corners Region

Schneider, A. 2013. Review: Heil, K.D., S.L O'Kane, L.M. Reeves, and A. Clifford. Flora of the Four Corners Region. Phytoneuron 2013-94: 1-3. Published 3 December 2013. ISSN 2153 733X Heil, K.D., S.L. O'Kane, L.M. Reeves, and A. Clifford 2013. Flora of the Four Corners Region, New Vascular Plants of the San Juan River Drainage: Arizona, Colorado, Mexico, and Utah. (ISBN 978-1-930723-84-9), hardcover. Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden, Vol. 124. Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Louis. St. BUY Let's cut to the chase: THIS BOOK! Whether you live in, near, or far from the Four Corners, and whether you are a book collector, a casual observer of wildflower beauty, a budding amateur botanist, or a professional working in the field, you will more than enjoy owning this masterfully created book. Facts: The book was 15 years in the making after the scheme was hatched over lunch at the Elk Ridge Cafe in Blanding in 1996. Major collectors were Ken Heil, Steve O'Kane, Arnold Clifford, and Wayne Mietty, with considerable assistance from Rich Fleming, Cyndie Holmes, Dave Jamieson, Les Lundquist, Lynn Moore, J. Mark Porter, Tim Reeves, and Glenn Rink. The list of 60+ major who contributors (especially those writing the individual keys and descriptions) reads like a who's of botany. The highly respected botanist Peter Raven, of decades at the Mssouri Botanical Garden (which published the Flora), praises the Flora in his Foreword: This is an "outstanding flora ... I congratulate the authors, illustrators, and editors on a job exceedingly well done." The 4 pound Flora covers the Four Corners region drained by the San Juan River from its headwaters at the Continental Divide at 4,292 meters to confluence with the Colorado River at — its 1,130 meters, an area of 65,382 square kilometers the size of West Virginia. The Flora covers this region in 1098 pages and catalogues 120 families and 2,355 taxa (41 endemics). There is a Glossary of 32 pages and over 23 pages of Literature Cited. The heavy stock pages are graced with 118 of Steve O'Kane superb photographs splendidly reproduced; 200 lovely and valuable line 's drawings, almost all by Linda Reeves; eleven mesmerizing color botanical illustrations (some full- page) by Carolyn Crawford; a most unusual and ethereal set of fifteen Glenn Vandre landscape watercolors of the vegetation associations and zones covered by the Flora; and inside the front life and back covers are full-sized political, topographic, and river maps of the area covered. The type face is large and easy on the eyes. ,411 of this is wrapped in a very handsome dust cover with picture sandstone on the front and an exciting full-color collage of the area's flora and terrain on the back me From what I have told you so far, you already should be writing your check, but wait, let tell you much more. The introductory material very nicely contains the expected scope of the project, methodology, geology, climate, plant communities, etc. But we also get an unexpected number of other pieces of very thoughtful and welcomed information: a two page list of historical collectors in the San Juan area, a list of endemics, lVz pages defining "weed," plant migration routes, and definitions of measurements, such as " Fbwer length = Point of insertion of the pedicel to the apex of the bngest petal." Because the Flora just came on the scene in September, 2013, have not had much time to I work with its heart and soul, the keys and descriptions, but those I have used and examined are compact, accurate, and helpful. For example, plant keys often require discriminating between annual and perennial plants, but how are we to do that? Certainly most of us can tell a perennial tree from a Gilia but how about a Gilia from an Ipomopsisl The opening of the Lupinus key gives us assistance with that genus by asking us about cotyledons: its commonly Plants annual, the cotyledons persistent 1. 1' Plants perennial, the cotyledons not present at flowering And let's have a standing ovation for the Salix keys, yes, plural "keys:" vegetative, pistillate, and staminate keys. Schneider: Review of Heil, O'Kane, Reeves, and Clifford, Flora of the Four Corners Region 2 The complete plant descriptions make easy for the reader to focus in on specific plant parts it by capitalizing and holding key words (STEMS, LEAVES, The complete descriptions also etc.). include the etymology of the specific epithet, synonyms, habitat, associated plant communities, a list of all the counties in the Four Corners area where the plant has been found (really amazing!), US elevation range, flowering time, entire Arange, unusual characteristics, and Native American uses. Nothing perfect; what are some of the problems in the Floral is * Any reference book published today should provide a web address for comments and corrections to be posted. Weber and Wittmann's new Colorado Flora does not provide a web address, Alfred's new Flora Neomexicana III does not, and following in this unfortunate pattern, Heil and O'Kane Flora 's ofthe Four Corners Region does not. How are we to know of mistakes in these books, such as, those I point out below and the ones that you will find? [I am pleased to say that a web page has now been established. Please make a note in your copy of the Flora ofthe Four Corners Region and send your < corrections to [email protected]>. These corrections will be posted at > <http :/7mvw.swcoloradow . ] * In some ways the large number of contributors that mentioned above good: we get the top I is - experts in each family writing the descriptions. But in other ways, confusion can result and does. For example, the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) recommendations are followed by some contributors (for Scrophulariaceae) but not others (for Chenopodiaceae). Be prepared to be flexible and speak several botanical languages. * Colorado Flora very nicely indicates where treatment of a family; genus, or species in conflict its is with the treatment in the monumental Flora ofNorth America. That same contrast and comparison definitely should have been carried out in the Flora ofthe Four Corners Region. * I find it very unfortunate that the keys do not provide a way for you to backtrack when you make a mistake in keying. If, for instance, you arrive at choice #27 in a key and you realize that you are in the wrong place, there is no indication, about what number you were at before #27. You cannot easily retrace your steps. Look at Weber and Welsh's floras; they both provide this thoughtful and time and frustration-saving numbering in brackets ]. f * I am quite puzzled by the choice of plants that have line drawings. Let's look at the major genera in our area: Astragalus: out of 73 taxa there are 11 drawings, all but 2 or 3 are drawings of rare or very uncommon plants; Erigeron: out of 39 taxa there are only two drawings, both of very uncommon uncommon plants; Eriogonum: out of 37 taxa there just one drawing of an Eriogonum; Penstemon: is common out of 28 taxa there just one drawing of a Penstemon; Poa: out of 23 taxa there but one is is common drawing of a Poa. There are no drawings of any Allium, Carex, Castilleja, Draba, Gilia, Mertensia, Oenothera, Ranunculus, Senecio, etc. etc. (And while we are on the line drawings, it sure would have been nice to have a ruler on each drawing. The point of the drawings not just to look is good (which they certainly do) but also to help identify.) * The glossary gives fine definitions (and has some very unusual and welcomed entries, such as, Hawkmoth, disjunct species, relict species, Raman Navajo, Piki, Park, sub, tuff. Ant Lion, and 2 some definitions of herb), but the glossary omits necessary entries: inflorescence, villous, limb, spp., sp., ssp., dorsal (but ventral is there!), sori, sporophore, trophophore. Scale, awn, and bristle are not defined sufficiently to assist with keying Asteraceae. * Other problems: Weber, Kearney and Peebles, Welsh, Heil and O'Kane (in their on-line checklist), and Allred all indicate that Ephedra cutleri and Yucca harrimaniae both, occur in the Four Corners area; neither plant is in the new Flora ofthe Four Corners Region. What else is missing? The etymology of Botrychium provided by the Flora really causes a head-spin and chuckle: from the Latin 'botry,' meaning a 'bunch of grapes' + 'oides,' meaning 'like.' There obviously is no "oides" in Schneider: Review of Heil, O'Kane, Reeves, and Clifford, Flora of the Four Corners Region 3 the word "Botrychium." The ending "ium" from the Latin "ion," a diminutive, thus the meaning is is "a bunch of small grapes." The problems have pointed out are the inevitable cost of being human; we make mistakes. I The excellence of Flora of the Four Corners Region enormously outweighs the few errors, but the inevitability of these errors just confirms to me the need for a web site that would correct the mistakes. OK, I have convinced you to buy the Flora, but how much is such a fabulous work of science going to cost you and where should you buy The Missouri Botanical Garden price only $72. it? is However, check out www.exoticplantbooks.com (go to the "new/specials" link) and you will find it for $57.60 plus only $2.45 for postage. Get your native plant society to register with Exotic Plant Books and your society will receive a credit for 10% of what you spend. The New Mexico and San Juan/Four Corners Native Plant Societies are registered. The latter has, over the past two years, accumulated enough credits to get 13 free copies of Weber's Colorado Flora, which have been given to Fort Lewis College students. After approximately 20,000 miles of walking, 150 miles of horse riding, and 150,000 miles of driving to, from, and on field trips to collect over 23,000 specimens (including 1,700 county records, 42 state records, and 17 new species), Ken and Steve deserve a great Thank You from us and a long- rest for themselves. The former they have been receiving; the latter they have not taken, for they immediately began work on a flora of New Mexico, and if all goes well we can expect that in the next few years. Al Schneider RoadV 19049 Lewis, Colorado 81327 R esident, San Juan/Four Corners Native Plant Society www. com swcoloradowildflowers.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.