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         Botany:     more books (103)
  1. Escape From Botany Bay by Gerald Hausman, Loretta Hausman, 2003-04-01
  2. The Road to Botany Bay: An Exploration of Landscape and History by Paul Carter, 2010-03-10
  3. Introduction to Botany (Agriculture) by James Schooley, 1997-01-09
  4. Medical Botany: Plants Affecting Human Health by Walter Hepworth Lewis, Memory P. F. Elvin-Lewis, 2003-08-15
  5. Living With Plants: A Guide to Practical Botany (ILLUSTRATED) by Donna N Schumann, Elwood B Ehrle, et all 1992-06
  6. Introductory Botany: Plants, People, and the Environment, Media Edition (with InfoTrac? 1-Semester, Premium Web Site Printed Access Card) by Linda R. Berg, 2007-03-23
  7. A text-book of botany for secondary schools by John Merle Coulter, 2010-09-06
  8. Botany in a Day:Thomas J. Elpel's Herbal Field Guide to Plant Families, 4th Ed. by Thomas J. Elpel, 2000-01-01
  9. Botany by Taylor Richard Alexander, 1970-06
  10. The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens by Richard Evans Schultes, 1991-09
  11. A Beachcomber's Botany by Loren C. Petry, 1968-01-01
  12. Botany in the Field: An Introduction to Plant Communities for the Amateur Naturalist by Jane Scott, 1984-05
  13. Shanleya's Quest:A Botany Adventure for Kids Ages 9-99 by Thomas J. Elpel, 2005-08-30
  14. The Healing Forest: Medicinal and Toxic Plants of the Northwest Amazonia (Historical, Ethno-& Economic Botany, Vol 2) by Richard E. Schultes, Robert F. Raffauf, 2003-01-01

41. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: Economic Botany
A useful set of web links to research, information, collections and educations sites. Based at the RBG Kew website.
http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/scihort/ecbot.html
Activities and Disciplines
Economic Botany
Research into useful and potentially useful plants is focused in the Centre for Economic Botany (CEB), and concentrates on the United Kingdom and the world's arid and semi-arid zones. Economic Botany has always been a key aspect of scientific research at Kew and the building which houses the CEB was named after Kew's most famous economic botanist, Sir Joseph Banks. The building also houses the Economic Botany Collection, which contains more than 76,000 botanical artefacts. About Us Research Services Collections ... Hosted sites

42. CSIRO PUBLISHING - Australian Journal Of Botany
Print and online journal publishing research and critical reviews in plant science of all groups, Category Science Biology botany Publications Journals......The Australian Journal of botany is an international journal publishing originalresearch including critical reviews in plant science encompassing all plant
http://www.publish.csiro.au/journals/ajb/
Advanced Search Subscribe / Access Access Problems Early Alert ... Wildlife on Farms shows how wildlife conservation can be integrated with farm management and the benefits this can bring. ISSN 0067-1924 Volume 51 2003
Frequency: 6 issues per year
The Australian Journal of Botany is an international journal for publication of original research in plant science. Work on all plant groups, including fossil plants, is published. The journal publishes in the areas of: ecology and ecophysiology; conservation biology and biodiversity; forest biology and management; cell and molecular biology; paleobotany; reproductive biology and genetics; mycology and pathology; and structure and development. Subscribe / Access
Access to the full text of all papers within an issue is available to subscribers ; from Vol. 50 all subscriptions include electronic access. Individual electronic papers are also available to buy online and some sample papers are accessible free of charge. The Australian Journal of Botany is one of the series of journals published by CSIRO PUBLISHING for CSIRO and the Australian Academy of Science

43. Cryptogamic Botany Company FieldCam: Our Ongoing Photographic Journal Of Flora A
Photographic journal of flora and fauna of southern Rhode Island, with special emphasis on seaweeds, mosses, and fungi.
http://www.cryptogamicbotany.com/algaecam.html
Molly's FieldCam
A photographic journal of some of what we're doing: collecting trips in the field, flora and fauna of southern Rhode Island, work in the studio, special projects, and more. Pick a month below to enter our image archive. Nov/Dec 2002 October 2002 September 2002 August 2002 ... Panoramas 2002

44. CSIRO PUBLISHING - Journals - Australian Systematic Botany
Australian Systematic botany is an international journal devoted to the taxonomy,biogeography and evolution of all plant groups including fossils publishing
http://www.publish.csiro.au/journals/asb/
Advanced Search Subscribe / Access Access Problems Early Alert ... Viroids presents indispensable and up-to-date information on viroids and viroid diseases. An international journal devoted to the taxonomy, biogeography and evolution of all plant groups ISSN 1030-1887 Volume 16 2003
Frequency: 6 issues per year Australian Systematic Botany considers papers and critical reviews that aim to advance systematic botany and related aspects of biogeography and evolution of all plant groups, including fossils. Subscribe / Access
Access to the full text of all papers within an issue is available to subscribers ; from Vol. 15 all subscriptions include electronic access. Individual electronic papers are also available to buy online and some sample papers are accessible free of charge. Australian Systematic Botany is one of the series of journals published by CSIRO PUBLISHING for CSIRO and the Australian Academy of Science

45. Tropical Glasshouse UW Aberystwyth Botanic Gardens
Tropical Glasshouse housing a collection of exotic ferns, cycads and angiosperms.
http://www.aber.ac.uk/~dbswww/ian_scott/tropical.htm
University of Wales Aberystwyth Botany Gardens - The Tropical Glasshouse
Local information: Students and campus visitors are welcome to visit the Glasshouses to see exotic plant species. They are on the east side of Plas Penglais drive (across Penglais Road from the main campus entrance). Enter the tropical glasshouse through the single storey brick building. Please remember that the buildings are only open during working hours (closed 1300-1400 h). There is a monthly update of plants of interest at Visit the Botany Gardens Right: Flowering Canna (Subclass Zingiberidae) in the pond.
Ferns and Cycads
The largest plants in the Glasshouse are the tree fern Angiopteris evecta right ) and the cycad Cycas revoluta . There are a number of ferns and cycads in the collection. Click on the Hyperlinks below for a few examples:
Division Pteridophyta (the ferns)
Division Cycadophyta (the cycads)
Flowering Plants (the Angiosperms)
Flowering plants are assembled in beds and displays like the bromeliads and aroids shown below
In the classification system used in the BY10610 module (the Cronquist system), the angiosperms are Division Magnoliophyta, which is subdivided into two classes (ending -opsida), each of which is divided into subclasses (ending -idae). In all, there are 12 angiosperm subclasses, containing 400 families (ending -aceae) and more than 200,000 species.

46. Burren Hill Walks Guided Tours
Guided walks in the Burren region of Ireland on geology , botany and archaeology.
http://homepage.eircom.net/~burrenhillwalks
Home The Burren The Tours The Guide ... Links Burren Hill Walks provide guided walking tours through the Burren Region of County Clare in Ireland Axiom Technology Ltd.

47. Electronic Sites Of Botany, Plant Biology & Science Journals
Links to the electronic sites of major journals publishing articles about plants and plant biology.Category Science Biology botany Publications Journals......EJournals.Org Electronic Sites of Leading botany, Plant Biology andScience Journals. These Belgian Journal of botany (February 13). To
http://www.e-journals.org/botany/
Electronic Sites of Leading Botany, Plant Biology and Science Journals
These are links to journals in which articles concerning plant biology are published. The sites will almost always have a Tables of Contents available free and may frequently have selected articles, or the entire text online. Some sites are free; others require registration or paid subscriptions. Many journals have free "trial" periods, or bundle online with print subscriptions, so check the site to test availability. Links are checked monthly. Last revised Monday, 17-Mar-2003 10:26:24 CST. Hot keys: =Go to top of page; =Go to previous letter; =Go to next letter; =Go to bottom of page. Jump to: A B C D ... Z
New Journals Added - March, 2003
Changed URLs - February, 2003

A
  • Abstracta Botanica (became Community Ecology)
  • Acarologia
  • Acta Biologica Cracoviensia Series Botanica
  • Acta Biotechnologica
  • Acta Biotheoretica ...
  • Acta Fytotechnica et Zootechnica - Scientific Journal for Phytotechnics and Zootechnics (Slovak Agricultural University in Nitra)
  • Acta Horticulturae
  • Acta Oecologica
  • Acta Paleobotanica
  • Acta Physiologiae Plantarum ...
  • Acta Phytogeographica Suecica - Swedish Phytogeographical Society
  • Acta Phytopathologica et Entomologica Hungarica
  • Adansonia
  • Advances in Bryology
  • African Crop Science Journal ...
  • AFZ der Wald (Allgemeine Forstzeitschrift)
  • AgBioForum
  • Agribusiness
  • Agricell Report
  • Agricoltura Mediterranea ...
  • American Gardener [no connect 10/14/01]
  • 48. Aquatic Botany
    An international scientific journal dealing with applied and fundamental research on submerged, floating and emergent plants in marine and freshwater ecosystems. (Elsevier Science Journals.)
    http://www.elsevier.nl:80/inca/publications/store/5/0/3/3/0/3/
    Home Search What's New
    Electronic Services
    ... Links Aquatic Botany
    Journal Information
    Description
    Audience

    Abstracting/Indexing

    Bibliographic and Ordering Information
    ...
    Dispatch Dates
    Authors
    Author Gateway
    The fast and efficient new author service for this journal
    Editors
    Information and services for Editors
    Contents Services
    Tables of Contents and Abstracts
    ContentsDirect

    Free Sample Copy
    Related Info
    ELSEVIER
    Last update: 17 Mar 2003

    49. Botany At U.T. Knoxville
    Includes faculty information, courses, admission, and students' pages.Category Science Biology botany Education......Departmental Seminar. Mr. Keith Bowman Master's Candidate, Department of botany,UTK. University Home Page; UTK Library Resources for Research in botany;
    http://fp.bio.utk.edu/botany/

    DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY The University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN 37996-1100 Phone 865-974-2256 Fax 865-974-2258 437 Hesler Biology Building
    Head: Edward E. Schilling
    Plant of the Week
    Erigenia bulbosa
    - "Harbinger of Spring"
    Departmental Seminar
    Mr. Keith Bowman
    Master's Candidate, Department of Botany, UTK
    "The Bryoflora of FallCreek Falls State Park, Van Buren and Bledsoe Counties, Tennessee"
    12:20-1:10 p.m.
    Monday, March 24, 2003 Walters Life Sciences, Room M311 Three New PhDs , Summer Semester
    Faculty List

    Graduate Students

    BSUT

    Botany Courses
    ...
    Wildflower Pilgrimage,
    April 21-27 Scholarships/Fellowships/Grants Botany Award Winners!
    Quick Links: On-Campus Sites Botanical WWW Sites
    On-campus links:

    50. Zamia Furfuracea
    Image.
    http://www.botany.hawaii.edu/faculty/carr/images/zam_fur.jpg

    51. JSTOR: American Journal Of Botany
    American Journal of botany. JSTOR coverage Vols. 184, 1914-1997. Journal Informationfor American Journal of botany. Publisher Botanical Society of America
    http://www.jstor.org/journals/00029122.html
    RESOURCES FOR LIBRARIANS RESOURCES FOR PUBLISHERS PARTICIPATION INFORMATION
    American Journal of Botany
    JSTOR coverage: Vols. 1-84, 1914-1997
    Please read JSTOR's "Terms and Conditions of Use" before you begin. Search this journal Browse this journal
    Journal Information for American Journal of Botany
    Publisher Botanical Society of America Moving Wall The American Journal of Botany is an internationally recognized journal accepting refereed research papers on all aspects of plant biology, published monthly since 1914. In addition to reports of original research in all areas of plant science, the Journal contains Rapid Communications, and Special Papers, which include reviews, critiques and analyses of controversial subjects. ISSN
    OCLC
    LCCN
    Journal information provided by Botanical Society of America Pre- and post-digitization work on this title was completed by Rachna Dhingra, Suzie Cunningham, Mark Borton, and Jill Sligay, JSTOR Production Technicians.
    JSTOR HOME
    SEARCH BROWSE TIPS ... CONTACT JSTOR

    52. Biology
    A page of links and articles.
    http://botany.about.com/
    zfp=-1 About Homework Help Biology Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
    Biology
    with Regina Bailey
    Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Science Fair Projects Top Biology Programs Biology How Tos ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
    Subscribe to our newsletter.
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    In The Spotlight Tue, Mar 18, 2003
    Predator or Prey Game

    The predator-prey relationship is important in maintaining balance between different animal species. In this game you must choose the correct predator-prey relationship.
    Discussion: Cell Size - How does the body control cell size?
    Discussion: Cloning - Will cloning make motherhood obsolete? Scientific Name Game Have you ever heard of an animal called a Lutra lutra ? Sure you have, it's an otter. In the Scientific Name Game your mission is to identify the correct organism for the given scientific name. Discussion: Plants and Pain - Do plants feel pain? Discussion: What is Life?

    53. JSTOR: Systematic Botany
    Systematic botany. JSTOR coverage Vols. 122, 1976-1997. Journal Informationfor Systematic botany. Publisher American Society of Plant Taxonomists
    http://www.jstor.org/journals/03636445.html
    RESOURCES FOR LIBRARIANS RESOURCES FOR PUBLISHERS PARTICIPATION INFORMATION
    Systematic Botany
    JSTOR coverage: Vols. 1-22, 1976-1997
    Please read JSTOR's "Terms and Conditions of Use" before you begin. Search this journal Browse this journal
    Journal Information for Systematic Botany
    Publisher American Society of Plant Taxonomists Moving Wall ISSN
    OCLC
    LCCN
    Pre- and post-digitization work on this title was completed by Eric Boxrud, Jill Sligay, Rachna Dhingra and Suzie Cunningham, JSTOR Production Technicians.
    JSTOR HOME
    SEARCH BROWSE TIPS ... CONTACT JSTOR

    54. Botany
    botany. Tradition and Innovation. The collections of the Renaissance papacywere well supplied with authoritative works on botany and materia medica.
    http://www.ibiblio.org/expo/vatican.exhibit/exhibit/g-nature/Botany.html
    Botany
    Tradition and Innovation
    No scientific subject, perhaps, produced a larger, a more curious, or a more splendidly illustrated literature than the world of plants. Greek medical men and scientists, Roman encyclopedists, and medieval doctors compiled and recompiled herbals, generally taking special interest in those plants that were thought to be of medicinal valueas hundreds were. The Vatican Library is a great repository of this tradition, in which direct observation and inherited stereotypes, empirical evidence and wild fantasy, jostled for centuries.
    • Galen "De simplicium medicamentorum temperamentis ac facultatibus" (excerpts), harmonized with Dioscorides, "De materia medica" (excerpts), and other works. In Greek, Byzantium, Tenth century, Illustrations added in Byzantine territory, fourteenth century This manuscript, a harmonization of excerpts from two of the most important writers on materia medica of antiquity, was assembled in Byzantium in the tenth century. Most of the substances named in the work are plants. Illustrations were added in the mid- fourteenth century to enhance the practical usefulness of the work. Although many of the illustrationslike the molluscs shown on this pageare strikingly naturalistic, most are copied from much earlier models. Vat. gr. 284 fols. 232 verso-233 recto nature01 NAN.17

    55. Botany Bay Business Enterprise Centre
    Specialists in small businesses and small business assistance offering a range of helpful services.
    http://www.botanybec.com.au

    56. Vascular Plant Families, UH Botany
    University of Hawaii, botany Department. Vascular Plant Family AccessPage. Systematic Index. NonFlowering Plant Families (cycads, conifers
    http://www.botany.hawaii.edu/faculty/carr/pfamilies.htm
    University of Hawaii Botany Department
    Vascular Plant Family Access Page
    Systematic Index

    57. All About Salvia Divinorum
    Information on botany, usage, trip reports, and legal issues. Includes an FAQ.
    http://www.salvia-divinorum.net
    Salvia Divinorum possesses the strongest natural entheogen:
    salvinorin A. Given the right dose, individual, set and setting, it produces a unique state of 'divine inebriation'. Salvia Divinorum, grows wild in Oaxaca, Mexico, where many indigenous tribes use it as part of spiritual ceremonies and healing. In many ways Salvia Divinorum is a unique 'magical' herb. Salvia Divinorum has been steadily growing in popularity over the last few years due to the incredible experiences people are having.
    Frequently Asked Questions about Salvia Divinorum

    Everything you always wanted to know about Salvia Divinorum.
    Where to buy Salvia leaves and extract

    Our favourite vendor is www.salvia-divinorum.com. Their prices, service and reliability is outstanding.
    Where to buy Salvia plants and cuttings

    You want to grow your own salvia? By far the best source for plants and cuttings is Rick at Theatrum Botanicum.
    How to smoke Salvia Divinorum

    Detail advice how to receive effects from salvia by smoking.
    The botany of Salvia Divinorum
    One of the best pages about the scientific part of Salvia Divinorum. The site contains beautiful pictures. Trip reports Some exceptional first-hand accounts of Salvia Divinorum experiences.

    58. Botany/primula
    Introduction to the types, characteristics and care involved.
    http://www.botany.com/primula.html
    PRIMULA (Prim'ula) DESCRIPTION: POTTING - Hardy Primulas: The bog kinds of Primulas grow best in wet places such as the bog garden, streamside or pond. They can, however, be grown successfully if they are watered generously in dry weather and if they're given a soil so rich in humus or vegetable matter it acts like a sponge and soaks in and retains moisture easily. Large quantities of leaf mold, cow manure, peat moss, or sphagnum moss should be mixed into the soil. An area that is shaded from strong sunshine should be chosen to plant these Primulas. The rock and cliff dwelling Primulas grow the best in rock gardens in loamy soil that has good drainage and never becomes too dry. Leaf mold, sand and a bit of limestone or rubble added would be beneficial. Greenhouse Primulas: PROPAGATION - Hardy Primulas: Greenhouse Primulas: VARIETIES - Hardy Primulas: Bog or Woodland Dwelling: (The English Primrose) P. vulgaris (P. acaulis) and its variety P. vulgaris rubra; Polyanthus Primrose; P. alpicola; P.beesiana; P. bullesiana; P. bulleyana; P. cockburniana; P. cortusoides; P. denticulata; P. elatior; P. florindae; P. helodoxa; P. japonica; P. nutans (Dies after flowering, replant seeds yearly); P. pulverulenta; P. rosea; P. sieboldii; P. sikkimensis; P. veris (Cowslip); P. whytei. Cliff and rock dwellers: P. auricula and its forms are P. bauhinii, P. serratifolia, and P. ciliata; P. viscosa; P. rubra; P. villosa; P. capitata; P. chionantha; P. farinosa; P. frondosa; P. helvetica; P. juliae; P. vialii (littonia); P. marginata and its hybrids P. marven, P linda pope, and P. rehniana; P. parryi; P. polyneura (veitchii); P. spectabilis; P. pubescens (This is a name for a large range of hybridsthe Garden Auriculas).

    59. Medical Botany-Introduction
    A MiniCourse in. MEDICAL botany. SYLLABUS. Skipping Along The World Wide Web.Module 1 Introductory botany. Module 2 Phytochemicals. Module 3 Formulations.
    http://www.ars-grin.gov/duke/syllabus/
    A Mini-Course in MEDICAL BOTANY
    SYLLABUS
    James A. Duke

    Ethnobotanist
    The Herbal Village
    8210 Murphy Road
    Fulton, Maryland 20759
    CONTENTS
    Skipping Along The World Wide Web
    Module 1: Introductory Botany Module 2: Phytochemicals Module 3: Formulations ... Your Instructor
    Appendix 1: The Herbal Alternative Appendix 2: Biting the Biocide Bullet
    Coming Soon: Herbal Litigation Coming Soon: Reading List (Books; Newsletters; Periodicals; Web Sites) WARNING: This syllabus is offered as an informational compilation, none of which is intended for diagnosis or treatment of disea se. As an ethnobotanist, James A. Duke does not diagnose or prescribe. He has compiled folk remedies from throughout the world and has sought chemical data that might support their applications. Physicians and other licensed practitioners are urged to be open to new information on the effectiveness of herbs that may suggest that an herbal alternative may be as good as a synthetic pharmaceutical option. Neither the Univeristy of Maryland, the University of Maryland Foundation Inc., nor the author of this syllabus recommends self diagnosis, self medication or use of unproven folk remedies. Dr. Duke does encourage unbiased scientific analyses that will result in less costly, more efficacious, and/or safer medicines. Website maintained by Dabatase Management Unit , Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, created by

    60. The Mysterious Venus' Flytrap
    Comprehensive information about this plant that eats meat and also includes includes information on how to grow one.
    http://www.botany.org/bsa/misc/carn.html
    Just like other plants, Venus' Flytraps gather nutrients from gases in the air and nutrients in the soil. However, they live in poor soil and are healthier if they get nutrients from insects. Carnivorous plants live all over the world but Venus' Flytraps live only in select boggy areas in North and South Carolina. Because of people's fascination with these plants, they collected many of them and they became endangered. Venus' Flytraps today are grown in greenhouses. The leaves of Venus' Flytrap open wide and on them are short, stiff hairs called trigger or sensitive hairs. When anything touches these hairs enough to bend them, the two lobes of the leaves snap shut trapping whatever is inside. The trap will shut in less than a second. The trap doesn't close all of the way at first. It is thought that it stays open for a few seconds in order to allow very small insects to escape because they wouldn't provide enough food. If the object isn't food, e.g., a stone, or a nut, the trap will reopen in about twelve hours and 'spit' it out. When the trap closes over food, the cilia. finger-like projections, keep larger insects inside. Fold your hands together lacing your fingers to see what the trap looks like. In a few minutes the trap will shut tightly and form an air-tight seal in order to keep the digestive fluids inside and bacteria out.

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