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E-grāmata: Plant Names: A Guide to Botanical Nomenclature

  • Formāts: 168 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Mar-2020
  • Izdevniecība: CSIRO Publishing
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781486311460
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  • Formāts: 168 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Mar-2020
  • Izdevniecība: CSIRO Publishing
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781486311460

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Plant Names is an invaluable guide to the use of scientific, commercial and common names for plants and the conventions for writing them. Written by horticultural botanists at the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, this book covers the naming of wild plants, plants modified by humans, why plant names change, their pronunciation and hints to help remember them, along with updated sections on trademarks and plant breeder's rights. The final section provides a detailed guide to resources useful to people using plant names. This fourth edition is based on the recently updated International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi, and Plants and the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants. It makes this technical information readily understandable to a range of readers, including botanists, publishers, professional horticulturists, nursery workers, hobby gardeners and anyone interested in plant names.

FEATURES

Explains how to use plant names, including how to write, pronounce and remember them Provides a recommended format for plant labels that avoids confusion Provides an extensive resource list of books and websites to help with plant names

Recenzijas

"This book is extremely aesthetically pleasing, as the authors harness their knowledge of the wonderful flora of Australia to highlight plant names and features stunning photographs of some of these iconic plants." -- Nora Mitchell * Plant Science Bulletin 66(3) * "I found it engaging and informative; and I've actually learned quite a few things from it, which is a good thing!" -- Glenn Leiper * Native Plants Queensland 59(1) *

Acknowledgements v
Preface xiii
Introduction 1(4)
Codes of plant nomenclature 5(6)
Human-made plants
7(1)
Why we have two codes
7(1)
Where plants are growing and how they originated
7(4)
Part 1 Wild plants
11(36)
Common names
13(7)
Structure
13(1)
Origin
14(1)
Common names as an alternative to botanical names
15(3)
Historical and cultural value
18(1)
West Indian Weed Song
19(1)
Latin names, the binomial system and plant classification
20(2)
The International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi, and Plants (ICN)
22(5)
Principles of the ICN
23(4)
The botanical hierarchy
27(7)
The nested hietarchy
28(1)
Ranks and taxa
28(1)
Order
29(1)
Family
29(1)
Genus
30(1)
Species
31(1)
Subspecies
32(1)
Variety
32(1)
Form
33(1)
Natural hybrids
33(1)
Name changes
34(13)
Nomenclatural changes
34(1)
Taxonomic changes
35(7)
Misidentifications and misapplied names
42(1)
What name to use?
43(4)
Part 2 Cultivated plants and cultigens
47(44)
The International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants
49(30)
Cultivated plants
50(1)
The cultigen
51(1)
Which plants and which names are covered by which code?
52(1)
Cultigens and the Cultivated Plant Code
53(1)
Principles of the Cultivated Plant Code
54(1)
Cultigen classification
54(1)
The cultigen hierarchy
54(1)
Ranks
54(1)
Taxa
55(1)
Kinds of cultigen
56(1)
Cultivars
56(3)
Groups
59(1)
Greges (grexes)
59(1)
Chimaeras
60(1)
Cultigen hybrids
60(2)
Naming wild plants brought into cultivation
62(1)
Wild plants in cultivation named under the ICN only
62(1)
Wild plants in cultivation that are given cultivar names
62(2)
Wild plants named separately by botanists and horticulturists
64(1)
Publishing cultigen names
65(1)
Publication
65(1)
Establishment
66(1)
Acceptance
66(1)
Formation of cultivar and Group epithets
66(1)
Use of Latin for cultigen epithets
67(1)
Translation, transliteration and transcription
67(1)
Priority
68(1)
Authors
68(2)
Nomenclatural standards
70(1)
The denomination class and the replication of names
70(1)
New names for existing cultivars
71(1)
Procedure for introducing a new cultivar
72(1)
Is the plant genuinely new?
72(1)
Does it clearly have some merit over plants already available?
73(1)
Can the special characters that distinguish it be reproduced?
73(1)
Would you like to take economic advantage of the find?
73(1)
How do I choose a new name?
74(1)
Are there any special requirements for the new cultivar to be officially recognised?
74(2)
Cultivar registration
76(3)
Marketing names (trade designations)
79(12)
Trade designations
80(1)
Plant breeder's rights
80(1)
Where are plant breeder's rights used?
81(1)
Protecting a plant using plant breeder's rights
82(1)
Commercial synonyms
83(1)
Plant breeder's rights symbols
83(1)
Trademarks
84(1)
Unregistered trademarks
85(1)
Registered trademarks
85(1)
Trademark symbols
86(1)
Name problems caused by using trademarks
86(1)
Relative benefits of trademarks and plant breeder's rights
87(1)
Plant breeder's rights, patents and genetic engineering
88(3)
Part 3 Using plant names
91(24)
Writing plant names
93(12)
Family name
93(1)
Genus name
93(1)
Specific epithet
94(1)
Species name
94(1)
Subspecies
95(1)
Variety
95(1)
Form
95(1)
Cultivar (cultivated variety)
95(1)
Hybrids
96(2)
Group names
98(1)
Collective names and grexes (greges)
98(1)
Graft-chimaeras
99(1)
Synonyms
99(1)
Uncertain names
99(2)
Common names
101(1)
Hyphens
101(1)
Spelling
102(2)
The structure of Latin names
104(1)
Pronunciation
105(3)
Which Latin do we use?
105(1)
General guidelines
105(1)
Stress on syllables
105(1)
Short and long vowels
106(1)
People and places
106(2)
Remembering names
108(2)
Reading
108(1)
Pronunciation
108(1)
Word derivations
108(2)
Recommended format for nursery plant labels 110
110(5)
Part 4 Plant name resources
115(14)
Books and websites to help with plant names
117(9)
Accurate lists of botanical names
117(1)
Families
117(1)
Genera
118(1)
Lists of validly published names, not necessarily current
118(1)
Floras and checklists of currently accepted plant names
118(1)
International
118(1)
Africa
119(1)
Asia
119(1)
Australia
120(1)
Europe and Mediterranean
121(1)
North and South America
121(1)
Pacific
122(1)
Horticultural floras and checklists
122(1)
International cultivar registration authorities (ICRAs)
123(1)
Authors of plant names
124(1)
International Code of Nomenclature and Cultivated Plant Code
124(1)
Botanical Latin, pronunciation, name derivations and meanings
125(1)
Botanic gardens and herbaria
126(1)
Classification systems
126(1)
Plant breeder's rights
127(1)
Asia-Pacific
127(1)
Europe
127(1)
North America
128(1)
Trademarks
128(1)
Asia-Pacific
128(1)
Europe
128(1)
North America
128(1)
Appendix 129(7)
Glossary and abbreviations 136(12)
References 148(3)
Index 151
Roger Spencer (BSc (Hons), MSc, PhD, Cert, Gard.) is Senior Horticultural Botanist at the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria in the Plant Identification Service. He has written many popular and scientific articles on horticultural topics and books on Elms, Grey and Silver Foliage Plants, and a recent 5-volume Horticultural Flora of South-eastern Australia.

Rob Cross (BSc, BAppSci(Hort)) is passionate about plants, their use and their conservation. He is a horticultural botanist at the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria where he deals with plant names on a daily basis, ensuring that plants in the Gardens Living Plant Collection have the current correct name applied to them. Rob has written scientific papers, a booklet on Japanese Flowering Cherries and contributed to other horticultural books.