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E-grāmata: Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlands, 2nd edition

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  • Formāts: 400 pages
  • Sērija : Bur Oak Guides
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Apr-2015
  • Izdevniecība: University of Iowa Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781609382971
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 37,25 €*
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  • Formāts: 400 pages
  • Sērija : Bur Oak Guides
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Apr-2015
  • Izdevniecība: University of Iowa Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781609382971

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Originally published in 1999, Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlandswas the first book to focus on the beauty and diversity of the wetland plants that once covered 1.5 million acres of Iowa. Now this classic of midwestern natural history is back in print with a new format and all-new photographs, just as Iowa’s wetlands are getting the respect and attention they deserve.


Originally published in 1999, Wildflowers and Other Plants of Iowa Wetlandswas the first book to focus on the beauty and diversity of the wetland plants that once covered 1.5 million acres of Iowa. Now this classic of midwestern natural history is back in print with a new format and all-new photographs, just as Iowa’s wetlands are getting the respect and attention they deserve.

In clear and accessible prose, authors Sylvan Runkel and Dean Roosa provide common, scientific, and family names; the Latin or Greek meaning of the scientific names; habitat and blooming times; and a complete description. Plants are presented by habitat (terrestrial or aquatic), then refined by habit (e.g., emergent, floating, or submerged) or taxonomic group (e.g., ferns and allies or trees, shrubs, and vines). Particularly interesting is the information on the many ways in which Native Americans and early pioneers used these plants for everything from pain relief to tonics to soup and the ways that wildlife today use them for food and shelter. Each of the more than 150 species accounts is accompanied by a brilliant full-page color photograph by botanist Thomas Rosburg, who has also updated the nomenclature and descriptions for certain species.

After decades of being considered an enemy of the settler, the farmer, and the citizen, Iowa’s wetlands have come into their own. We are finally caring for these important habitats. Runkel and Roosa’s updated field companion will be a valuable guide to today’s preservation and restoration initiatives.
Publisher's Note to the Second Edition xi
Foreword xiii
Arnold van der Valk
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xix
Disclaimer xxi
Introduction 1(46)
Terrestrial Flowering Herbs
Skunk cabbage
47(2)
Marsh marigold
49(2)
Spring cress
51(2)
Bogbean
53(2)
Water parsnip
55(2)
Tall cotton-grass
57(2)
Giant manna grass
59(2)
Fox sedge
61(2)
Cattail sedge
63(2)
Lacustrine sedge
65(2)
Woolly sedge
67(2)
Tussock sedge
69(2)
False hop sedge
71(2)
Hop sedge
73(2)
Yellowfruit sedge
75(2)
Squarrose sedge
77(2)
Gray's sedge
79(2)
Water hemlock
81(2)
Angelica
83(2)
Canada anemone
85(2)
Tufted loosestrife
87(2)
Northern leafy green orchid
89(2)
Marsh cress
91(2)
Dark green bulrush
93(2)
Curly dock
95(2)
Small white lady slipper
97(2)
Reed canary grass
99(2)
Blue flag iris
101(2)
Cattail
103(2)
Yellow monkey flower
105(2)
Watercress
107(2)
Fog fruit
109(2)
Reddish spikerush
111(2)
Fringed loosestrife
113(2)
Marsh bellflower
115(2)
Arrow grass
117(2)
Joe Pye weed
119(2)
Arrow arum
121(2)
Hard-stemmed bulrush, soft-stemmed bulrush
123(2)
Grass of Parnassus
125(2)
Swamp milkweed
127(2)
Moneywort
129(2)
Water plantain
131(2)
Whorled loosestrife
133(2)
Winged loosestrife
135(2)
Boneset
137(2)
Stinging nettle
139(2)
Swamp loosestrife
141(2)
Water horehound
143(2)
Marsh skullcap
145(2)
Water smartweed
147(2)
Tear thumb
149(2)
White vervain
151(2)
Purple loosestrife
153(2)
Sweet flag
155(2)
Yellow nut grass
157(2)
Pendant bulrush
159(2)
Bog twayblade
161(2)
Seedbox
163(2)
Cardinal flower
165(2)
Barnyard grass
167(2)
Acuminate rush, Dudley's rush
169(2)
Wood nettle
171(2)
Torrey's rush
173(2)
Mint
175(2)
Blue vervain
177(2)
Ditch stonecrop
179(2)
White turtlehead
181(2)
Sundew
183(2)
Prairie cord grass
185(2)
River bulrush
187(2)
Wool-grass
189(2)
Jewelweed
191(2)
Brook lobelia
193(2)
Tall coneflower
195(2)
Sneezeweed
197(2)
Pink turtlehead
199(2)
Red-rooted cyperus
201(2)
Blue lobelia
203(2)
Reed grass
205(2)
False dragonhead
207(2)
Burhead, tall burhead
209(2)
Water willow
211(2)
Monkey flower
213(2)
Umbrella sedge
215(2)
Meadow beauty
217(2)
Mountain mint
219(2)
Hedge nettle
221(2)
American germander
223(2)
Rose mallow
225(2)
Riddell's goldenrod
227(2)
Ladies' tresses
229(2)
Stick-tight
231(2)
Fringed gentian
233(2)
Closed gentian
235(4)
Ferns, Fern Allies, and Lower Vascular Plants
Adder's-tongue fern
239(2)
Cinnamon fern
241(2)
Common horsetail
243(2)
Crested wood fern
245(2)
Marsh fern
247(2)
Meadow spikemoss
249(2)
Mosquito fern
251(2)
Royal fern
253(2)
Sensitive fern
255(2)
Spinulose wood fern
257(2)
Water clover
259(2)
Water horsetail
261(2)
Woodland horsetail
263(4)
Trees, Shrubs, and Vines
Black ash
267(2)
Black willow
269(2)
Bog birch
271(2)
Buttonbush
273(2)
Cottonwood
275(2)
Elderberry
277(2)
Indigo bush
279(2)
Meadow sweet
281(2)
Red-osier dogwood
283(2)
Riverbank grape
285(2)
River birch
287(2)
Sage willow
289(2)
Sandbar willow
291(2)
Silky dogwood
293(2)
Silver maple
295(2)
Sycamore
297(4)
Herbs Growing in Water: Emergent, Floating, or Submerged
American lotus
301(2)
Arrowhead
303(2)
Bladderwort
305(2)
Bur-reed
307(2)
Coontail
309(2)
Curly pondweed
311(2)
Elodea
313(2)
Flat-stemmed pondweed
315(2)
Greater duckweed
317(2)
Lesser duckweed
319(2)
Long-leaved pondweed
321(2)
Pickerel weed
323(2)
Red-head pondweed
325(2)
Sago pondweed
327(2)
Spatterdock
329(2)
Star duckweed
331(2)
Water hyssop
333(2)
Watermeal
335(2)
Water milfoil
337(2)
Watershield
339(2)
Water stargrass
341(2)
White waterlily
343(2)
Wild celery
345(2)
Wild rice
347(2)
Yellow water crowfoot
349(2)
Glossary 351(4)
Selected Bibliography 355(6)
Index 361
Sylvan Runkel (1906­1995) was the coauthor of five books about midwestern wildflowers, including Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie (Iowa paperback, 2009) and Wildflowers of Iowa Woodlands (Iowa paperback, 2009). A vigorous promoter of conservation for many years, he was honored by the dedication of the Sylvan Runkel State Preserve in 1996. Conservationist

Dean Roosa has served as Iowas state ecologist, board member for the Iowa Chapter of the Nature Conservancy and the Natural Areas Association, chair of the Iowa Natural History Association, and president of the Iowa Ornithologists Union. He is the coauthor of Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie and The Vascular Plants of Iowa (Iowa, 1994).

A professor of ecology and botany at Drake University, Thomas Rosburg has served as president of the Iowa Academy of Science and as a member of the board of directors for the Iowa Chapter of the Nature Conservancy. Winner of the Sierra Club Environmental Educator Award, the Prairie Advocate Award, the Governors Iowa Environmental Excellence Award, and many other distinctions, he is also the photographer for many University of Iowa Press publications, including Trees in Your Pocket (2012) and Wildflowers of the Tallgrass Prairie (2010). He has published over 360 images in a wide range of books, magazines, calendars, and brochures, including National Geographic, Sierra, The Iowan, and the American Journal of Botany.