Weed Seeds of the Great Plains
A Handbook for Indentification
Linda W. Davis
208 pages, 600 illustrations including 286 color photographs,
7 x 10
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0651-1, $25.00
Seeds, as small and unobtrusive
as they seem, are an essential part of the life cycle of plants.
In addition, they are useful for indentification of plants and,
in fact, are often superior for that purpose that other parts
of a plant.
That's because seeds have distinctive characteristics, tend
to outlast all other plant parts, and vary little within a species--unlike
other parts such as leaves.
Since weeds interfere with the growth, harvesting, and quality
of crops, Linda Davis says, the ability to identify weed seeds
before they are indavertently planted affords an economic advantage.
Other weed-control measures--herbicides and mechanical removal
of unwanted plants--are enormously costly in comparison.
Lavishly illustrated with more than 600 photographs and drawings,
this handbook provides information about the seeds of 280 species
of weedy plants of the Great Plains, including ones commonly
found in crops, rangeland, lawns, and along roadsides.
This is the only book available that covers a large number
of Great Plains plants. For each species it provides a high-quality
color photograph showing minute details, a black-and-white life-size
silhouette (against which actual seeds can be compared), and
a full description. An easy-to-use set of finding lists facilitates
identification of unknown seeds. Both scientific and common names
are used throughout, and an illustrated glossary clarifies technical
terms.
"Among the most beautiful and simultaneously useful books
on the topic. Plant seeds are not easy to identify, especially
for those untutored in the mysteries, and this book will certainly
help all but the hopelessly timid."--Robert B. Kaul,
professor of botany, University of Nebraska, and contributor
to Flora of the Great Plains
"Unsurpassed photos. This is a case where a good picture
is worth more than many words."--Duane Isely, author
of Seed Analysis and Weed Identification and Control
LINDA W. DAVIS is an instructor in biology at Kansas
State University.
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