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Robert H. Mohlenbrock July
2002 paper, 0-8093-2421-0, $57.00 736
pages, 6 x 9 The Illustrated Flora of Illinois
The
first flora of Illinois was prepared in 1846 by Dr. Samuel B. Mead, a
physician from Augusta, Illinois. Between 1846 and 1963, several people
published plant lists and floras for various parts of Illinois. In 1975,
Robert H. Mohlenbrock published his first edition of Guide to the
Vascular Flora of Illinois, followed by a second expanded and revised
edition in 1986. This latest Vascular Flora of Illinois includes
over thirty-two hundred species, an increase of almost three hundred since
the 1986 revised edition. In
addition, for the first time, taxa below the rank of species are
recognized and may be identified by keys.
Investigating
seldom-visited patches of prairies, wetlands, and forested canyons,
Mohlenbrock has added several native species to this flora. And while
there has been extensive exploration for plants, Mohlenbrock has also
researched the herbaria in an attempt to verify previous reports of
records of Illinois plants.
Because
of a reinterpretation of existing genera, the number of genera of Illinois
plants has increased markedly. Recent biosystematic techniques have begun
to substantiate the genera that botanists such as John Kunkel Small, Per
Axel Rydberg, and Edmund C. Greene proposed nearly a century ago.
The
sequence of groups in this book is ferns, conifers, and flowering plants,
with dicotyledons given before monocotyledons. Within each group, the
families are arranged alphabetically, as are the genera within each family
and the species within each genus.
For
each taxon recognized in this book, Mohlenbrock gives a common name if one
is generally used in Illinois. He follows this by an indication of
flowering time for flowering plants and of spore-production time for ferns
and their relatives. He also provides a habitat statement and a general
comment on distribution in Illinois for each taxon. Synonyms for some
other scientific names used previously for a taxon appear in italics. This
book contains indexes both for common names and for family and genus
names.
Robert
H. Mohlenbrock taught botany at Southern Illinois University
Carbondale for thirty-four years, obtaining the title of Distinguished
Professor. After his retirement in 1990, he joined Biotic Consultants as a
senior scientist teaching wetland identification classes in twenty-six
states to date. Mohlenbrock has been named SIU Outstanding Scholar and has
received the SIU Alumnus Teacher of the Year Award, the AMOCO Outstanding
Teacher Award, and the Meritorious Teacher of the Year Award from the
Association of Southeastern Biologists. During his career at Southern
Illinois University, ninety graduate students earned degrees under his
direction. Since 1984, he has been a monthly columnist for Natural History magazine.
Among his forty-five books and more than five hundred publications are Macmillan’s
Field Guide to North American Wildflowers, Field Guide to the U.S.
National Forests, and Where
Have All the Wildflowers Gone?
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