Plant Systematics

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Academic Press, Nov 10, 2019 - Science - 774 pages

Plant Systematics, Third Edition, has made substantial contributions to plant systematics courses at the upper-undergraduate and first year graduate level, with the first edition winning The New York Botanical Garden's Henry Allan Gleason Award for outstanding recent publication in plant taxonomy, plant ecology or plant geography. This third edition continues to provide the basis for teaching an introduction to the morphology, evolution and classification of land plants. A foundation of the approach, methods, research goals, evidence and terminology of plant systematics are presented, along with the most recent knowledge of evolutionary relationships of plants and practical information vital to the field.

In this new edition, the author includes greatly expanded treatments on families of flowering plants, as well as tropical trees (all with full-color plates), and an updated explanation of maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference algorithms. Chapters on morphology and plant nomenclature have also been enhanced with new material.

  • Covers research developments in plant molecular biology
  • Features clear, detailed cladograms, drawings and photos
  • Includes major revisions to chapters on phylogenetic systematics and plant morphology
 

Contents

II EVOLUTION AND DIVERSITY OF PLANTS
53
III SYSTEMATIC EVIDENCE AND DESCRIPTIVE TERMINOLOGY
467
IV RESOURCES IN PLANT SYSTEMATICS
623
V SPECIES CONCEPTS AND CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
669
PLANT DESCRIPTION
691
BOTANICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
697
SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS IN PLANT SYSTEMATICS
701
STATISTICS AND MORPHOMETRICS IN PLANT SYSTEMATICS
703
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
713
INDEX
749
Copyright

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About the author (2019)

Dr. Michael G. Simpson has been a professor of Biology at San Diego State University since 1986. His area of expertise is plant systematics, dealing with the description, identification, naming and classification of plants with the overriding goal of inferring the pattern of evolutionary history (phylogeny). Dr. Simpson has taught courses in Principles of Organismal Biology, Plant Systematics, Taxonomy of California Plants, Economic Botany, Genetics and Evolution, and Seminar in Systematics and Evolution. Additionally, he serves as the Curator of the SDSU Herbarium where he oversees the maintenance, organization, and use of the collection and facilitates additions to the herbarium. Currently, his field work in Chile and Argentina is supported in part by the National Geographic Society. In addition to publishing numerous articles in technical journals, Dr. Simpson has authored of the widely used textbook Plant Systematics (Elsevier-Academic Press, 2006; 2nd ed. 2010.)

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