Cultivated Plants of Southern Africa

Cultivated Plants of Southern Africa
Author: H. F. Glen
Publisher: Jacana Media
Total Pages: 448
Release: 2002
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9781919931173

A listing of almost 9000 kinds of plants known to be cultivated in Southern Africa, or to have been tried here. The information is derived from a database containing details mainly of specimens archived in the National Herbarium, Pretoria.

Bulletin

Bulletin
Author: Jardin botanique national de Belgique
Publisher:
Total Pages: 900
Release: 1993
Genre:
ISBN:

Vegetables

Vegetables
Author: G. J. H. Grubben
Publisher: PROTA
Total Pages: 671
Release: 2004
Genre: Botany
ISBN: 9057821478

Copper-cobalt flora of Upper Katanga and Copperbelt. Field guide. Over 400 plants, 1,000 photographs and 500 drawings

Copper-cobalt flora of Upper Katanga and Copperbelt. Field guide. Over 400 plants, 1,000 photographs and 500 drawings
Author: Malaisse, François
Publisher: Presses Agronomiques de Gembloux
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2016-04-04
Genre: Congo (Democratic Republic)
ISBN: 2870160801

The copper-cobalt outcrops of Upper Katanga and north-western Zambia host a particular flora which comprises an estimated 750 species of which more than 400 are treated in this copper-cobalt field guide. The aim of this book, resulting from several years of intensive field work and study, is to bring together the basic knowledges permitting an easy approach to the identification of a great number of the species to be encountered. More than 400 species are illustrated with color photographs and/or drawings together with comments concerning synonyms, habit, description, ecology and distribution. Plant species are listed and colour-coded according to classification: Cyanoprocaryota, lichenized Fungi, Anthocerophyta, Marchantiophyta and Bryophyta (red edge), Lycophyta and Monilophyta (green edge), Magnoliopsida (blue edge) and Liliopsida (yellow edge). An index allows easy location either according to genus and species. An account of the research on copper-cobalt ecosystems carried out during the last ten years in southeastern D.R. Congo is also presented. The editors have spent more than twenty years in the area concerned and have collected more than 8,500 voucher specimens, including eleven species new to science (holotypes).