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Kalanchoe (Crassulaceae) in Southern Africa: Classification,
Biology, and Cultivation provides a highly readable, illustrated
account of the Kalanchoe species. The book includes an overview of
the family Crassulaceae and genus Kalanchoe in global and
subcontinental contexts that is followed by information on the
taxonomic history of the genus. The characters and ecology of the
species are also discussed, including their distribution ranges,
where they occur, their habitat preferences, and where the species
were formally recorded for the first time. For each indigenous and
naturalized species, comprehensive taxonomic, descriptive and other
information of interest is provided. This is the must-have resource
for plant scientists, plant taxonomists, ethnobotanists, herbarium
curators, ecologists, pharmacologists, invasions scientists,
horticulturalists and landscape designers.
Most botanical gardens include succulents in their collections; few
are devoted solely to them. In Succulent Paradise, the reader is
taken on a verbal and visual tour of twelve exceptional succulent
gardens. See how a handful of landscaping and horticultural
visionaries have juxtaposed indigenous and exotic plants with a
blend of natural and created landscaping elements. Experience the
impact and style of gardens in locations as diverse as steeply
terraced Mediterranean cliffs, dusty Karoo plains, Mexico City’s
metropolis, California’s canyons, and the red desert of Arizona.
The authors have visited gardens around the world dedicated to the
display, cultivation and propagation of succulent plants. In
Succulent Paradise, they have expressed their love of these
tenacious, yet surprisingly glamorous, plants as well as
appreciation for those whose vision and persistence has created
abundance, promoted conservation, and left a legacy for future
generations.
Common names of Angolan plants presents an updated and expanded
catalogue of several thousand common names recorded for the
indigenous and exotic floristic riches of Angola. Separate
alphabetical lists of common names and accepted scientific names
are provided and reference is made to the synonyms under which they
were recorded. Where known, the languages are given throughout. The
book provides biodiversity specialists and researchers in a broad
spectrum of scientific and other endeavours, linguists, students
and other stakeholders with the basic information on the common
names of Angolan plants that has been unavailable for a long time.
It represents a further critically important step towards
assembling the knowledge of the flora of the country into a single,
modern, easily accessible and scientifically sound framework.
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