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The science of dendrochronology has grown significantly in the past
20 years. In the 1950s and 1960s, interest in the subject was
limited to only a handful of scientists who perceived in
dendrochronology a "l'art pour l'art." Today, however, specialists
from many different fields recognize and are pursuing the problems
of dendrochronology. Tree-ring research has acquired a permanent
role in the various sciences of archeology, history, geology,
ecology, and climatology. The founders of dendrochronology
themselves were of varied scientific backgrounds and interests. For
example, A. E. Douglass in the United States was an astronomer, B.
Huber in Germany a forest-biologist, and F. N. Shvedov in Russia a
climatologist. Today the spectrum is even broader. Many den
drochronologists are authorities in mathematics, archeology,
history, forestry, botany, wood technology, ecology geography,
geology, etc. It is, therefore, understandable that it has become
almost impossible for one individual to encompass the entire field.
Bitvinskas (1974), Fritts (1976), Schweingruber (1983), and
Mitsutani (1990) have attempted, each guided by his own interests,
to provide at least an overview of the field. Recently, individual
aspects have been presented by groups of authors in books edited by
Fletscher (1978), Hughes et al. (1982), Jacoby and Hornbeck (1987)
and Bradley and Jones (1992). It is very likely that in the future
summaries covering each branch of dendrochronology will be
published."
This book presents light microscopic anatomical images of aquatic
and wetland plant stem. It features double-stained cross- and
longitudinal sections of almost 400 species of vascular plants from
the lowland to the alpine zone in Central Europe, including plants
from lakes, ponds, rivers, bogs, fens, wet meadows, saline meadows,
tall herb associations and alpine snow beds. The microscopic
photographs at various magnifications are supplemented with
detailed anatomical descriptions. For each species it provides a
photo of the whole plant, a short morphological and ecological
description as well as indications about its world- and Central
European distribution. The book includes a hydrobotanical and an
anatomical section. The hydrobotanical section describes the
ecological classification of aquatic and wetland plants and
explains major ecophysiological processes e.g., photosynthesis,
mineral nutrition, gas exchange, adaptations to soil anoxia, turion
formation and ecology. The anatomical section highlights the
variety of structures and anatomical features of vascular plants in
all wet environments.
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