Showing posts with label fern guides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fern guides. Show all posts

Monday, October 7, 2013

FL and LA fern books


Nothing gives me more pleasure than getting a new fern guidebook in the mail, particularly when they are well designed and useful. Above is a photo of my fern bookshelf - much larger now that I'm a professor! These books are a great resource for learning about the floras of places I can't get to easily. However, I recently acquired fern books about places I can get to - Florida, where I am, and Alabama, a few hours' drive away. As I work on learning the fern flora of the southeast, these will both prove helpful.


Both are great books. The Florida guide starts with an introduction to ferns generally, with drawings of leaf forms and other helpful features. The bulk of the book is keys, followed by descriptions of the families, then genera and species, that are keyed out. Drawings of some taxa or features are included sporadically, and there's a set of plates in the center of the book with color photos of nearly every species listed. There are 160+ species of ferns and lycophytes in Florida, and they all fit nicely in this slim volume.

The Alabama book is twice as thick as the Florida one, and is very sleek and attractive. It begins with introductory information about ferns, and the geology and geography of Alabama, followed by a key to the fern genera and then species. Descriptions of all the species are next, and each includes one or more photos, a drawing, and a map of the state colored by county to show where each species occurs. These maps are really useful, and are a great feature of this book.

There is a fair amount of overlap in the species in these two states, at least between northern Florida and most of Alabama, and in the field I would probably take along the Alabama guide. Unless I were roaming in south Florida, where a tropical element creeps in that is better covered by the guide for this state.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Move to Florida, and Florida Fern Guide

Greetings from sunny Florida! Actually, it's raining at the moment, and has been with staggering frequency for the entirety of July. This month Gainesville has already received over 11 inches of rain, nearly double its normal rainfall for July. Despite the deluge, I'm pleased to say that I will be able to report on Florida's weather regularly now - I moved here from Tucson about two weeks ago, to take up a position in the Department of Biology at the University of Florida (UF) beginning in August. I'm thrilled to be here, and to once again have regular access to ferns!

The UF Extension office has a neat publication about the Ferns of Florida, which is a great introduction to basic fern identification and some of the common species in the state. The guide is available to download as a PDF.


I can't wait to get started learning the ferns and other plants of this region, particularly so I can put a local spin on the plant taxonomy classes I will be teaching at UF! In the meantime I will try to stay dry, and enjoy the new plant and wildlife here, including the living version of UF's mascot, a large one of which is lurking in the photo below...

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Ferns of the Central Amazon

A while back I posted about the Portuguese word samambaia, which means 'fern'. I thought about this lovely word again yesterday when a speaker in our weekly evolution seminar series mentioned a group of guides that have been published for various plant groups in the Amazon - including the ferns!

This fern key is fantastic. It covers 125 taxa found in the central Amazon of Brazil, in the Reserva Biológica do Uatumã, an almost one million hectare reserve that was built in response to the construction of a dam that had pervasive environmental impacts in the region. It is located in the northeastern corner of the state of Amazonas, not too far from Manaus. The reserve is now a resource for research and education.

The fern guide is very comprehensive, and has a built in key that will allow you to use almost any feature of the plant that might be available to you, including habit, various features of the sori, and a number of characteristics of either the sterile or fertile fronds (which happily are separate categories - these folks really know ferns!).


In addition to this interactive key (which is a Java app), there are also two beautiful PDF guides that you could print out for your next Amazonian adventure. One is a PDF version of a gorgeous book, which I happened to pick up a hardcopy of at a conference a few years ago, called Guide to the Ferns and Lycophytes of Rebio Uatumã (below left). The other is a grid of photos of common ferns in the Reserve (below right). The latter would be more amenable to printing and laminating for a visit to the rainforest.

  

If you're interested in guides to other plant groups in Brazil, check out the website of the Brazilian branch of PPBio. PPBio is the Program for Planned Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, which operates in Brazil and elsewhere. The site is in Portuguese, but the guide page has cover photos for each group that you can use to find what you're looking for. In addition to ferns they have guides for Zingiberales, Fabaceae, and also lizards.

Friday, May 7, 2010

NameThatPlant


I wanted to mention a great website for people interested in plants, particularly of the U.S. Southeast. It's called NameThatPlant.net, and it is "a clearinghouse of information about native and naturalized plants of the Carolinas and Georgia." Of course, many of the plants on the site have ranges outside of those states, so it's a resource worth knowing about. I recently contributed a bunch of photos of ferns, as well as audio files of about a hundred plant name pronunciations, so if you explore a bit you might come across me reciting the name of, say, Asplenium trichomanes ssp. trichomanes. It's a fun site, go visit.