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Flora of Australia Volume 44B: Poaceae 3. Centothecoideae - Chloridoideae

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Flora of Australia Volume 44B: Poaceae 3. Centothecoideae - Chloridoideae

Contributors:

By (Author) CSIRO PUBLISHING

ISBN:

9780643069602

Publisher:

CSIRO Publishing

Imprint:

CSIRO Publishing

Publication Date:

1st April 2005

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

581.994

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

504

Weight:

1540g

Description

This latest volume in the acclaimed Flora of Australia series covers the subfamilies Arundinoideae, Danthonioideae, Aristidoideae, Micrairoideae and Chloridoideae. It describes a mixture of tropical and temperate grasses and includes a number of economically and environmentally important groups, such as: *Triodia iconic spinifex grasses of Australias arid areas that are an important major habitat for a variety of species *Wallaby grasses attractive grasses with distinctive purple and green heads that are a major structural component of endangered south-eastern grasslands *Aristida (kerosene grasses and three-awns) a large tribe of grasses whose characteristic three long bristles are problematic for the agricultural industry as they can contaminate fleece *Mitchell grasses of great economic importance for the pastoral industry in Queensland *Couch grass one of the lawn grasses we take for granted *Parramatta grasses well-known weeds on the eastern seaboard *Arundo and Phragmites the reeds along our waterways The volume includes native and naturalised species, treating five subfamilies, 55 genera and over 450 species. Many of the species treated are endemic to Australia. It features over 90 pages of illustrations as well as the traditional tightly written authoritative descriptions, identification keys, bibliographic information, and notes on ecology and distribution. An essential reference for plant taxonomists, ecologists and grassland researchers.

Reviews

"... well-illustrated and documented, a worthy successor to Bentham's 1878 treatment." -- JF Veldkamp (Blumea v.50 no.2 2005)

Author Bio

Australian Biological Resources Study is a Program within Parks Australia Division of the Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities.

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