Browsing by collection: year:
Sedges: Uses, Diversity, and Systematics of the Cyperaceae (Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden) (3.47573)
Date: 2008Creator: Hipp, Andrew
Type: Book
Accelerated evolutionary rates in tropical and oceanic parmelioid lichens (Ascomycota) (3.55275)
Date: 2008Creator: Hipp, Andrew
Type: Article
Discoloration and decay in severed tree roots (3.55276)
Date: 2008Creator: Watson, Gary W.
Type: Article
Gaps and soil C dynamics in old growth northern hardwood-hemlock forests (3.55277)
Date: 2008Creator: Scharenbroch, Bryant C.
Type: Article
Gradient Analysis of an Eastern Sand Savanna's Woody Vegetation, and its Long-Term Responses to Restored Fire Processes (3.55278)
Date: 2008Creator: Bowles, Marlin L., Apfelbaum, Stephen I.
Type: Article
Patterns in spatial extent of gap influence on understory plant communities (3.55279)
Date: 2008Creator: Fahey, Bob
Type: Article
Taxonomy of Hill's Oak (Quercus ellipsoidalis: Fagaceae): Evidence from AFLP data (3.55280)
Date: 2008Creator: Hipp, Andrew, Weber, Jaime A.
Type: Article
The effects of gap disturbance on nitrogen cycling and retention in late-successional northern hardwood-hemlock forests (3.55281)
Date: 2008Creator: Scharenbroch, Bryant C.
Type: Article
Illinois Forest Health Highlights (3.56330)
Date: 2008 – 2016Creator: Miller, Fredric D., Adams, Stephanie
Type: Article
Field guide to Wisconsin Sedges : An Introduction to the Genus Carex (Cyperaceae) (3.56333)
Date: 2008Creator: Hipp, Andrew
Type: Book
Description:Sedges are among the world s most diverse and ecologically important plant families, with almost two hundred species in Wisconsin alone. These grass-like plants, found mostly in wetlands, are increasingly popular with landscapers and home gardeners. Learning to identify sedges is challenging, however, and the available technical guides to the sedge family can be overwhelming to a nonspecialist. "Field Guide to Wisconsin Sedges "is a beautifully illustrated introduction to the largest sedge genus, "Carex, " which alone makes up about 7 percent of the flora of the upper Midwest. Written primarily for naturalists, wild plant enthusiasts, and native landscapers, this book is unique in its accessible format and illustrations. With this book, readers can learn to recognize key structures needed to identify approximately 150 "Carex "species found in Wisconsin. Author Andrew Hipp shows how to identify many of the major groupings of sedges that are used in guides to the genus throughout the world. "Fi""eld Guide to Wisconsin Sedges" includes information on habitat and range drawn from Hipp s extensive field experience and inspection of thousands of herbarium sheets. Primarily an identification guide, the book is also a valuable source of habitat information for landscapers, gardeners, and restorationists.
Features: Keys to all Wisconsin "Carex "species, arranged by section Distribution maps for all species Species descriptions and detailed habitat information for more than 50 common species Color illustrations of whole plants or details for more than 70 species Appendix summarizing dominant "Carex" species by Wisconsin habitat A glossary of terms Water-resistant paperback cover"
How far is too far? Genetic consequences of Seed Provenance Decisions in Sedges. Final report for USDA-USFWS grant FWS0603 (3.56334)
Date: 2008Creator: Hipp, Andrew
Type: Article
Pre-European Settlement Barrens and Forests among Nine Townships on the Shawnee National Forest (3.91099)
Date: 2008Creator: McBride, Jenny, Bowles, Marlin L.
Type: Article
Description:Report to the Shawnee National Forest.
Chronological Change in Old-Growth Forests of the Chicago Region (3.91111)
Date: 2008Creator: Bowles, Marlin L., Jones, Mike
Type: Article
Description:Report to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and the Chicago Wilderness.