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The
Plants Of Mount Kinabalu
Author
: John H. Beaman
Classes : Plants
Price : US$ 55.00
Availability :
Hard Cover Pages : 220
Dimensions : 249. 160.19 mm
ISBN : 983-812-026-x
Code : 99026 |
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INTRODUCTION
The Plants of Mount Kinabalu The primary objective of this
project is to provide an inventory of all vascular plants in the flora of
Mount Kinabalu. Two books on the flora, covering the ferns, fern allies
and orchids, have already been published.
The Plants of Mount Kinabalu, 3, enumerates the gymnosperms and non-orchid
monocotyledons. Two additional volumes on the dicotyledons are expected
to be completed in three or four years. The Kinabalu flora may include as
many as 5000-6000 species, and is one of the most diverse if not the most
diverse flora in the world. Additionally, Mount Kinabalu has been a centre
of extremely active plant evolution and speciation and presents a spectacular
natural laboratory for studying these processes.
This third volume in the series includes sections on the history of botanical
research on Mount Kinabalu, analysis of collecting activities, geographical
distributions and endemism, ecological associations of the species, life-forms,
classification and evolution of the monocotyledons, an enumeration of the
species and indexes to numbered collections.
Information is provided for each species on literature, habit, habitat,
elevation range, and specimens upon which the study is based. The gymnosperms
and non-orchid monocotyledons of Mount Kinabalu include 38 families, 173
genera and about 490 species, subspecies and varieties. More than 5000 specimens
were examined and recorded for the project. These have been collected over
a period of 145 years (1851-1996) by about 120 naturalists, explorers, botanists
and local people, and are the basis for virtually all the accumulated knowledge
of these plant groups on Mount Kinabalu.
The book is particularly authoritative because of the collaboration of 15
noted specialists in various plant groups. The last works that considered
the monocotyledons of Mount Kinabalu were Otto Stapf's monumental 1894 account,
On the Flora of Mount Kinabalu, in Noth Borneo and Lilian Gibbs's 1914 work,
A Contribution to the Flora and Plant Formations of Mount Kinabalu and the
Highlands of British North Borneo.
Stapf's paper listed 30 non-orchid monocots in 10 families; Gibbs listed
41 in 14 families. With some 460 species of monocotyledons included in the
present work, a 10-fold increase has been made to previous knowledge of
the flora, and has the advantage of being based on about a century of advances
in the understanding of the flora and improvements in the scientific methodology
for conducting such a study.
The project involves new and innovative procedures for conducting floristic
inventories, and is serving as a model for similar projects in other parts
of the world. Specimens have been examined in some 23 different herbaria,
including all relevant specimens at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, thc
Natural History Museum, London, and the Rijksherbarium, Lei den.
Gibbs had about 122 specimens available for the monocotyledons in her account,
and Stapf had only about 45. In contrast, the present study of the monocotyledons
is based upon over 4600 specimen records of collections accumulated over
the 147 years since Mount Kinabalu was first explored by Hugh Low in 1851.
AUTHOR
John Beaman, Professor Emeritus at Michigan State
University and Honorary Research Fellow at The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew,
has been conducting research on the flora of Mount Kinabalu since 1983,
when he spent a year as Fulbright visiting professor at the National University
of Malaysia in Sabah.
In 1994 he took the position as founding director of the Institute of Biodiversity
and Environmental Conservation at Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, In 1996 he
moved to England to spend full time working on the Kinabalu flora at Kew.
Professor Beaman has received many honours and awards. He has also served
as president of the American Society of Plant Taxonomists and the Society
for Economic Botany.
Reed Beaman also has been involved in research on the flora of Mount Kinabalu
since 1983. He has been coauthor with his father of many of the publications
resulting from the Kinabalu research. Presently he is studying the evolution
and phylogeny of species of Polyosma (Escalloniaceae) and Elatostema (Urticaceae)
on Mount Kinabalu for his Ph.D. dissertation at the University of Florida.
He also holds the positi6n of vice-president of the Florida environmental
consulting firm A. F Clewell, Inc. |