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Nepenthes
Of Borneo
Author
: Charles Clarke
Classes : Plants
Price : US$ 38.00
Availability :
Hard Cover Pages : 207
Dimensions : 261. 191. 20 mm
ISBN : 983-812-015-4
Code: 99036 |
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INTRODUCTION
The pitcher plants of Borneo are much more than a colourful
collection of unusual plants. They trap and devour animals and provide homes
for others, even making convenient daytime roosting sites for bats. Few
plants can boast such a variety of bizarre features, but the Nepenthes of
Borneo don't stop there -- there are many other facets of their biology
that we still know very little about.
On top of that, their main home is the steaming tropical forests of Borneo;
on the summits of remote mountains, high up in the tops of trees, and even
by the sides of roads in the major towns. This book investigates the nepenthes
of Borneo in detail, treating each of the species, their ecology, where
and how they grow, and how they survive, and discussing the threats they
face.
Charles Clarke has been studying these plants for the last ten years, and
has travelled to all corners of Borneo to research this book. A number of
these plants are illustrated here for the first time, and much of the information
presented is new to science. Scientists and lay people with an interest
in the natural history of Borneo will find this book essential reading.
AUTHOR
Charles Clarke was born in Melbourne, Australia.
His interest in natural histroy developed slowly, constrained by a childhood
loathing of the "great outdoors". The voluntary removal of this obstacle
during secondary school led to an honours degree in Botany at Monash University
in Melbourne, and a Ph. D in Ecosystem Management at the University of New
England, in Armidale, New South Wales.
His interest in pitcher plants first lured him to Borneo in 1987, and he
has been going back ever since. In 1989 and 1990 he lived in Brunei, studying
the ecology of pitcher plants and travelling extensively around the island.
In between stints in Borneo he has taught Ecology and Biometrics at James
Cook University in Queensland, and worked as a horticultural consultant
in Hong Kong.
He is now based at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. This
book, his first, presents a synthesis of the research performed on his travels
around Borneo. |