Field Guide to the Palms of the Americas

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Princeton University Press, 1995 - 352 páginas

This user-friendly and authoritative book will serve scientists, growers, and sightseers as a guide to the 67 genera and 550 species of naturally occurring palms found in the Americas. Its purpose is to give an introduction to the diversity of palms and allow almost anyone to identify a palm from this part of the world. Providing scientifically accurate descriptions and a rich supply of illustrations, including color photos taken in the wild of over 256 species, this guide is extraordinary in its coverage of the plant that has become for many people the symbol of the tropical landscape.


Palms are not only aesthetically pleasing, but they also make up an economically and ecologically important family of plants. In industry, for example, the coconut, oil palm, and date palm have a wide and varied use. In the lowland rain forest, palms are usually one of the most abundant and diverse families of plants. Field Guide to the Palms of the Americas will appeal to professional scientists or students working in the tropics-including agronomists, anthropologists, ecologists, entomologists, natural historians, and zoologists-as well as to amateur and professional growers of palms, to "eco-tourists" who visit tropical regions, and to inhabitants of these regions who are interested in the native flora.

 

Índice

III
27
IV
28
V
29
VI
31
VII
32
VIII
33
IX
35
X
40
XXXVII
112
XXXVIII
114
XXXIX
118
XL
119
XLI
122
XLII
124
XLIII
126
XLIV
128

XI
41
XII
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XIII
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XIV
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XV
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XVI
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XVII
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XVIII
58
XIX
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XX
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XXI
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XXII
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XXIII
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XXIV
67
XXVI
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XXVII
69
XXVIII
95
XXIX
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XXX
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XXXI
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XXXII
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XXXIII
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XXXIV
108
XXXV
109
XXXVI
110
XLV
129
XLVI
130
XLVII
140
XLVIII
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XLIX
143
L
154
LI
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LII
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LIII
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LV
165
LVI
190
LVII
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LVIII
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LIX
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LX
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LXI
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LXII
204
LXIII
226
LXIV
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LXV
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LXVI
251
LXVII
291
LXVIII
305
LXIX
312
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Página 302 - Riley. 1993. Predation by vertebrates and invertebrates on the seeds of five canopy tree species of an Amazonian forest. Vegetatio, 107/108:375-386.
Página 303 - ... Study', report to World Bank, Washington, DC. Tobias, D. and R. Mendelsohn (1991), 'Valuing ecotourism in a tropical rainforest reserve', Ambio, 20, 91-3. Toledo, VM, AI Batis, R. Becerra, E. Martinez and CH Ramos (1992), 'Products from the tropical rainforests of Mexico: An ethnoecological approach', in M. Plotkin and L. Famolare (eds). Sustainable Harvest and Marketing of Rainforest Products, Washington, DC: Conservation International, pp.99-109.
Página 303 - Weaver, PL 1992. An ecological comparison of canopy trees in the montane rain forest of Puerto Rico's Luquillo Mountains. Caribbean Journal of Science. 28(1-2): 62-69.
Página 302 - Terborgh, J. 1983. Five New World Primates. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
Página 302 - Conservation status of Attalea crassispatha (Mart.) Burret, the rare and endemic oil palm of Haiti.
Página 303 - Suriname 5(5): 1-172. . 1968. The geonomoid palms. Verh. Kon. Ned. Akad. Wetensch, Afd. Natuurk., Tweede Sect. ser. 2, 58: 1-202.

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