Mosses of the Northern Forest - (Northern Forest Atlas Guides) by Jerry Jenkins
About this item
Highlights
- This guide is an essential companion for those interested in stewardship and conservation of the region.
- About the Author: Jerry Jenkins directs the Northern Forest Atlas Project.
- 176 Pages
- Nature, Plants
- Series Name: Northern Forest Atlas Guides
Description
About the Book
"A visual reference for identification of 283 species of mosses of the Northern Forest Region, with quick guides, systematic sections, and visual glossary. Accompanying folding charts for field use sold separately"--Book Synopsis
This guide is an essential companion for those interested in stewardship and conservation of the region.
The Northern Forest Region lies between the oak forests of the eastern United States and the boreal forests of eastern Canada. It is, collectively, one of the largest and most continuous temperate forests left in the world and, like much of the biosphere, it is at risk.
With multi-image composite photos that allow for unparalleled depth and clarity, this unique guide illustrates the myriad varied and beautiful--and often overlooked--mosses of the Northern Forest.
-Large, easy-to-use format
-Easily characterize and compare over 300 moss species
-High-definition composite images, ecological diagrams, habitat keys, and a visual glossary
-Accompanying large-scale foldout charts also available
A complete online archive of images and articles, including digital atlases, is available at northernforestatlas.org.
Review Quotes
This guide is an essential companion for those interested in stewardship and conservation of the region. With multi-image composite photos that allow for unparalleled depth and clarity, this unique guide illustrates the myriad varied and beautiful--and often overlooked--mosses of the Northern Forest.
-- "Northeastern Naturalist"About the Author
Jerry Jenkins directs the Northern Forest Atlas Project. He is author of Woody Plants of the Northern Forest, Sedges of the Northern Forest, Climate Change in the Adirondacks, The Adirondack Atlas, and coauthor of Acid Rain in the Adirondacks.