Plants that trap and eat animals have inspired awe since before the days of Darwin. Lured into the danger zone by optical, tactile, and olfactory strategies, the prey succumb to ingenious traps and face their doom. But unlike plants that temporarily catch insects for pollination, the true carnivores go considerably further: they digest them for the nutrients they need to survive in extremely inhospitable sites on land and in water. This exquisite, thoroughly up-to-date book, copiously illustrated with closeup photography, provides the first comprehensive listing of some 630 known carnivorous plant species, described in fascinating detail, with identification history, physiology, ecology, and an extensive bibliography. It is an essential ref...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:98/23201 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
International audiencePlant carnivory results from the adaptation of plants to their environment. Th...
Carnivorous plants comprise roughly 0.24 per cent of the flowering plants, or 640 species represente...
Carnivorous plants are a unique botanical group, possessing modified leaves to trap, kill, and consu...
Carnivorous plants (CPs)—those possessing specific strategies to attract, capture and kill animal pr...
A plant is considered carnivorous if it receives any noticeable benefit from catching small animals....
Carnivorous plants have evolved convergently around five times in evolutionary history. These plants...
Carnivory is found in eight additional plant families besides the well-studied and speciose Droserac...
Among the recent avalanche of books on carnivorous plants is this book that is completely dedi-cated...
Hunter Plants: Darwin and Carnivorous Plants.Carnivorous Plants is a magnifi cent monographic work a...
As discussed in Chapter 1, although our understanding of the ecology and evolution of carnivorous pl...
In this chapter, we review the key conservation issues concerning carnivorous plants, focusing on tw...
Most plants grow and develop by taking up nutrients from the soil while continuously under threat fr...
Charles Darwin is known the world over as the founder (along with A R Wallace) of modern evolutionar...
The recently described genus Philcoxia comprises three species restricted to well lit and low-nutrie...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:98/23201 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
International audiencePlant carnivory results from the adaptation of plants to their environment. Th...
Carnivorous plants comprise roughly 0.24 per cent of the flowering plants, or 640 species represente...
Carnivorous plants are a unique botanical group, possessing modified leaves to trap, kill, and consu...
Carnivorous plants (CPs)—those possessing specific strategies to attract, capture and kill animal pr...
A plant is considered carnivorous if it receives any noticeable benefit from catching small animals....
Carnivorous plants have evolved convergently around five times in evolutionary history. These plants...
Carnivory is found in eight additional plant families besides the well-studied and speciose Droserac...
Among the recent avalanche of books on carnivorous plants is this book that is completely dedi-cated...
Hunter Plants: Darwin and Carnivorous Plants.Carnivorous Plants is a magnifi cent monographic work a...
As discussed in Chapter 1, although our understanding of the ecology and evolution of carnivorous pl...
In this chapter, we review the key conservation issues concerning carnivorous plants, focusing on tw...
Most plants grow and develop by taking up nutrients from the soil while continuously under threat fr...
Charles Darwin is known the world over as the founder (along with A R Wallace) of modern evolutionar...
The recently described genus Philcoxia comprises three species restricted to well lit and low-nutrie...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:98/23201 / BLDSC - British Library Do...
International audiencePlant carnivory results from the adaptation of plants to their environment. Th...
Carnivorous plants comprise roughly 0.24 per cent of the flowering plants, or 640 species represente...