So far in this series we have explored the classification and naming of plants as we work towards a way of understanding the foundations of natural history.This approach has followed a thread of consciousness that looks to the origins of localised folk taxonomy while also exploring the ‘scientific’ constructs that result in the given nomenclature of any individual plant. This narrative has been pursued by exploring a variety of approaches, including concepts of human ecology, as a lens through which to appreciate the relationships between people and their social and physical environments, but also to overcome unconscious bias which in the world of plants can lead to ‘plant blindness’. This term means we tend to underappreciate the flora aro...
researchEthno-classification is a science dealing with a search for order, or a pattern, in the ways...
People’s diminished awareness of plants, affected by anthropogenic environmental deterioration, has ...
International audience‘A hundred plants, a hundred names’. Ethnographic field surveys have given us ...
So far in this series we have explored the classification and naming of plants as we work towards a ...
Categorising and naming of plants are human constructs which have been employed by different culture...
This short introduction to plant names is a deviation from my normal approach to communicating about...
When a person enters an unfamiliar space for the first time, such as a new habitat – a tropical or a...
An exploration of how plants have been classified through time and across different cultures, explor...
For an arboriculturist, horticulturalist or land manager responsible for land cover which composes l...
This article tracks the history of taxonomy back to the ancient Greek scholars Aristotle and Theophr...
This is the final installation in a series of 8 articles that have taken a closer look at some of th...
This work deals with phytonyms, proper nouns representing pants, trees and flowers, different motive...
We all seek to identify plants in our ordinary lives, or as professionals, yet what we mean by 'iden...
Biology is the science that explores the living world around us. To communicate the wonders of natur...
Plant use is a familiar word pair that emphasizes how the great wealth of properties and characters ...
researchEthno-classification is a science dealing with a search for order, or a pattern, in the ways...
People’s diminished awareness of plants, affected by anthropogenic environmental deterioration, has ...
International audience‘A hundred plants, a hundred names’. Ethnographic field surveys have given us ...
So far in this series we have explored the classification and naming of plants as we work towards a ...
Categorising and naming of plants are human constructs which have been employed by different culture...
This short introduction to plant names is a deviation from my normal approach to communicating about...
When a person enters an unfamiliar space for the first time, such as a new habitat – a tropical or a...
An exploration of how plants have been classified through time and across different cultures, explor...
For an arboriculturist, horticulturalist or land manager responsible for land cover which composes l...
This article tracks the history of taxonomy back to the ancient Greek scholars Aristotle and Theophr...
This is the final installation in a series of 8 articles that have taken a closer look at some of th...
This work deals with phytonyms, proper nouns representing pants, trees and flowers, different motive...
We all seek to identify plants in our ordinary lives, or as professionals, yet what we mean by 'iden...
Biology is the science that explores the living world around us. To communicate the wonders of natur...
Plant use is a familiar word pair that emphasizes how the great wealth of properties and characters ...
researchEthno-classification is a science dealing with a search for order, or a pattern, in the ways...
People’s diminished awareness of plants, affected by anthropogenic environmental deterioration, has ...
International audience‘A hundred plants, a hundred names’. Ethnographic field surveys have given us ...