A Sierra Nevada Flora
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Average customer review:Product Description
From Toxicodendron diversilobum (poison oak) to Zannichellia palustris (horned pondweed), this book will help every outdoor enthusiast identify, and possibly avoid certain plants in the Sierra. Covers wildflowers, ferns, shrubs, and trees. This edition strictly follows the nomenclature presented in The Jepson Manual as the basis for scientific names.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #971866 in Books
- Published on: 1996-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 259 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
While this is written for outdoors enthusiasts who may encounter a variety of plants during an average hike in California's Sierra mountains, it provides plenty of detail for those more actively researching plant life. Anticipate a fine in-depth coverage of flora and plant life properties. -- Midwest Book Review
Customer Reviews
A Sierra Nevada Flora Reviewed
I found this book to be a great help identifying plants in the field. Most can be identified without magnification. Plants are identified using dichotomous keys.
I also use The Jepson Manual, Higher Plants of California and the old Munz's. But both are heavy and difficult to use in the field for many of the genera though I did use them when I got home to check my identifications. The second great feature of this book is that the plants are specific to the area that I was traveling through. I didn't have to separate out plants that only live in the desert or at the coast. Eliminating that many choices made the effort much easier.
I recommend the book heartily, understanding the plants and animals around us greatly enhances the experience of enjoying nature.
Many of the plants that I found can be seen at californiagardens.com
Disappointing
This book is valuable because it's complete and compact enough to carry in a backpack. Unfortunately, it has enough drawbacks that I wish someone else would write a better book to compete with it.
One example of its problems is when I tried to use it to identify a daisy. The index showed no listing for daisy, so I looked through the Aster family section the hard way, and eventually found the genus Erigeron (which turned out to be indexed under "wild daisy"). Unlike most genera, the book only provides a key for this genus, and omits the usual species description that includes things like plant height that I rely on to confirm the guesses that I make from the key.
I've found an unusually large number of anomalies where I suspect the book is simply wrong. For instance, it says Lupinus adsurgens leaflets are 2-5 mm long, whereas Jepsen says they're 20-50 mm long (I suspect Jepsen is right).
Experienced botanists will find this book to be a worthwhile supplement to Jepsen. Amateurs should look elsewhere, and probably settle for something that only tries to cover the most interesting flowers.
Another Press Run Please
This book is great. It is a concise reference on an interesting flora. The botanical keys are easy enough for amateurs to use and for professionals to key plants from memory. The size and weight make it easy to include in a backpack or field press, although I would like a hardback for my reference shelf. This book is valuable to anyone interested in natural history of the region.




