Plant Disease (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 85)
By David Ingram and Noel Robertson
()
Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
Related to Plant Disease (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 85)
Related ebooks
Plant Disease Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFungi Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Plant Galls Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Studies of American Fungi. Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Foundations of Genetics Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHow the Earth Turned Green: A Brief 3.8-Billion-Year History of Plants Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The History of Domestic Plant Medicine: The History of Domestic Plant Medicine Ebook
The History of Domestic Plant Medicine: The History of Domestic Plant Medicine
byGabrielle HatfieldRating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Garden Birds Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPests of Ornamental Trees, Shrubs and Flowers: A Color Handbook Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsA Monograph of Chalara and Allied Genera Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMushrooms and Their Cultivation - A Handbook for Amateurs Dealing with the Culture of Mushrooms in the Open-Air, Also in Sheds, Cellars, Greenhouses, E Ebook
Mushrooms and Their Cultivation - A Handbook for Amateurs Dealing with the Culture of Mushrooms in the Open-Air, Also in Sheds, Cellars, Greenhouses, E
byT. W. SandersRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsBiodiversity and Human Health Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWild Mushrooming: A Guide for Foragers Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPlants, Man and Life Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Alien Plants Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPlant Pests Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsTropical Nature: Life and Death in the Rain Forests of Central and Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Weeds: In Defense of Nature's Most Unloved Plants Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Forgotten Pollinators Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Life in Lakes and Rivers Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWild Orchids of Britain Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAnts Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsTropical Plant Types: Pergamon International Library of Science, Technology, Engineering and Social Studies Ebook
Tropical Plant Types: Pergamon International Library of Science, Technology, Engineering and Social Studies
byB. G. M. JamiesonRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsIdentification of the Larger Fungi Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Broads Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFlora of the Guianas: Series A: Phanerogams Fascicle 30: 139 Gentianaceae Ebook
Flora of the Guianas: Series A: Phanerogams Fascicle 30: 139 Gentianaceae
bySylvia Mota de OliveiraRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsA Synopsis of the British Mosses Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDrawing and Painting Fungi: An Artists Guide to Finding and Illustrating Mushrooms and Lichens Ebook
Drawing and Painting Fungi: An Artists Guide to Finding and Illustrating Mushrooms and Lichens
byClaire Kathleen WardRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Butterflies of the British Isles Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDemons in Eden: The Paradox of Plant Diversity Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Related podcast episodes
The Surprising World of Wasps: A Conversation with Seirian Sumner Podcast episode
The Surprising World of Wasps: A Conversation with Seirian Sumner
byNew Books in Science0 ratings0% found this document usefulThe Surprising World of Wasps: A Conversation with Seirian Sumner 0 ratings0% found this document usefulEp. 02 - Fall Colors 0 ratings0% found this document usefulFebruary 18, 2020 Sensitive Plant, Honey as a Root Stimulator, Valerius Cordus, Antoine Nicholas Duchesne, Adolphe-théodore Brongniart, the Lady's Slipper, Winter Poetry, Beth Chatto's Garden Notebook, Macrame 3-pack, and February Birth Flowers: Today we celebrate a man who wrote one of the most influential herbals in history and the French botanist who created the modern strawberry. We'll learn about the Father of Paleobotany and the sweet little Orchid known as the moccasin flower. Today's... Podcast episode
February 18, 2020 Sensitive Plant, Honey as a Root Stimulator, Valerius Cordus, Antoine Nicholas Duchesne, Adolphe-théodore Brongniart, the Lady's Slipper, Winter Poetry, Beth Chatto's Garden Notebook, Macrame 3-pack, and February Birth Flowers: Today we celebrate a man who wrote one of the most influential herbals in history and the French botanist who created the modern strawberry. We'll learn about the Father of Paleobotany and the sweet little Orchid known as the moccasin flower. Today's...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulMerlin Sheldrake: How have fungi shaped the world?: Our lives have always been entangled with fungi, says biologist Merlin Sheldrake, and the future of this relationship is full of possibility. Podcast episode
Merlin Sheldrake: How have fungi shaped the world?: Our lives have always been entangled with fungi, says biologist Merlin Sheldrake, and the future of this relationship is full of possibility.
byInstant Genius0 ratings0% found this document usefulThe Sting in the Tail: What’s the point of wasps? Podcast episode
The Sting in the Tail: What’s the point of wasps?
byThe Curious Cases of Rutherford & Fry0 ratings0% found this document usefulFebruary 10, 2020 Midwinter Trees, Plant Health Resolutions, Jan Gronovius, Benjamin Smith Barton, Winifred Mary Letts, Jack Heslop-Harrison, Snow Poems, A Land Remembered by Patrick D Smith, Wood Markers, and Laura Ingalls Wilder: Today we celebrate the man who suggested naming the Twinflower for Linnaeus and the botanist who gave Meriwether Lewis a crash course in botany. We'll learn about the English writer who wrote, that, "God once loved a garden we learn in holy writ and... Podcast episode
February 10, 2020 Midwinter Trees, Plant Health Resolutions, Jan Gronovius, Benjamin Smith Barton, Winifred Mary Letts, Jack Heslop-Harrison, Snow Poems, A Land Remembered by Patrick D Smith, Wood Markers, and Laura Ingalls Wilder: Today we celebrate the man who suggested naming the Twinflower for Linnaeus and the botanist who gave Meriwether Lewis a crash course in botany. We'll learn about the English writer who wrote, that, "God once loved a garden we learn in holy writ and...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful003 Bodacious Boas: This fortnight’s episode is dedicated to boas. The first portion looks into how boas hunt; their ability to subdue prey and potentially hunt in a “coordinated” fashion. After, we dig into some landscape genetics and see how the success of cave dwelling b... Podcast episode
003 Bodacious Boas: This fortnight’s episode is dedicated to boas. The first portion looks into how boas hunt; their ability to subdue prey and potentially hunt in a “coordinated” fashion. After, we dig into some landscape genetics and see how the success of cave dwelling b...
byHerpetological Highlights0 ratings0% found this document usefulDecember 6, 2019 Dianthus Syrup, African Flora Threatened, The Potato Exhibit, Johann Zinn, a Smithsonian letter, J Bernard Brinton, Joyce Kilmer, Plants Are Terrible People by Luke Ruggenberg, Fiskars Snip, and the Cincinnati Herbarium: Today we celebrate the botanist who made his mark in human anatomy and the botanist who lost his civil war specimens to a confederate raider. We'll hear the most popular poem about trees written by a poet who was killed in WWI. We Grow That Garden... Podcast episode
December 6, 2019 Dianthus Syrup, African Flora Threatened, The Potato Exhibit, Johann Zinn, a Smithsonian letter, J Bernard Brinton, Joyce Kilmer, Plants Are Terrible People by Luke Ruggenberg, Fiskars Snip, and the Cincinnati Herbarium: Today we celebrate the botanist who made his mark in human anatomy and the botanist who lost his civil war specimens to a confederate raider. We'll hear the most popular poem about trees written by a poet who was killed in WWI. We Grow That Garden...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulDecember 3, 2020 Seed Size, Gourds and Squashes, James Arnold, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Sara Coleridge, Earth to Table by Jeff Crump and Bettina Schormann, and Octavia Hill: Today I'll talk about the difference between gourds and squash. We'll also celebrate the man whose philanthropy made the Arnold Arboretum possible. We’ll recognize the painter who said flowers made him paint freely. We salute the English author who... Podcast episode
December 3, 2020 Seed Size, Gourds and Squashes, James Arnold, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Sara Coleridge, Earth to Table by Jeff Crump and Bettina Schormann, and Octavia Hill: Today I'll talk about the difference between gourds and squash. We'll also celebrate the man whose philanthropy made the Arnold Arboretum possible. We’ll recognize the painter who said flowers made him paint freely. We salute the English author who...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulFebruary 3, 2021 Jellicoe's Shute House Masterpiece, Carl Ludwig Blume, the Huckleberry, White Snakeroot, Both by Douglas Crase, and Celebrating Sidney Lanier: Today we celebrate a man with, perhaps, the perfect last name for a botanist: Blume. We'll also learn about a wild berry that is a sister to the blueberry and the cranberry. We hear some words about the devastating impact of the poisonous White... Podcast episode
February 3, 2021 Jellicoe's Shute House Masterpiece, Carl Ludwig Blume, the Huckleberry, White Snakeroot, Both by Douglas Crase, and Celebrating Sidney Lanier: Today we celebrate a man with, perhaps, the perfect last name for a botanist: Blume. We'll also learn about a wild berry that is a sister to the blueberry and the cranberry. We hear some words about the devastating impact of the poisonous White...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulIn Life and Death 0 ratings0% found this document useful019 Invertebrates Strike Back: We usually think of invertebrates as a frog’s favourite meal. But in this episode we explore the times when the tables turn and frogs fall victim to mighty invertebrates. Except for the Accra snake-necked frog, they have an ingenious way of avoiding inve... Podcast episode
019 Invertebrates Strike Back: We usually think of invertebrates as a frog’s favourite meal. But in this episode we explore the times when the tables turn and frogs fall victim to mighty invertebrates. Except for the Accra snake-necked frog, they have an ingenious way of avoiding inve...
byHerpetological Highlights0 ratings0% found this document usefulWhat is soil? (and how to improve it) 0 ratings0% found this document useful#68: Spring Galls: Nature's Master Geneticists, a conversation with Adam Kranz Podcast episode
#68: Spring Galls: Nature's Master Geneticists, a conversation with Adam Kranz
byNature's Archive0 ratings0% found this document usefulNovember 21, 2019 Dancing with Bees, the Garden Works in Winter, Jan Gronovius, Albert Burrage, Harold Nicolson, A Potted History of Vegetables by Lorraine Harrison, Tchotchke Tidy Up, and the First Garden TV Show: Today we celebrate the botanist who named the very first plant for his mentor Carl Linnaeus, and we celebrate the 160th birthday of one of the country's wealthiest orchidologists and the founder of the Amerian Orchid Society. We'll hear some garden... Podcast episode
November 21, 2019 Dancing with Bees, the Garden Works in Winter, Jan Gronovius, Albert Burrage, Harold Nicolson, A Potted History of Vegetables by Lorraine Harrison, Tchotchke Tidy Up, and the First Garden TV Show: Today we celebrate the botanist who named the very first plant for his mentor Carl Linnaeus, and we celebrate the 160th birthday of one of the country's wealthiest orchidologists and the founder of the Amerian Orchid Society. We'll hear some garden...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulEp. 201 : Harvesting for Conservation with Sarah Nilson and Eric Burkhart Podcast episode
Ep. 201 : Harvesting for Conservation with Sarah Nilson and Eric Burkhart
byto know the land0 ratings0% found this document usefulJanuary 10, 2020 Charlotte Moss Winter Garden, Elm Tree Comeback, Nicholas Culpeper, Indian Tea, Henry Winthrop Sargent, Dame Barbara Hepworth, Henry David Thoreau, Emily Dickinson's Gardens by Marta McDowell, Back to the Roots Organic Mushroom Kit, and t: Today we celebrate the 17th-century renegade who wanted medicine through herbs to be accessible to the people and the Anniversary of the day Indian tea became available for sale in England. We will learn about the American landscape gardener whose... Podcast episode
January 10, 2020 Charlotte Moss Winter Garden, Elm Tree Comeback, Nicholas Culpeper, Indian Tea, Henry Winthrop Sargent, Dame Barbara Hepworth, Henry David Thoreau, Emily Dickinson's Gardens by Marta McDowell, Back to the Roots Organic Mushroom Kit, and t: Today we celebrate the 17th-century renegade who wanted medicine through herbs to be accessible to the people and the Anniversary of the day Indian tea became available for sale in England. We will learn about the American landscape gardener whose...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulWild Cherry Monograph by jim mcdonald | 21: On today's episode I narrate jim mcdonald's wild cherry monograph. Here's a sampling from his monograph which you can find here: When considering wild cherry, most will immediately think of its use in the address of coughs and... Podcast episode
Wild Cherry Monograph by jim mcdonald | 21: On today's episode I narrate jim mcdonald's wild cherry monograph. Here's a sampling from his monograph which you can find here: When considering wild cherry, most will immediately think of its use in the address of coughs and...
byHerbRally0 ratings0% found this document useful#29: Adam Kranz - The Amazing World of Plant Galls 0 ratings0% found this document usefulS.5 Ep.2: Digging into the Wood Wide Web 0 ratings0% found this document usefulThe Hidden Half Of Nature: Why Invisible Microbes Are The Key To Health & Life.: This is a special Premium audio episode. to the BenGreenfieldFitness show and access this and over 300 additional hidden audios, videos, pdf's and more! I read plenty of books about gut health, immune system, and alternative medicine, but one of the... Podcast episode
The Hidden Half Of Nature: Why Invisible Microbes Are The Key To Health & Life.: This is a special Premium audio episode. to the BenGreenfieldFitness show and access this and over 300 additional hidden audios, videos, pdf's and more! I read plenty of books about gut health, immune system, and alternative medicine, but one of the...
byBen Greenfield Life0 ratings0% found this document usefulSusanne Masters - Ethnobotanist looking at the interactions we have with wildlife. Author of Wild Waters.: 480 Podcast episode
Susanne Masters - Ethnobotanist looking at the interactions we have with wildlife. Author of Wild Waters.: 480
byTough Girl Podcast0 ratings0% found this document usefulNovember 10, 2020 Robert Morison, Dean O’Banion, Henry Luke Bolley, Henry Van Dyke, The Private World of Tasha Tudor by Tasha Tudor, and Split Pea Soup: Today we celebrate a 17th-century Scottish botanist who used the structure of a plant's fruits for classification. We'll also learn about a mobster florist killed while working with his Chrysanthemums (Dendranthema grandiflora). We salute the American... Podcast episode
November 10, 2020 Robert Morison, Dean O’Banion, Henry Luke Bolley, Henry Van Dyke, The Private World of Tasha Tudor by Tasha Tudor, and Split Pea Soup: Today we celebrate a 17th-century Scottish botanist who used the structure of a plant's fruits for classification. We'll also learn about a mobster florist killed while working with his Chrysanthemums (Dendranthema grandiflora). We salute the American...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulHerbaria: Their role in protecting biodiversity and indigenous knowledge: Dr. Barbara Thiers is the director emerita in the Division of Plant Research and Conservation at the New York Botanical Garden. Prior to her retirement, she was the Patricia K. Holmgren director of the William and Linda Steer herbarium, the world's third largest herbarium, housing over 7.9 million collections of algae, broophytes, fungi, and vascular plant. She applied her interest in herbarium science and information technology to develop the CV Star Virtual herbarium, which contains a searchable database of digitized herbarium specimens. She is also the editor of the Index Herberorium, the guide to the world's approximately 3300 herbaria. Dr. theers is widely recognized for her contributions to efforts to digitize the world's natural history collections. In 2020, to help educate the public as to the importance of herbaria and botanical history, she published a beautifully illustrated book entitled herbaria the Podcast episode
Herbaria: Their role in protecting biodiversity and indigenous knowledge: Dr. Barbara Thiers is the director emerita in the Division of Plant Research and Conservation at the New York Botanical Garden. Prior to her retirement, she was the Patricia K. Holmgren director of the William and Linda Steer herbarium, the world's third largest herbarium, housing over 7.9 million collections of algae, broophytes, fungi, and vascular plant. She applied her interest in herbarium science and information technology to develop the CV Star Virtual herbarium, which contains a searchable database of digitized herbarium specimens. She is also the editor of the Index Herberorium, the guide to the world's approximately 3300 herbaria. Dr. theers is widely recognized for her contributions to efforts to digitize the world's natural history collections. In 2020, to help educate the public as to the importance of herbaria and botanical history, she published a beautifully illustrated book entitled herbaria the
byBrainforest Café0 ratings0% found this document usefulAugust 18, 2020 Houseplants and Air Quality, Benjamin Alvord, Olav Hauge, Ozaki’s Cherry Trees, the Camperdown Elm, World Daffodil Day, Dream Plants for the Natural Garden by Piet Oudolf and Henk Gerritsen, and the Cherokee Rose: Today we celebrate the Brigadier General, who described the Compass Plant. We'll also learn about the Norwegian poet who gardened and tended 70 apple trees. We remember the gift given to American by the Mayor of Tokyo. We also honor an extraordinary... Podcast episode
August 18, 2020 Houseplants and Air Quality, Benjamin Alvord, Olav Hauge, Ozaki’s Cherry Trees, the Camperdown Elm, World Daffodil Day, Dream Plants for the Natural Garden by Piet Oudolf and Henk Gerritsen, and the Cherokee Rose: Today we celebrate the Brigadier General, who described the Compass Plant. We'll also learn about the Norwegian poet who gardened and tended 70 apple trees. We remember the gift given to American by the Mayor of Tokyo. We also honor an extraordinary...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful415: Global Glomus Growth Guesses: This episode: A global estimate of plants and their root fungi shows how agriculture may have greatly affected soil carbon storage over time! (5.7 MB, 8.3 minutes) Show notes: Microbe of the episode: Rhizobium virus RHEph4 Takeaways Even... Podcast episode
415: Global Glomus Growth Guesses: This episode: A global estimate of plants and their root fungi shows how agriculture may have greatly affected soil carbon storage over time! (5.7 MB, 8.3 minutes) Show notes: Microbe of the episode: Rhizobium virus RHEph4 Takeaways Even...
byBacterioFiles0 ratings0% found this document usefulHow do flowers know when to bloom?: Find out what influences when flowers open and the various factors that slow the process Podcast episode
How do flowers know when to bloom?: Find out what influences when flowers open and the various factors that slow the process
byCrowdScience0 ratings0% found this document usefulApril 4, 2019 Garden Geography, Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle, Alois Ludwig, the Nova Scotia Mayflower, John Greenleaf Whittier, Diana Donald, Spring Bulbs, Joseph Sauriol: Have you started to think about your garden in geographical terms? Aside from the zone you are gardening in, what are the micro-climates in your garden? Areas sheltered by trees, buildings or other structures may be warmer and ideal... Podcast episode
April 4, 2019 Garden Geography, Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle, Alois Ludwig, the Nova Scotia Mayflower, John Greenleaf Whittier, Diana Donald, Spring Bulbs, Joseph Sauriol: Have you started to think about your garden in geographical terms? Aside from the zone you are gardening in, what are the micro-climates in your garden? Areas sheltered by trees, buildings or other structures may be warmer and ideal...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful190. Karen Bakker with Sally James: Uncovering the Secret Sounds of Life: Have you ever wished that animals or plants could talk to us? As it turns out, they can. The natural world is teeming with conversation, though many of it is beyond human hearing range. Scientists are using groundbreaking digital technologies to... Podcast episode
190. Karen Bakker with Sally James: Uncovering the Secret Sounds of Life: Have you ever wished that animals or plants could talk to us? As it turns out, they can. The natural world is teeming with conversation, though many of it is beyond human hearing range. Scientists are using groundbreaking digital technologies to...
byTown Hall Seattle Science Series0 ratings0% found this document useful
Related articles
Book Reviews Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Book Reviews
Aug 17, 2021
Chelsea Green Publishing Co, £27 ISBN 978-1603589482 Forager-chef Alan Bergo’s ‘root-to-seed’ approach to plants looks at edibles in a completely new way and opens up a whole new world of flavours. Reviewer Aaron Bertlesen is Great Dixter’s garden
8 min readDowntools Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Downtools
Mar 3, 2020
6 min readA Blessing In Disguise Country LifeArticle
A Blessing In Disguise
Sep 20, 2023
4 min readSummer Silence Is A Crime Against Nature – We Need To Bring Back Birdsong The IndependentArticle
Summer Silence Is A Crime Against Nature – We Need To Bring Back Birdsong
Feb 8, 2021
My first and latest lockdowns were bookended by works by two remarkable women. Unfortunately, I read the one that provides a sliver of hope first: Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm, by Isabella Tree. It tells the inspiring story of how
4 min readDowntools Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Downtools
Jul 12, 2022
6 min readKeep An Ear Out Bloom Magazine UKArticle
Keep An Ear Out
Sep 4, 2023
3 min readBook Reviews Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Book Reviews
Jun 22, 2021
Thames & Hudson, £50 ISBN 978-0500022313 A collaborative and conversational retrospective of the work – and inner workings – of one of the UK’s most influential and imaginative designers. Reviewer Tania Compton is a garden designer and writer. T
8 min readDowntools Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Downtools
May 27, 2020
7 min readA Different Land HorticultureArticle
A Different Land
Feb 22, 2024
4 min readThe Invisible Force Keeping Carbon in the Ground The AtlanticArticle
The Invisible Force Keeping Carbon in the Ground
Oct 23, 2023
6 min readLittle Crop Of Horrors Country LifeArticle
Little Crop Of Horrors
Jan 10, 2024
5 min readWhere Have All The Insects Gone? Bloom Magazine UKArticle
Where Have All The Insects Gone?
Jun 6, 2019
2 min readGillian Burke BBC Wildlife MagazineArticle
Gillian Burke
Jun 2, 2022
2 min readLungs Of The Earth Amateur GardeningArticle
Lungs Of The Earth
May 23, 2023
I SPENT a long time studying my old garden in Hook Norton in Oxfordshire in the late 1990s and early 2000s, trying to understand why that garden functioned without any chemical intervention. At the time I was trying to write The Natural Gardener, pub
2 min readSuck Stick Drip How Meat-eating Plants Are Taking Back The Bogs BBC Wildlife MagazineArticle
Suck Stick Drip How Meat-eating Plants Are Taking Back The Bogs
Dec 17, 2020
5 min readSmart Plants WellBeingArticle
Smart Plants
Oct 11, 2017
Words MARTIN OLIVER Plants and trees are important to humans on many different levels. Representing 99 per cent of the Earth’s total biomass, they provide food and shelter and are a significant oxygen source. Wild areas full of trees are ideal places
7 min readStrange Fruit BBC Countryfile MagazineArticle
Strange Fruit
Sep 17, 2020
6 min readMysterious Tree Disease Of The 70s And 80s Unmasked Farmer's WeeklyArticle
Mysterious Tree Disease Of The 70s And 80s Unmasked
Nov 10, 2023
3 min readDowntools Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Downtools
Sep 6, 2022
9 min readA Gardener’s Miscellany Amateur GardeningArticle
A Gardener’s Miscellany
May 17, 2022
Two related plants go under the Miscellany microscope THIS week, I’m combining two plant genera into one Miscellany. They are related, and have some interesting stories connected with them! Let’s start with laburnums, which are in flower now. These a
6 min readWe Need Insects More Than They Need Us NautilusArticle
We Need Insects More Than They Need Us
Jul 4, 2019
The interconnection of the world is a wonder. Consider the United States Declaration of Independence, says Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson, a conservation biologist. It was written with the help of a wasp. In July, 1776, when Timothy Matlack, a clerk with sta
11 min readBanishing Thebalsam BBC Wildlife MagazineArticle
Banishing Thebalsam
Jul 30, 2020
6 min readA Bug’s Menu HorticultureArticle
A Bug’s Menu
Oct 24, 2018
5 min readThe Original World Wide Web MOTHER EARTH NEWSArticle
The Original World Wide Web
Nov 17, 2023
7 min readDowntools Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Downtools
Nov 1, 2022
6 min readPlant Blindness Country LifeArticle
Plant Blindness
Mar 25, 2020
THE more we task plants with saving the planet, the more shameful this fact seems: currently, advanced Western societies show less awareness of flora than at any other time in the modern period. In recent months, both the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew,
2 min readDelicious Or Deadly? RECOIL OFFGRIDArticle
Delicious Or Deadly?
Jun 16, 2020
8 min readBook Reviews Gardens Illustrated MagazineArticle
Book Reviews
Aug 19, 2020
6 min readREAD & WATCH Pip MagazineArticle
READ & WATCH
Jan 31, 2021
BY NIGEL PALMER (CHELSEA GREEN PUBLISHING 2020) Review by Emily Stokes He had me at Ferments. Maybe Regenerative, or Mineral and Biological Extracts, and possibly Locally Sourced. It was a combination of the entire title that captured my regenerative
3 min readRewilding Our Minds The American ScholarArticle
Rewilding Our Minds
Jun 1, 2021
15 min read
Reviews for Plant Disease (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 85)
0 ratings0 reviews