Forest Trees of Australia

Hardcover
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Author: D.J. Boland

ISBN-10: 0643069690

ISBN-13: 9780643069695

Category: Oceania & Australasia - International Business

Forest Trees of Australia is the essential reference for observing, identifying and obtaining information on the native trees in this country. It describes and illustrates over 300 of the most important indigenous trees, which have been carefully selected for their environmental significance, their importance to the timber industry, or their prominence in the landscape.\ This new and thoroughly revised edition has been fully updated throughout and includes treatments of 72 additional species....

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Forest Trees of Australia is the essential reference for observing, identifying and obtaining information on the native trees in this country. It describes and illustrates over 300 of the most important indigenous trees, which have been carefully selected for their environmental significance, their importance to the timber industry, or their prominence in the landscape. This new and thoroughly revised edition has been fully updated throughout and includes treatments of 72 additional species. New maps and photographs show a wonderfully diverse range of forests, from mangrove swamps, tropical regions and deserts, to alpine areas and majestic stands of temperate forests. A color section illustrates some of the major forest types of Australia and bark from a diverse range of species. Forest Trees of Australia is an unsurpassed guide to identification for horticulturists, botanists, foresters, students, farmers, environmentalists and all those who are interested in Australian native trees.

\ From the Publisher"There is no doubt that this is an accurate, reliable and well-presented book." \ "Foresters, botanists, horticulturists, a wide range of students, farmers and all people interested in native Australian trees will find this text a valuable reference."\ "As with the earlier editions it will be widely used as a valuable reference to assist in the identification and recognition of 300 of our most important indigenous trees."\ \ \