• icon
    Thanh toán đa dạng, linh hoạt
    Chuyển khoản ngân hàng, thanh toán tại nhà...
  • icon
    Miễn Phí vận chuyển 53 tỉnh thành
    Miễn phí vận chuyển đối với đơn hàng trên 1 triệu
  • icon
    Yên Tâm mua sắm
    Hoàn tiền trong vòng 7 ngày...

Wild Plant Culture: A Guide to Restoring Edible and Medicinal Native Plant Communities

  • Mã sản phẩm: 0865719802
  • (2 nhận xét)
best choise
100% Hàng chính hãng
Chính sách Đổi trả trong vòng 14 ngày
Kiểm tra hàng trước khi thanh toán
Chưa có nhiều người mua - cẩn thận
  • Publisher:New Society Publishers (November 22, 2022)
  • Language:English
  • Paperback:296 pages
  • ISBN-10:0865719802
  • ISBN-13:978-0865719804
  • Item Weight:1.3 pounds
  • Dimensions:7.5 x 0.69 x 8.88 inches
  • Best Sellers Rank:#60,914 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #36 in Landscape #44 in Native American Demographic Studies #61 in Botany (Books)
  • Customer Reviews:4.8 out of 5 stars 9Reviews
1,180,000 vnđ
- +
Wild Plant Culture: A Guide to Restoring Edible and Medicinal Native Plant Communities
Wild Plant Culture: A Guide to Restoring Edible and Medicinal Native Plant Communities
1,180,000 vnđ
Chi tiết sản phẩm

Mô tả sản phẩm

From the Publisher

Wild Plant Culture by Jared Rosebaum with endorsement by Mark Shepard

Restoring Reciprocity, Sustaining Sustenance

Mayapples (Podophyllum peltatum) after the rain.


Plants in Relationships

There are many broken relationships in our ecologically devastated world, but perhaps the most broken of all is our relationship with the rest of the natural world.

This chapter includes:

  • Plant Planet
  • Wild Plants as Food
  • Wild Plants as Medicine

Black cohosh (Actaea racemosa).


Ecosystem Restoration

Amidst all the grim news of environmental collapse, we have an opportunity. It is an opportunity to re-imagine our place in nature, and use our artful, technical, and mimetic capacities to create places that emplace us.

This chapter includes:

  • Mimesis and the Reference Ecosystem
  • Restoring Plants

Spicebush swallowtail caterpillar on spicebush leaf.


In Community with Nature

Native plants have evolved in a close relationship with the climate and geology of our region. They thrive in tandem with the wild creatures that utilize them for food and shelter, creatures that often return the favor by providing seed dispersal or pollination services.

This chapter includes:

  • Communities
  • Belonging to an Biodiverse Community

Learning Your Land

Stormwater runoff from cornfield.


Reading Geology, Soils, and Water

The intent of this book is to help you match plant species to pre-existing habitat conditions, using appropriate species that are well-adapted for the fundamental underlying conditions of a site.

This chapter includes:

  • Soils and Geology
  • Water

Orchard grass field margin


Land Use History

Influences on the composition of natural areas include annual precipitation, soils, bedrock geology, extremes of temperature, and the influence of the biota — from predators to pollinators. The difference was land use history — the effects of human use during the post-colonial era.

This chapter includes:

  • Land Use History and Habitat Quality
  • Natural Disturbances

Did these black birches germinate on the same nurse log?


Reading the Story of the Land

Plants tell the story of the land in meticulous detail. They are the ultimate diagnostic tools for assessing the health of soils and water, the impact of land use history, and the presence or absence of natural disturbances.

This chapter includes:

  • Analyzing the Landscape
  • Making Your Own Map
  • Tend or Mend

Restoring Your Land

Land shaping


Repairing Soil

The productivity of soils can be improved, and damaged soils can be repaired. Many soils are degraded by agricultural or industrial land use, and may lack appropriate ecology in the form of bacteria, fungi, and other soil organisms.

This chapter includes:

  • Soil Amendments
  • Mycorrhizal Fungi
  • Restoring Landscape Structure

Smothering, at the Adirondack Wild Center.


Vegetation Control

A key aspect of site preparation involves the removal of undesirable plants from the vicinity of the restoration area. Undesirable plants may compete with existing, desirable species, or with restoration plantings.

This chapter includes:

  • Tillage
  • Smothering and Solarizing
  • The “Lasagna” Mulching Method
  • Herbicides

Planting a plug tray of bottle gentian (Gentiana clausa).


Introducing Plant Materials

The two primary methods of introducing new plants to a site are by seeding and by planting live plant materials. Each method has different attributes relative to economy, successful recruitment, and maintenance.

This chapter includes:

  • Planting
  • Seeding
  • Post-seeding Maintenance for Meadows
  • Meadow Maintenance
Plant Community - Riparian, Glade, Meadow, Seashore | Food Medicine-Nettle, Ferm, Hickory, Groundnut

 

Hỏi đáp
Nhận xét của khách hàng