
Carnivorous Plants
Physiology, Ecology, and Evolution
Oxford University Press
Published on 15. February 2019
Book
Paperback/Softback
552 pages
978-0-19-883372-7 (ISBN)
Description
Carnivorous plants have fascinated botanists, evolutionary biologists, ecologists, physiologists, developmental biologists, anatomists, horticulturalists, and the general public for centuries. Charles Darwin was the first scientist to demonstrate experimentally that some plants could actually attract, kill, digest, and absorb nutrients from insect prey; his book Insectivorous Plants (1875) remains a widely-cited classic. Since then, many movies and plays, short stories, novels, coffee-table picture books, and popular books on the cultivation of carnivorous plants have been produced. However, all of these widely read products depend on accurate scientific information, and most of them have repeated and recycled data from just three comprehensive, but now long out of date, scientific monographs. The field has evolved and changed dramatically in the nearly 30 years since the last of these books was published, and thousands of scientific papers on carnivorous plants have appeared in the academic journal literature. In response, Ellison and Adamec have assembled the world's leading experts to provide a truly modern synthesis. They examine every aspect of physiology, biochemistry, genomics, ecology, and evolution of these remarkable plants, culminating in a description of the serious threats they now face from over-collection, poaching, habitat loss, and climatic change which directly threaten their habitats and continued persistence in them.
Reviews / Votes
As a review of the most up to date research on carnivorous plants, this is ideal for senior undergraduate or graduate students, academics, and those with a keen interest in carnivorous plants...It rewards the careful and thorough reader who is passionate about botany. * Emma Bocking, The Canadian Field-Naturalist * Carnivorous Plants is a remarkable work of scholarship for a remarkable group of plants (by a remarkable band of enthusiasts). * Botany One *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Illustrations
110
Dimensions
Height: 246 mm
Width: 189 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
1076 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-883372-7 (9780198833727)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
12/2017
Oxford University Press
€192.21
Shipment within 15-20 days
Persons
Aaron M. Ellison is the Senior Research Fellow in Ecology at Harvard University, and a semi-professional photographer and writer. He studies the disintegration and reassembly of ecosystems following natural and anthropogenic disturbances; thinks about the relationship between the Dao and the intermediate disturbance hypothesis and reflects on the critical and reactionary stance of Ecology relative to Modernism.
Lubomir Adamec is the Senior Research Scientist in the Section of Plant Ecology of the Institute of Botany CAS at Trebon, Czech Republic, where he has been working since 1986. Since graduating in plant physiology from the Charles University in Prague, Czechoslovakia, he has been studying the ecophysiology of aquatic and wetland plants, especially carnivorous ones: mineral nutrition, photosynthesis, growth traits, Utricularia trap ecophysiology, and biophysics. He is the curator of the world's largest collection of aquatic carnivorous plants, currently including more than 80 species or populations, which is used extensively for research and plant conservation.
Lubomir Adamec is the Senior Research Scientist in the Section of Plant Ecology of the Institute of Botany CAS at Trebon, Czech Republic, where he has been working since 1986. Since graduating in plant physiology from the Charles University in Prague, Czechoslovakia, he has been studying the ecophysiology of aquatic and wetland plants, especially carnivorous ones: mineral nutrition, photosynthesis, growth traits, Utricularia trap ecophysiology, and biophysics. He is the curator of the world's largest collection of aquatic carnivorous plants, currently including more than 80 species or populations, which is used extensively for research and plant conservation.
Editor
Senior Research FellowSenior Research Fellow, Harvard University, Harvard Forest, Massachusetts, USA
Senior Research ScientistSenior Research Scientist, Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic
Content
- Part I: Overview
- 1: Aaron M. Ellison and Lubomír Adamec: Introduction
- 2: J. Stephen Brewer and Jan Schlauer: Biogeography and habitats of carnivorous plants
- 3: Andreas Fleischmann, Jan Schlauer, Stephen A. Smith, and Thomas J. Givnish: Evolution of carnivory in angiosperms
- Part II: Systematics and evolution of carnivorous plants
- 4: Andreas Fleischmann, Adam T. Cross, Robert Gibson, Paulo M. Gonella, and Kingsley W. Dixon: Systematics and evolution of Droseraceae
- 5: Charles Clarke, Jan Schlauer, Jonathan Moran, and Alastair Robinson: Systematics and evolution of Nepenthes
- 6: Andreas Fleischmann and Aymeric Roccia: Systematics and evolution of Lentibulariaceae: I. Pinguicula
- 7: Andreas Fleischmann: Systematics and evolution of Lentibulariaceae: II. Genlisea
- 8: Richard W. Jobson, Paulo C. Baleeiro, and Cástor Guisande: Systematics and evolution of Lentibulariaceae: III. Utricularia
- 9: Robert F.C. Naczi: Systematics and evolution of Sarraceniaceae
- 10: Adam T. Cross, Maria Paniw, André Vito Scatigna, Nick Kalfas, Bruce Anderson, Thomas J. Givnish, and Andreas Fleischmann: Systematics and evolution of small genera of carnivorous plants
- 11: Tanya Renner, Tianying Lan, Kimberly M. Farr, Enrique Ibarra-Laclette, Luis Herrera- Esrella, Stephan C. Schuster, Mitsuyasu Hasebe, Kenji Fukushima, and Victor A. Albert: Carnivorous plant genomes
- Part III: Physiology, form, and function
- 12: John D. Horner, Bartosz J. Plachno, Ulrike Bauer, and Bruno Di Giusto: Attraction of prey
- 13: Bartosz J. Plachno and Lyudmila E. Muravnik: Functional anatomy of carnivorous traps
- 14: Simon Poppinga, Ulrike Bauer, Thomas Speck, and Alexander G. Volkov: Motile traps
- 15: Ulrike Bauer, Reinhard Jetter, and Simon Poppinga: Non-motile traps
- 16: Ildikó Matu?iková, Andrej Pavlovic, and Tanya Renner: Biochemistry of prey digestion and nutrient absorption
- 17: Lubomír Adamec and Andrej Pavlovic: Mineral nutrition of terrestrial carnivorous plants
- 18: Thomas J. Givnish, K. William Sparks, Steven J. Hunter, and Andrej Pavlovic: Why are plants carnivorous? Cost/benefit analysis, whole-plant growth, and the context- specific advantages of botanical carnivory
- 19: Lubomír Adamec: Ecophysiology of aquatic carnivorous plants
- 20: Laurent Legendre and Douglas W. Darnowski: Biotechnology with carnivorous plants
- Part IV: Ecology
- 21: Douglas W. Darnowski, Ulrike Bauer, Marcos Méndez, John D. Horner, and Bartosz J. Plachno: Prey selection and specialization by carnivorous plants
- 22: Adam T. Cross, Arthur R. Davis, Andreas Fleischmann, John D. Horner, Andreas Jürgens, David J. Merritt, Gillian L. Murza, and Shane R. Turner: Reproductive biology and prey-pollinator conflicts
- 23: Leonora S. Bittleston: Commensals of Nepenthes pitchers
- 24: Thomas E. Miller, William E. Bradshaw, and Christina M. Holzapfel: Pitcher-plant communities as model systems for addressing fundamental questions in ecology and evolution
- 25: Dagmara Sirová, Jirí Bárta, Jakub Borovec, and Jaroslav Vrba: The Utricularia-associated microbiome: composition, function, and ecology
- 26: Jonathan A. Moran, Bruce Anderson, Lijin Chin, Melinda Greenwood, and Charles Clarke: Nutritional mutualisms of Nepenthes and Roridula
- Part V: The future of carnivorous plants
- 27: Charles Clarke, Adam Ross, and Barry Rice: Conservation of carnivorous plants
- 28: Matthew C. Fitzpatrick and Aaron M. Ellison: Estimating the exposure of carnivorous plants to rapid climatic change
- 29: Aaron M. Ellison and Lubomír Adamec: The future of research with carnivorous plants