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The second edition of The Jepson Manual thoroughly updates this acclaimed work, the single most comprehensive resource on California's amazingly diverse flora. The Jepson Manual, second edition, integrates the latest science with the results of intensive fieldwork, institutional collaboration, and efforts of hundreds of contributing authors into an essential reference on California's native and naturalized vascular plants.
The second edition includes treatments of many newly described or discovered taxa and recently introduced plants, and reflects major improvements to plant taxonomy from phylogenetic studies. Nearly two-thirds of the 7,600 species, subspecies, and varieties the volume describes are now illustrated with diagnostic drawings. Geographic distributions, elevation ranges, flowering times, nomenclature, and the status of non-natives and native taxa of special concern have all been updated throughout. This edition also allows for identification of 240 alien taxa that are not fully naturalized but sometimes encountered. A new chapter on geologic, climatic, and vegetation history of California is also featured.
- Sales Rank: #346921 in Books
- Published on: 2012-01-31
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 10.75" h x 2.50" w x 8.25" l, 5.75 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 1600 pages
- Canvas cover with handles
Review
"For serious wildflower enthusiasts, this is a must-have reference book."--"Desert Sun"
"A wonderful resource and indispensible reference for anyone working with the flora of western North America and beyond."--Richard Felger, University of Arizona Herbarium"Economic Botany" (01/20/2013)
"The book . . . is an indispensable up-to-date treasure trove for academics and a flora to be envied by botanists from outside California."--Ivan Hoste"Plant Ecology and Evolution" (05/01/2013)
"Certainly one of the most comprehensive regional floras now available. . . . A wonderful resource and indispensible reference for anyone working with the flora of western North America and beyond."--Richard Felger, University of Arizona Herbarium"Economic Botany" (01/20/2013)
"Another milestone in Californian botanical literature."--Marcel Rejmanek"Plant Science Bulletin" (10/01/2012)"
A wonderful resource and indispensible reference for anyone working with the flora of western North America and beyond. --Richard Felger, University of Arizona Herbarium"Economic Botany" (01/20/2013)"
Certainly one of the most comprehensive regional floras now available. . . . A wonderful resource and indispensible reference for anyone working with the flora of western North America and beyond. --Richard Felger, University of Arizona Herbarium"Economic Botany" (01/20/2013)"
From the Inside Flap
California’s extraordinary flora is described in contemporary detail in this handy volume, which should prove an inspiration to all of those interested in these plants, their habitats, and their importance to a state richer in botanical diversity than any other part of the United States. This is a thorough revision of an indispensable book.”Peter H. Raven, Missouri Botanical Garden
This second edition of The Jepson Manual is a monumental achievement! Far more than a simple update, the book has gone through a thorough revision, making it a must-have book for California plant enthusiastsprofessional and lay alike."Lucinda McDade, Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden
Biogeographers, vegetation ecologists, and practitioners of conservation and restoration will all welcome the second edition of the Jepson Manual. Many improvements in this second edition include major taxonomic name changes, more information on habitat/range/phenology, better keys, and new illustrations. The second edition is more user-friendly, accurate, and scientifically rigorous. And these improvements are exactly the kind of recent, authoritative, and trusted flora needed.”Michael G. Barbour, University of California, Davis
About the Author
Bruce G. Baldwin is Curator of the Jepson Herbarium and Professor of Integrative Biology at the University of California, Berkeley. Douglas H. Goldman is Herbarium Associate at the Harvard University Herbaria. David J. Keil is Professor Emeritus and Director of the Robert F. Hoover Herbarium at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.Robert W. Patterson is Professor of Biology at San Francisco State University. Thomas J. Rosatti is Specialist at the University and Jepson Herbaria, University of California, Berkeley. Dieter H. Wilken is Director of Conservation at the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden.
Most helpful customer reviews
33 of 33 people found the following review helpful.
Great tool for identification, and learning
By average joe buckaroo
I botanize in California. As a professional botanist, a book like this is essential to my work. I also live and teach botany outside of California. After going over my personal copy for a week, I can see real value in getting some additional copies for student use for the lab portion of my course. The second edition follows on the first edition in having a very useful family-level key. I emphasize family level sight recognition in my teaching, but students have to learn that skill and using a family level key is critical during the learning process. A plant like Larrea (creosote bush) technically has a compound leaf; but with only two leaflets, someone who doesn't know that is likely to interpret it as a simple leaf. With TJM2, you will successfully key it out either way.
Scientific knowledge of plant family boundaries and relationships have increased dramatically over the past 20 years, and TJM2 has taken the important, but likely uncomfortable step for some, of following a modern circumscription of families. But the editors didn't arbitrarily just pledge allegiance to treatments such as the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group II or III (the compilation of TJM2 easily predated APGIII). For example, APGIII treats a huge diversity in the single family Asparagaceae; TJM2 favors recognizing a number of smaller families. Ditto for Caprifoliaceae, which encompasses all but Adoxaceae in APGIII, but here is treated as Caprifoliaceae, Dipsacaceae, Linnaeaceae, etc. Monophyly is an important objective for both APGIII and TJM2 so recognizing Sarcobatus in Sarcobataceae outside of Amaranthaceae is followed in both. I personally like the approach of TJM2 over APGIII for the examples given above.
Two aids are presented that really make the revised family level taxonomy accessible to non professionals. First, a phylogenetic tree is presented on the two pages of the inside back cover. This will be incredibly useful as a learning aid for students. I know some students that have taken a range-plant ID course are going to balk at hearing me teach Amaranthaceae as inclusive of Amaranthaceae and Chenopodiaceae, but excluding Sarcobataceae. The phylogentic tree provides a ready reference for students to see the phylogenetic distance between Sarcobataceae and Amaranthaceae. At the same time, they can see how Caprifoliaceae, Linnaeaceae, etc form a monophyletic group and why another author/book/APGIII might recognize just one larger Caprifoliacaee. Kudos to the editors for adding this detail! On the tree, the family names are followed by the first page number of their treatment--another useful touch.
The second aid to help with using new family circumscriptions is that, under the traditional family, the new family assignments for genera treated within that family in TJM1 are given. For example, Portulacaceae only includes the genus Portulaca now; other genera in California such as Lewisia or Claytonia are now recognized as Montiaceae. Under the family description for Portulacaceae, the reference to Montiaceae is given. Same for Scrophulariaceae where the family treatment clearly points one to Phrymaceae for Mimulus, Plantaginaceae for Penstemon, Orobanchaceae for Castilleja, etc. Useful, even for us professionals who try to keep up with the taxonomic literature but have to rewire our brains for some things long entrenched in practice. Even though TJM2 doesn't overlap entirely with all genera and species in my state, I can see I will use it as a reference with my local flora a lot.
Like TJM1, family and generic treatments and keys were written by a large group of experts (hundreds) with more or less experience and familiarity in their respective groups. Combined with inherent difficulties in recognizing some species and genera, I expect some keys to work better than others throughout the book. This is true also because the editors attempted to limit the complexity of botanical terminology used in the book to make it more accessible to laymen. In practice, the limited terminology results in some oversimplification or imprecision, but over all may have merit (technical terms exist for a reason; I'm reserving my verdict for now).
The illustrations for many representative species will continue to be useful and are appreciated.
Because taxonomy isn't static, further changes beyond the text are being updated online -- another enormous task in itself -- and URLs are given in this book at the front. Kudos to all involved for contributing to such a useful resource.
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Cheaper production than 1993 edition
By J. S. Radford
Unfortunately, if one is serious, one must buy this edition. But it is printed more cheaply than 1993 edition (like on onionskin) and feels cheap (printed on very thin but not top quality paper - just thin and cheap).
I also bought the digital version. Expensive. I am NOT impressed with it. Jepson people seem to be at about the DOS or maybe Windows 3.0 level of skill in converting their tome into something to use digitally - very minimal hypertext function. Very limited.
It is very cumbersome to use, though I have a pretty powerful computer, and not too interesting to use. I had hopes of being able to extract different families to make my own sub-text but that seems impossible.
I was hoping to use the digital version in the field for ID purposes but one would absolutely need a fast laptop. I had hopes of putting on a tablet. Not likely. Way too slow.
FOLLOW-UP NOTE: Not having a tablet (iPad or similar) I managed to put Jepson onto my Samsung Note 3. BUT it is totally worthless on that medium. EXTREMELY slow navigation, no search function, way too little displayed per screen, no bookmarking function, just plain worthless on that machine which is otherwise wonderful for most things.
SECOND FOLLOW-UP NOTES:
CAVEATS: I definitely implied that "The Jepson People" were responsible for the lesser quality paper (and lesser grand tome, compared to 1993 version, though, of course, the 2012 edition goes way beyond the earlier one content-wise ... and what really matters anyway?). My mistake! I understand from later interaction with UC Press and from reading MR. Ferguson's comment (below) that the Jepson people tried to do all the right things but it was not their call. UC Press is responsible. But then they are great people as well. I have dealt with them in regards to the Adobe Digital Editions ebook version of Jepson and they were nothing but helpful. Indeed, they were somewhat dismayed by the way the digital version came out - specifically were not happy with handling of the drawings. Apparently Adobe dropped the ball or something.
SUGGESTIONS: 1 - get the Kindle version of the ebook. UC Press will give you a link to use that better, faster version of the digital Jepson manual. 2 - bookmark the "eflora" web site for the Jepson manual. It has a nicely collected set of resources readily to hand for each and every taxon. 3 - I find if I use Kindle version with Epub version open as well and have computer in portrait mode (turned 90 degrees), then I can have the best of both worlds - fast access with Kindle version and the largest possible representations of the drawings through ePub version - but ONLY if computer monitor is rotated! If monitor is not rotated, the ePub version will truncate all drawings that are larger or largest sizes. With monitor turned, I get no loss of graphics even at largest sizes.].
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
An indispensable tool.
By Nick Liberato
I work as a field biologist and am frequently called upon by other members of my team to help ID mammals, herps, and arthropods (they're all more-than-competent birders), which poses no problem for me.
However, my botanical identification skills are somewhat rudimentary and I finally decided to break down and add this important tool to my arsenal. I've known of its existence for decades, but have never gotten around to purchasing it until now. I can already see that it will more than fill my needs, not only in identifying individual species, but in recognizing ecological plant communities as well.
The section on geographic subdivisions of CA (pp. 35-48, especially the map on page 43) is almost worth the price of admission itself.
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