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9780826322395 Academic Inspection Copy

Changing Plant Life of La Frontera

Observations on Vegetation in the United States/Mexico Borderlands
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Originating in a symposium on 'Vegetation and Flora of La Frontera' held at the American Institute of Biological Sciences to honour the late Forrest Shreve, pioneer desert ecologist, this collaboration of outstanding biologists, environmentalists, and climatologists from both sides of La Frontera presents a new agenda for study of the strikingly diverse shrub and grassland ecosystems of the US/Mexico border. The twenty-two contributors focus their expertise on historic cross-border changes in vegetation stemming from disparate land-use practices in the United States/Mexico border region -- La Frontera -- a 100-km-wide strip on either side of the international boundary. The diversity of scientific approaches includes fire histories, pollen studies, repeat aerial and ground photographic analyses, botanical surveys, biogeography, and paleoecology, to name a few. This book is richly illustrated with Landstat images, repeat ground photography, vegetation and reference maps, landscape photographs, and numerous graphs and diagrams.
Grady L Webster and Conrad J Bahre
"I recommend [the book] for those seriously interested in understanding the human impact on our border region and how plants and plant communities respond to human and natural pressures. It should be required reading for those involved in discussion of transborder questions of environmental contamination and degradation." "I recommend Ythe book? for those seriously interested in understanding the human impact on our border region and how plants and plant communities respond to human and natural pressures. It should be required reading for those involved in discussion of transborder questions of environmental contamination and degradation." Recommended for biology collections, and potentially of interest to anthropology, Latin American studies, and political science programs. "Recommended for biology collections, and potentially of interest to anthropology, Latin American studies, and political science programs."
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