Green Inheritance: Saving the Plants of the World.GREEN INHERITANCE: Saving the Plants of the World ANTHONY HUXLEY Conservation efforts have traditionally focused on animals, from monarch butterflies to giant pandas. But the plants on which these and all other animals rely, directly or indirectly, for sustenance Sustenance Amalthaea goat who provided milk for baby Zeus. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 41] ambrosia food of the gods; bestowed immortal youthfulness. [Gk. Myth. are often taken for granted Adj. 1. taken for granted - evident without proof or argument; "an axiomatic truth"; "we hold these truths to be self-evident" axiomatic, self-evident obvious - easily perceived by the senses or grasped by the mind; "obvious errors" by the public. Nettles net·tle n. 1. Any of numerous plants of the genus Urtica, having toothed leaves, unisexual apetalous flowers, and stinging hairs that cause skin irritation on contact. 2. Any of various hairy, stinging, or prickly plants. , bamboo plants, and potatoes don't inspire the same degree of passion that our nearer relatives do. Huxley's aim is to emphasize plants' unique role in maintaining life on Earth and to illuminate the plight of many crops, trees, and flowering plants plants which have stamens and pistils, and produce true seeds; phenogamous plants; - distinguished from See also: Flowering that are being slashed or harvested into oblivion. Plants alone have the capacity to convert raw chemicals such as nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon--through the process of photosynthesis--into living tissue. Science writer Huxley details plants' uses as medicines, fuel, food, and objects of beauty. It's just this utility that is threatening many plant species with extinction, Huxley notes. This beautiful book deftly deft adj. deft·er, deft·est Quick and skillful; adroit. See Synonyms at dexterous. [Middle English, gentle, humble, variant of dafte, foolish; see daft. makes the case for botanical conservation. Univ. Calif. Press, 2006, 192 p., color plates and illus., paperback, $29.95. |
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