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  <title>The green world :</title>
  <subTitle>Plant Development</subTitle>
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  <namePart>Hopkins, William G</namePart>
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   <placeTerm type="text">USA</placeTerm>
   <publisher>Chelsea House Publishers</publisher>
   <dateIssued>2006</dateIssued>
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 <note>“Have you thanked a green plant today?” reads a popular bumper sticker.&#13;
Indeed, we should thank green plants for providing the food we eat, fiber for&#13;
the clothing we wear, wood for building our houses, and the oxygen we breathe.&#13;
Without plants, humans and other animals simply could not exist. Psychologists&#13;
tell us that plants also provide a sense of well-being and peace of mind,&#13;
which is why we preserve forested parks in our cities, surround our homes&#13;
with gardens, and install plants and flowers in our homes and workplaces. Gifts&#13;
of flowers are the most popular way to acknowledge weddings, funerals, and&#13;
other events of passage. Gardening is one of the fastest-growing hobbies in&#13;
North America and the production of ornamental plants contributes billions&#13;
of dollars annually to the economy.&#13;
Human history has been strongly influenced by plants. The rise of agriculture&#13;
in the Fertile Crescent of Mesopotamia brought previously scattered&#13;
hunter-gatherers together into villages. Ever since, the availability of land&#13;
and water for cultivating plants has been a major factor in determining the&#13;
location of human settlements. World exploration and discovery was driven&#13;
by the search for herbs and spices. The cultivation of New World crops—sugar,&#13;
By William G. Hopkins&#13;
vii&#13;
cotton, and tobacco—was responsible for the introduction of slavery to&#13;
America, the human and social consequences of which are still with us. The&#13;
push westward by English colonists into the rich lands of the Ohio River&#13;
Valley in the mid-1700s was driven by the need to increase corn production&#13;
and was a factor in precipitating the French and Indian War. The Irish Potato&#13;
Famine in 1847 set in motion a wave of migration, mostly to North America,&#13;
that would reduce the population of Ireland by half over the next 50 years.&#13;
As a young university instructor directing biology tutorials in a classroom&#13;
that looked out over a wooded area, I would ask each group of students to&#13;
look out the window and tell me what they saw. More often than not, the&#13;
question would be met with a blank, questioning look. Plants are so much&#13;
a part of our environment and the fabric of our everyday lives that they&#13;
rarely register in our conscious thought. Yet today, faced with disappearing&#13;
rainforests, exploding population growth, urban sprawl, and concerns about&#13;
climate change, the productive capacity of global agricultural and forestry&#13;
ecosystems is put under increasing pressure. Understanding plants is&#13;
even more essential as we attempt to build a sustainable environment for&#13;
the future.&#13;
THE GREEN WORLD series opens doors to the world of plants. The series&#13;
describes what plants are, what plants do, and where plants fit into the&#13;
overall scheme of things. In Plant Development, the reader is introduced&#13;
to patterns of development in plants as they progress through the life&#13;
cycle from seed to mature plant. We learn how plants grow, how they use&#13;
hormones and signals from their environment to coordinate their development,&#13;
and how they can measure time.</note>
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 <subject authority="">
  <topic>Development</topic>
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  <topic>EBOOK</topic>
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  <topic>plant</topic>
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 <identifier type="isbn">0791085627</identifier>
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  <physicalLocation>e-BOOK UPT Perpustakaan Instiper Yogyakarta</physicalLocation>
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