The Genus Utricularia: A Taxonomic Monograph

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The Genus Utricularia:
A Taxonomic Monograph
OCLC
20762331

The Genus Utricularia: A Taxonomic Monograph is a

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in 1994.[2]

Background

Taylor's monograph represented the culmination of 41 years of research,[3][4] which included numerous field trips and herbarium visits (Taylor observed 90 species in habitat and estimated he had examined more than 50,000 herbarium specimens).[1] More than 900 Utricularia taxon names had to be considered for the revision, the vast majority of which proved to be synonyms.[5]

Content

Taylor recognised 214 species, which he classified into

infraspecific taxa were recognised. Each species was illustrated with a full-page line drawing created by the author and inked in by Sue Hillier.[1] Taylor's species list and classification are now generally accepted with some additions of newly described taxa and modifications based on phylogenetic studies.[5]

Reviews

The book was well received and in particular praised for its scope and comprehensiveness.[6][7] Donald Schnell reviewed the work for the March 1990 issue of the Carnivorous Plant Newsletter:[6]

Some may think me guilty of hyperbole after the following statement, but after careful consideration, I judge this to be the CP book publication event since Lloyd in 1942.

After forty years of backbreaking, sometimes heartbreaking, excruciatingly detailed and careful study of the genus Utricularia by this author, frequently working on his own time into nights and weekends, this is what we have been waiting for. The meticulous balance and perspective of studying many thousands of herbarium specimens and living plants in situ throughout the world range are all here. In a foreword, Kew Gardens Director Ghillean Prance notes that here we have the unusual complete taxonomic study (nowadays) of a large and complex genus, but also a genus which is global in extent.

[...] the book is soft cover but strongly manufactured. Paper and printing are excellent as is the line drawing and halftone work. There is a complete bibliography and index. I find the author's writing style to be particularly refreshing [in] these days of stilted academic conformity.

[...] I can recommend this book without reservation, and it should be in the personal library of all serious CP students, especially those who are working with utricularias at all.

In a 1991 issue of the

Brittonia
: "Forty years of love and devotion are reflected in this marvelous tome by the world's authority on bladderworts." But he added: "Two comments on the down side are that the specimen citations are restricted mostly to the types, and that the cover (in my copy) became unglued after I reviewed it." [8]

References

  1. ^ a b c Taylor, P. 1989. The genus Utricularia - a taxonomic monograph. Kew Bulletin Additional Series XIV: London.
  2. ^ The genus Utricularia : a taxonomic monograph. WorldCat.
  3. ^ Lowrie, A. 2002. "Utricularia petertaylorii (Lentibulariaceae), a new species from the south-west of Western Australia" (PDF). Nuytsia 14(3): 405–410.
  4. ^ McPherson, S. R. 2010. Carnivorous Plants and their Habitats. 2 volumes. Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole.
  5. ^ a b Fleischmann, A. 2012. The new Utricularia species described since Peter Taylor's monograph. Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 41(2): 67–76.
  6. ^ a b Schnell, D. 1990. Special book review. Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 19(2): 51–52.
  7. ^
    JSTOR 4110760