Atlas of Nevada Conifers is a major scientific contribution to our understanding of the ecology of Nevada. It documents in great detail the distribution of all native conifer species in the state-critical information because of the primary ecological importance of conifers for all organisms and because of the lack of documentation of these distributions in the scientific literature before now. Charlet maps and documents the exact location of herbarium records for 1,600 individual trees. The data found in 23 tables and 22 range maps will serve as a primary reference for botanists, land managers, and conservation biologists for years to come.
The Atlas of Nevada Conifers will be a definitive resource for botanists, land managers, and conservation biologists for decades to come. Author David Charlet's detailed maps and exhaustive records are like treasure maps to the many unexplored motherlodes of biodiversity waiting to be explored in the Great Basin [for anyone] with a strong sense of curiosity and Atlas in hand, whether professional scientist or amateur nature lover . . ."" —David Lukas, Great Basin News ""He gives 20 excellent illustrations by Bridget Keimel, 22 dot-distribution maps plotting herbarium data and reported sightings, and detailed distributional data (location, elevation, collection, herbarium acronym) from 202 mountain ranges. . . . This exceptionally valuable effort extends ranges of most of the species in the state."" —Rudolf Schmid, Taxon 46 ""Though isolated conifer stands in Nevada have been the subject of active inquiry for the past 50 years, Dr. Charlet discovered many conifer locations that had never been recorded. This atlas documents his extensive field research to accurately identify the species and locations of the state's conifer stands, precisely maps the distribution of all the species, and significantly extends the known range of almost every species of pine, fir, spruce, juniper, and cedar in the state."" —SciTech Book News, March 1997
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