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A Natural History of Nettles
by Keith G R Wheeler
312 pages; quality trade paperback (softcover); b&w illustrations, reproduced in color on supplemental CD; catalogue #04-0522; ISBN 1-4120-2694-6; US$26.29, C$32.99, EUR21.99, £14.99
Nettles, followers of mankind, steeped in folklore. Enter their fascinating and beautiful world without being stung! Learn about their great utility which has alleviated suffering during war, disease and famine.
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About the book About the author Reviews Excerpts
Samples of the full colour images included on CD Catalogue info
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About the Book
The first book ever on the much maligned nettles of the world presents a story of these followers of mankind and his cattle throughout history. This study centres on the most abundant and sub-cosmopolitan common stinging nettle (Urtica dioica), but also deals with other nettles throughout the world. Tropical tormentors rich in species include the notorious nettle trees with their formidable stings which fascinated the Europeans after their discovery by botanists on the round-the-world trips of exploration in the 17-19th centuries. Many people on their travels will have met the nettle trees of the Indo-Malay region and other stinging nettles in North and South America, India, etc., which sting and have beautiful flowers but are called nettles; these are also dealt with. The first microscopists and their descriptions of the beautiful stinging hair; the uncovering of the mechanism of its action and the more recent elucidation of the toxins causing the characteristic symptoms is a fascinating one and takes up 3 chapters.
The book includes the 100 major scientific works published on the common stinging nettle and never brought to the notice of the general public before. The author spent six years studying the ecology of the nettle patch, its invertebrate herbivores (mainly insects) and vertebrate herbivores (cattle, deer, etc.,) and their interactions with other plants: its secret life is recorded in line drawings and photographs (1000+ individual items). It was not possible to publish these in colour but they are in full colour on a CD-ROM (300 dpi) at the back of the book. Covered also are nettle folklore, fibre use in World War I & II, as a food, fodder, herbal medicine, growth as a competitor plant, habitats, sex (unique exploding stamens), breeding systems, variation, evolution etc.!! Some the world's most beautiful butterflies would not exist without nettles.
About the Author
Born in North London at the beginning of WWII. Main interest is general natural history whilst specialist areas are plants, fungi, and insects (mainly butterflies & moths). Other interests are microscopy and photography. Qualifications are B.Sc. Botany, London (Kings College) 1962, Ph. D. Ecology, (Exeter) 1982. Teacher of Biology and Science at secondary school level. Part-time freelance photographer (mainly natural history) in the 80s to the present. Publication of photographs/articles in Amateur Photographer, and other magazines and books. Awards for photographic competitions include: BBC Wildlife, 1985, first in category 'Beyond the Human Eye': Olympus 70th Anniversary, 1990, Grand Prix winner, category II, Nature Photo: Visions of Science, Novartis, 2002, Close-up category.
Reviews
"There is plenty within the book to merit its place on an entomologist's bookshelf. The colour plates (when printed out at high resolution) are stunning...when you have it revel in the superb illustrations of insects"
Dr Phil Wilkins (Editor of Amateur Entomologist's Society)"Everything about this book speaks enthusiasm, from the home-made... format to the profusion of diagrams and pictures... Nettles... a success story... have become the most ubiquitous plant in the whole flora... still spreading. Wheeler describes the small world of the nettle forest, with its legions of moths (butterflies), bugs, beetles and flies, not to mention its parasites, including Dodder and Nettle Rust. ÉWheeler is interested in everything about his subject. The book Éwith self-help publishing and a CD-ROM showing us what the pictures would have looked like in full colour. At £15 it is a bargain. But the author's sheer exuberance, verbal and visual, makes all this rather endearing."
PETER MARREN BRITISH WILDLIFE Vol. 16 No.5 June 2005"This hugely entertaining and enthusiastic account of nettles, profusely illustrated with black-and-white photos and drawings (plus a bonus CD of colour Images!), delves into every conceivable aspect of these plants. Above all, the book is packed with the sort of detail that distinguishes the best natural history writing. The author has not only made numerous field observations but also has scoured the literature in arts and science. Here is a most eccentric book - but a small masterpiece."
John Akeroyd. Sherkin Comment, Issue No. 40. Environmental Quarterly of Sherkin Island Marine Station, Ireland, 2005.
Excerpts
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Samples of the full colour images included on CD
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Catalogue Information
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