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Lady's-slippers in Your Pocket

A Guide to the Native Lady's-slipper Orchids, Cypripedium, of the United States and Canada

By Paul Martin Brown

Bur Oak Guides

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laminated fold-out guide, 34 color photos, 2008
16 3/4 x 16 7/8 inches folds to 4 1/8 x 9 inches
$9.95, 1-58729-655-1, 978-1-58729-655-0
$99.00, 10-pack point-of-purchase display, 1-58729-659-4, 978-1-58729-659-8

Available March 2008

Native orchids are increasingly threatened by pressure from population growth and development but, nonetheless, still present a welcome surprise to observant hikers in every state and province. Compiled and illustrated by long-time orchid specialist Paul Martin Brown, this pocket guide to lady's-slippers is the first in a series that will cover all the wild orchids of the continental United States and Canada.

Brown provides general distributional information, time of flowering, and habitat requirements for each species as well as a complete list of hybrids and the many different growth and color forms that can make identifying orchids so intriguing. For lady's-slippers he includes information on 12 species, 2 additional varieties, and 6 hybrids.

Wild lady's-slippers grow from Alaska, with the spotted lady's-slipper, Cypripedium guttatum, to Texas, with the ivory-lipped lady's-slipper, C. kentuckiense. Most of these species are easy to identify based upon their general appearance, range, and time of flowering. Answer three simple questions—when, where, and how does it grow? Then compare the living plant with the striking photos in this backpack-friendly laminated guide and consult the key that Brown has created. Following these steps should enable both professional and amateur naturalists to achieve the satisfaction of identifying specific orchids in their native environment.

Paul Martin Brown is a research associate at the University of Florida Herbarium, Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville, and at the Botanical Research Institute of Texas. Founder and editor of the North American Native Orchid Journal, he is the author of eleven books, most recently Wild Orchids of the Northeast and Field Guide to the Wild Orchids of Texas. He has discovered or named several new species of ladies'-tresses in the past ten years and coauthored the treatment of Spiranthes for the Flora of North America series.

Check out the review posted online for the Cedar Rapids Gazette, please click here.

 

 

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