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Zona Tropical Publications

A Guide to Tropical Plants of Costa Rica

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Ranging from miniature epiphytic orchids to towering trees, and from mangrove forests lining coastal waterways to high-elevation cloud forests, Costa Rica's rich and varied flora attracts casual visitors as well as professional botanists. A Guide to Tropical Plants of Costa Rica, the first popular treatment to include plants from all regions of the country, is an indispensable guide to the country's native and exotic species. This book is beautifully illustrated with more than 540 photographs taken in the field, each depicting an entire plant or a closer view of flowers or fruits. Instructive pen-and-ink drawings of botanical details also accompany many of the accounts. The text clearly explains each plant's identifying characteristics and reveals fascinating facts about its natural history, chemical properties, and medicinal and other uses. Sidebars throughout the book elaborate on unusual uses of plants, distinct attributes of certain plant families, plants of particular microhabitats, and other topics of interest.

529 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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Profile Image for Paul Norwood.
135 reviews5 followers
January 25, 2024
The author set herself an impossible task to begin with, so I'm definitely giving her four stars here.
First of all, the first edition is better printed, but it's worth upgrading to the second edition because of a couple extra sections (Osa, especially), updated nomenclature, and a physically smaller book. The paper feels denser, though, so I'm not sure there's a significant weight saving. I was convinced that the new edition's paper would do poorly in the humidity but mine did fine.
The author herself says the arrangement is difficult. I've read the whole book and I still can't find anything in there. Some important groups are treated separately, but then they also have representatives "lost" in other sections. Everything is scattered everywhere which would be fine if this was a complete flora, but many common and representative plants are missing from the book so I often found myself thinking "for sure this tree is in here" and looking three times through almost the entire book. Say, aguacatillo is in there in a way, but I couldn't find it under avocado, or quetzal, or palta, oops! Forgot to look under aguacate. Also the sea almond for example, frustrated me a lot. I vaguely remembered it from Hawaii but couldn't find it at all in the book, even though it's locally common and important.
The photos are nice and the descriptions very readable. It's a good way to prepare for a trip, but not a field reference.
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