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         Botany Institutions:     more books (100)
  1. The ecological relations of roots, (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication, no. 286) by John E Weaver, 1919
  2. Bibliographical index to North American botany;: Or, citations of authorities for all the recorded indigenous and naturalized species of the flora of North ... miscellaneous collections [v.l5,art. 1]) by Sereno Watson, 1878
  3. Geological and natural history survey of North Carolina, part III, botany: Containing a catalogue of the plants of the state by M. A Curtis, 1867
  4. Development and activities of roots of crop plants;: A study in crop ecology, (Carnegie Institution of Washington publication) by John E Weaver, 1922
  5. Institutions and Inequalities: Essays in Honour of André Béteille
  6. Gardens of Empire: Botanical Institutions of the Victorian British Empire by Donal P. McCracken, 1997-07
  7. Costa Rican mosses collected by Paul C. Standley in 1924-1926, (Smithsonian Institution. United States National Museum. Contributions from the United States National Museum) by Edwin Bunting Bartram, 1928
  8. Antinomies of Society: Essays on Ideologies and Institutions by André Béteille, 2003-08-07
  9. Institutions and Markets in India's Development: Essays For K. N. Raj
  10. Law and Institutions of the European Union by K. P. E. Lasok, the late D. Lasok, et all 1998-06
  11. Our Green and Living World: The Wisdom to Save It by Edward S. Ayensu, Vernon H. Heywood, et all 1984-11-30
  12. Leaf anatomy and systematics of New World Velloziaceae (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Edward S Ayensu, 1974
  13. Morden-Smithsonian Expedition to Dominica: the lichens (Thelotremataceae) (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Mason E Hale, 1974
  14. Classification, evolution, and phylogeny of the families of Dicotyledons (Smithsonian contributions to botany) by Aaron Goldberg, 1986

61. Institute For Systematic Botany | Herbarium Use Policy
Loans are made for one year to botanical institutions or departments engaged in taxonomicresearch. 2000 Institute for Systematic botany Last Updated March
http://www.plantatlas.usf.edu/isb/use.htm
Herbarium Use Policy
The University of South Florida (USF) Herbarium facility is primarily for teaching and research by the USF faculty, staff, and students. In addition, the facilities are open for systematic research (e.g. monographic, floristic, revisionary studies) by individuals associated with other universities and research institutions on a reciprocal basis. Researchers conducting projects specifically related to plant systematics are encouraged to use the collections. Initially, such researchers must contact the Director or Curator for permission to use the collections. Standard and common sense care for the specimens must be maintained at all times, including but not limited to the following:
  • Persons working with the collection will be expected to fully understand its organization.
  • Specimens must be properly refiled. If there is any question about the positioning of material, it should be refiled by herbarium personnel.
  • Sheets are to be handled with care. Do not bend, break, or tear the sheets, and do not turn them face down.

62. Environmental Archaeology Links (EAL) - Botanical Resources
Internet Directory for botany (Raino Lampinen, Botanical Museum, Finnish Museumof Natural History); Botanical Gardens/Museums/Research institutions.
http://www.envarch.net/botres.html
Botany web resources
General Botanical Gardens/Museums/Research Institutions Gardening General
Botanical Gardens/Museums/Research Institutions
Gardening
EAL index Return to main index

63. UW Department Of Botany: GRADUATE PROGRAM OVERVIEW
Student Group The Department of botany enrolls approximately 40 graduate studentswho come from diverse educational institutions and geographic regions.
http://depts.washington.edu/botweb/gradprogram/fact_sheet.htm
The Graduate Program in Botany: Overview
Programs of Study
The Department of Botany offers graduate studies leading to the Ph.D. and M.S. degrees, with emphasis in the areas of plant molecular biology, plant physiology, population biology, ecology, paleobotany, and systematics. The range of the faculty interests include protista, algae and fungi as well as non-vascular and vascular plants. Students may also take advantage of close ties to other departments at the University, such as Genetics, Biochemistry, Microbiology, and Zoology, as well as the Friday Harbor Marine Laboratories on San Juan Island, the College of Forest Resources, the Center for Quantitative Sciences, the College of Ocean and Fishery Sciences, the Center for Quaternary Research, and the Center for Urban Horticulture. Students are required to rotate through different research laboratories in their first year to compare laboratories in their area of interest and to learn new techniques that may prove helpful in their research program. Other requirements include a limited number of formal courses, an oral comprehensive exam (Ph.D. only) a thesis/dissertation describing original research, and an oral defense of this work. (Click here to see the Department of Botany Course Catalog) Admission Requirements:
1. Prerequisites

64. Irish Scientic Institutions
Department of Pure and Applied Mathematics Department of Biochemistry Departmentof botany Department of Chemistry OTHER IRISH SCIENTIFIC institutions.
http://www.dcu.ie/staff/hsheehan/sts/isis.htm
SCIENCE IN IRELAND: THE VENUES
THE UNIVERSITIES
DUBLIN CITY UNIVERSITY School of Biological Sciences
School of Chemical Sciences
School of Physical Sciences DCU in a joint degree with Queens University Belfast also offers an M Sc in Science Communication UNIVERSITY COLLEGE CORK Department of Biochemistry
Department of Chemistry
Department of Mathematics
Department of Mathematical Physics
Department of Physics
Department of Zoology UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN Department of Botany
Department of Biochemistry
Department of Geology
Department of Industrial Microbiology Department of Pharmacology Department of Physiology Department of Zoology Department of Experimental Physics UNIVERSITY COLLEGE GALWAY Botany Department Chemistry Department Electronic Engineering Department Information Technology Department Mathematics Department Physics Department UNIVERSITY OF LIMERICK Department of Chemical and Environmental Science Department of Physics Department of Materials Science and Technology Department of Computer Science and Information Systems The National Technological Park Information Technology Department TRINITY COLLEGE DUBLIN Department of Pure and Applied Mathematics Department of Biochemistry Department of Botany Department of Chemistry Department of Genetics Department of Geology Department of Microbiology School of Pharmacy Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry Department of Pharmaceutics Department of Pharmacology Department of Pharmacognosy Department of Physics Department Zoology ST. PATRICK'S COLLEGE

65. Botany Of Plane Trees
botany of plane trees. the correct specific name for the London plane, and the namesused by some common British reference works and institutions are listed
http://www.chengappa.demon.co.uk/planes/text/botany.html
Botany of plane trees
Description
Plane trees, genus Platanus L., form the only genus in the dicotyledon family Platanaceae, in the order Hamamelidales. The order and genus arose early in the evolution of flowering plants, and fossil specimens are known from the earlier Cretaceous period, over 100 million years ago. The trees are deciduous and bisexual (both sexes borne on the same tree.) There are about 6-7 species, all trees from the northern hemisphere, mostly in temperate regions. Platanus kerrii is found in Indochina, Platanus orientalis in West Asia and South Europe, and Platanus occidentalis, P. racemosa, P. wrightii, P. lindeniana are from North America. A detailed botanical description of the family and genus can be found at this website . Some aids to identifying the distinct varieties can be found here on this site. All plane trees are large, generally 20-50m high. Flaking bark that peels away in thin sheets, often leaving a dappled trunk is a common characteristic. However forms occur in which the bark is retained. Leaves are borne alternately on the stem. They are always simple (not split into leaflets). In most species they are palmately lobed and veined, (in P. kerrii leaves are unlobed, pinnately serrate and pinnately veined). The axillary bud on the shoot is covered completely during the growing season by the base of the petiole, which may be swollen to accomodate it. The shoots and young leaves are covered by hairs or a fine down when young, this is probably to protect the young tissue from sunlight and water loss. The hairs are usually shed as the leaves mature, but sometimes they are partially retained on the underside of the leaves. Stipules are often present, part of each stipule forming a tube around the shoot, the rest of it forming a leafy extension.

66. SDNHM: Botany Collection Policies And Protocols
Destructive testing The botany Department follows the institutional policy in approving providedto researchers associated with nonprofit institutions at no
http://www.sdnhm.org/research/botany/policies.html
CONTACT
Jon Rebman
or Judy Gibson
SDNHM
P.O. Box 121390
San Diego, CA 92112-1390 USA
(619) 232-3821, ext. 229
fax: (619) 232-0248
botany@sdnhm.org

Policies and Protocols Policies that govern the acquisition, care and use of specimens were formally approved by the San Diego Society of Natural History Board of Trustees in January 1995, with revisions in 1997. The Museum's Collections Policy establishes policies for: code of ethics, acquisitions, documentation and care of collections, deaccessioning, loans, forensic collections and voucher collections repository, sampling and destructive testing, access, etc. The Botany Department establishes departmental procedures to implement the general museum policies within the framework of its disciplinary concerns. Acquisitions
Specimens are acquired that will strengthen the existing collection relative to the research priorities of staff and research associates as well as the regional emphasis of the museum. Specimens may be acquired by fieldwork, exchange, gift, purchase, or bequest. Material is accepted from contract projects within the region if well prepared and accompanied by adequate data. Specimens are accepted only with clear documentation of legal title (e.g., proof of permits, landowner permission, etc.). Access to and loans of specimens The primary reason for holding specimens is their use in scientific research and education. Thus the policies for access to collections and for loans are designed to maximize the usefulness of the collections while minimizing risk of damage to or loss of the collections. Loans of specimens are approved by the Curator, and are made to researchers representing not-for profit institutions. Students may borrow specimens only with the written approval of their faculty advisor. Loans are made for one year at a time, with consideration of written renewal requests. Any restrictions due to the physical nature of the specimen or particular value (scientific or commercial) are clearly identified before the loan is finally approved. Staff make every effort to respond to loan requests promptly.

67. Arnold Arboretum - South Central China And Tibet: Hotspot Of Diversity - Researc
flora and a record of the social, political, and religious institutions of the Herbaria,1997, 1998, 2000 Chen Wenyun, Kunming Institute of botany, 1998 Chen
http://www.arboretum.harvard.edu/library/tibet/researchers.html
South Cental China and Tibet: Hotspots of Diversity
Expeditions Researchers Publications Participating Institutions Map and Gazetteer Search Expedition Collections ... Share Your Feedback
South Central China and Tibet: Hotspot of Diversity
Researchers
David Boufford
As assistant director for collections in the Harvard University Herbaria, David Boufford has done fieldwork in Asia since 1977 and in China since 1980. His early explorations in China took place in the central part of the country, where the flora is similar to that of eastern North America; in 1988, with Bruce Bartholomew of the California Academy of Sciences, he collected in the easternmost part of the Hengduan region in eastern Sichuan; and in 1995 he organized an expedition to the border of Tibet, in south central Qinghai. Since 1997 Dr. Boufford has worked on determining the western and southern boundaries of the Hengduan Mountain hotspot while continuing to collect specimens of vascular plants, bryophytes, and fungi. He has also done fieldwork in Bhutan, Japan, South Korea, Nepal, and Taiwan.
Susan Kelley
Associate curator Susan Kelley is responsible for developing and managing the Arnold Arboretum's digital mapping system. In 2000 she became the first non-Asian woman to participate in an extensive botanical field expedition in Tibet. She had previously done fieldwork with Taiwanese botanists in the mountains of Taiwan.

68. Environmental Studies Curriculum Offered At ACS Member Institutions
courses recommended for the environmental studies minor BI 206 Field botany; andarable land may destabilize economic, political, and social institutions.
http://www.colleges.org/~enviro/resources/envcurriculum.html
Environmental Studies Curriculum
GENERAL
Mission and History

Leadership Roles

Newsletters

ALLIANCES
Overview

Campus as Lab

Campus-

Community
...
Global Community
CAMPUS CONTACTS Team Member by Group ACS Database CURRICULUM Course List by Campus Majors, Minors and Programs STUDENTS Student Interns Careers/Internships WebBoard EVENTS Upcoming Workshops Past Workshops/ Conferences ... Programs RESOURCES Travel Policies Campus Greenpages Campus Operations Campus Calendars ... Websites Environmental Studies Curriculum offered at ACS Member Institutions Birmingham Southern College Centenary College Furman University Millsaps College ... Washington and Lee University Birmingham-Southern College Environmental Studies Minor For further information, contact: Jeanne Jackson Director of Leadership Studies Birmingham-Southern College 900 Arkadelphia Rd. Birmingham, AL 35254

69. Herbarium Use, Department Of Botany, University Of Guelph
Link to botany Main Page, Herbarium Use. doing graduate work are frequent visitorsto confirm scientific names or borrow specimens from other institutions.
http://www.uoguelph.ca/botany/facilities/herbarium/use.htm
Herbarium Use Welcome Message Contact Us Site Index Links The herbarium is used by many individuals in the public and in the university community. The herbarium staff are consulted on identification of plants poisonous to both animals and humans. We assist farmers and members of the various government ministries on weed species as well as endangered species. Persons from the horticultural trade as well as landscape architects, environmental consultants utilize our resources. University students from a variety of disciplines such as biology, geography, zoology, veterinary medicine, crop science and entomology come to the herbarium to use our extensive library, our expertise and the actual herbarium specimens. Professors and students doing graduate work are frequent visitors to confirm scientific names or borrow specimens from other institutions. Most herbaria have an international program of borrowing and lending herbarium specimens to other institutions. We also have an active exchange program that is essential for increasing our international holdings of plant species.

70. Shannon Binns, Alumni Profile, Department Of Botany, University Of Guelph
However, it is not impossible to do well in botany (and Crop Science, Environmental Myexperience at other institutions, and with other peers from all over the
http://www.uoguelph.ca/botany/people/alumni/Binns_Shannon.htm
Alumni Profile
Shannon Binns Welcome Message Contact Us Site Index Links
B.Sc. 1997 Minor in Plant Biology, University of Guelph
Ph.D. 2001 Plant Systematics and Phytochemistry, University of Ottawa
How did you become interested in plant biology? I entered Biological Sciences unspecialized because I was an Arts and Science student who had many interests. After first focusing on Marine Biology for a year as a possible future, I became inspired by the teachings of Dr. Larry Peterson and Dr. Greenwood in Introductory Botany during the fall semester of my second year (1994). Perhaps because I felt more at ease on campus and in my classes, but also definitely as a result of their teaching styles and the labs, I gained a tremendous insight from this course and decided to fill my schedule with various botanical courses. Why did you choose the University of Guelph to pursue a degree? I chose the University of Guelph because it offered FLEXIBILITY in designing your own program for a degree that would give a really good overview of many areas of Biology. I was also excited to be part of a University with a legacy, but also the obvious lack of pretension or "eliteness" that is often my experience in visiting other old Ontario institutions. Being a student at U of Guelph is about stretching for the heights with the constant reminder that we all need to maintain our "roots" firmly planted in the earth.

71. DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY - Main Page
contacts exist to various foreign institutions, especially to the University of Groningen,The Netherlands; The Institute of Ecology and botany, the Hungarian
http://botanika.bf.jcu.cz/English/
Èeská verze
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Èeské Budìjovice

Branišovská 31, CZ-370 05 Èeské Budìjovice

Head of the Department: Prof. Karel Prach
Email: Prach@bf.jcu.cz
Phone: +420 387 772 220 Administration: Milena Pittnerová
Email: Milena.Pittnerova@tix.bf.jcu.cz
Phone: +420 387 772 345 Secretary: Dr. Jan Kuèera
Email: Jan.Kucera@tix.bf.jcu.cz
Phone: +420 387 772 383
At present, the Department is very limited in space, we have only a limited number of rooms mostly rented from the Academy. However, recently a new building was obtained which needs a large-scale reconstruction which will take several years. The lack of space and budget shortfalls are main limiting factors of the development of the Department. Details on master programs approved on teaching in English are given below. For the full list of courses guarranteed by the Department see the main Faculty pages (English version is under preparation).
Webmaster Marek Bastl, Email: Marek.Bastl@tix.bf.jcu.cz

72. MaPSTeDI - Participating Institutions
Participating institutions. The four sections involved in this grant are1) Zoology 2) Paleontology and Geology 3) botany, and 4) Entomology.
http://mapstedi.colorado.edu/institutions.html
Participating Institutions
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
Website: http://www.colorado.edu/CUMUSEUM/
Address: Henderson Building, 218 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309
Overview: UCM museum collections date back to the 1870's, before its founding in 1902. The museum is now split into five sections each with its own staff. The four sections involved in this grant are: 1) Zoology 2) Paleontology and Geology 3) Botany, and 4) Entomology. Over the last three years, the condition of the UCM collections and their data has been substantially enhanced as the result of two NSF-funded collections improvement projects (NSF DBI 9728995, NSF DEB 9709543). Collections:
Zoology . The Zoology Section collections strength is in the bioregion, especially Colorado and the surrounding plains, plateaus and basins. All of the collections (mollusks, other invertebrates, fishes, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals) are the largest in the state except for the birds, which are the second largest. The collections are approximately 85% databased.
Paleontology . The Geology Section of the UCM houses the Paleontology Collection, which emphasizes the Cenozoic fossil record of the Rocky Mountain region. Including invertebrates (primarily insects, spiders, and mollusks), vertebrates, and plants, the collections is the largest in numbers of catalogued specimens in the Rocky Mountain region.

73. DEPARTMENTS & INSTITUTIONS
DEPARTMENTS institutions. DEPARTMENT OF botany Šlechtitelù 11, 783 71, Olomouc,phone +420 585 634 801, 585 634 800 Head of department prof. ing.
http://www.upol.cz/UP_En/Faculties/PrF/departments.htm
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICAL ANALYSIS AND MATHEMATICAL APPLICATIONS
Tomkova 38, 772 00 Olomouc
Phone: + 420-58-412-604, 412-210, 541-1642
Head of department: prof. RNDr. Jan Andres, CSc.
Phone: + 420-585 411 644
e-mail: andres@inf.upol.cz This department guarantees the magister’s degree studies in mathematics and its applications and bachelor’s studies in mathematics and economics, further specialised in banking, while in the realm of doctoral studies the department caters for mathematical analysis, approximate and numerical methods.
Scientific profile of the department: dynamic systems, mathematical statistics, numerical methods, mathematical modelling in mechanics. DEPARTMENT OF ALGEBRA AND GEOMETRY
Tomkova 38, 772 00 Olomouc
Head of department: prof. RNDr. Jiøí Rachùnek, DrSc.
Phone: + 420-58-541-1645
e-mail: rachunek@risc.upol.cz The Department of Algebra and Geometry is responsible for teacher training in mathematics and descriptive geometry and for doctoral studies of algebra. Scientific orientation: universal algebra, ordered algebraic structures, ordered sets, incidence structures, differential geometry of manifolds and other morphisms, setting co-ordinate systems in projection planes, humanization of mathematical education. DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICAL INFORMATION SCIENCE Tomkova 38, 772 00 Olomouc

74. Section Of Botany - Loan Information
1. Loan requests will be accepted only from institutions with appropriatefacilities for storage of herbarium specimens. Such institutions
http://www.carnegiemuseums.org/cmnh/botany/loan.htm
~Loan Information~
The purpose of this document is to describe the regulations pertaining to the loan of herbarium specimens from Carnegie Museum of Natural History Herbarium. CM's loan policy follows the suggestions outlined in The Herbarium Handbook, by Forman and Bridson (1989). Safety and preservation of the herbarium collection is the basis for this policy. 1. Loan requests will be accepted only from institutions with appropriate facilities for storage of herbarium specimens. Such institutions must accept responsibility for the safe custody and return of the loan. Loans are not made to individuals. Use of material by graduate students must be made under the supervision of a major professor. 2. Loan requests should be addressed to the Curator and should include the name of the borrower and a short description of the project. 3. Loans of herbarium specimens are made for a period of one year, with the exception of type specimens that are available for a period of three months. Renewals may be requested in writing to the Curator. Except for type specimens, loans should be returned in their entirety. Type material must be returned via registered first class mail. Specimens must be carefully packed to avoid damage in transit. 4. All specimens are to be treated with utmost care thereby conserving them for future studies. Specimens should remain in their covers except during actual examination. Normally one to a few sheets of each species will be retained for reference purposes.

75. ARCUS Member Institutions
ARCUS Menu Patrick J. Webber Department of botany and Plant Physiology 100 North
http://www.arcus.org/ARCUS/mem_inst.html
- ARCUS Menu - About ARCUS Board of Directors Member Institutions Member Representatives Employment Opportunities ARCUS Staff Contact ARCUS ARCUS Annual Meetings Arctic Forum (1998-2002) ARCUS Washington DC Office Apply for Membership Membership Application Forms Directory of Arctic Researchers About ARCUS ARCUS Members ARCUS Staff ARCUS Board of Directors ARCUS Annual Meetings ARCSS Program Arctic Social Sciences Arctic GIS Arctic Logistics Arctic Logistics Access (ALIAS) Download Publication PDFs Witness the Arctic Arctic Forum Publications Education Resources Arctic Visiting Speakers ARCUS Student Award Alaska Native Knowledge Network Barrow Arctic Science Consortium Veco Polar Resources Arctic Icebreaker Coord. Cmte. AMAP Project Directory TEA ARCUS Home Page Member Representatives
U.S. Members
International Affiliates
U.S. Members Alaska North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife Management
http://www.co.north-slope.ak.us/
Representative Alternate Representative Robert Suydam
PO Box 69
Barrow, AK 99723
Phone: 907/852-0350
Fax: 907/852-0351
robert.suydam@north-slope.org

76. Culture Institutions
September 79, Fair of Flowers Lithuanian Blossoms Kojelavièiaus 1; Days ofOpen Doors at the botany gardens Kairënø 43, Vingis Park, Èiurlionio 110.
http://www.vilnius.lt/culture/events/capd2001.htm

Home page
Culture Institutions Culture Events Cultural Centres ... Site map
September 7-22, 2001 will see the international festival
Capital Days. Vilnius 2001
The programme of the event.
September 7-9 Flowers Fiesta Cathedral Square September 7-9 Fair of Flowers "Lithuanian Blossoms"
Kojelavièiaus 1
Days of Open Doors at the botany gardens
Kairënø 43, Vingis Park, Èiurlionio 110
Org.: Environment Department of Vilnius City Municipality Tel.: 22 59 51
Botany Garden of Vilnius State University September 9-17 Vilniaus City Hall Festival in the City Hall Org.: Vilnius City Hall Tel./fax. 61 80 07 (D.Medalinskienë), (8-286) 1 69 00 (J.Jonynas) E-mail rotuse@takas.lt September 7-9 The 8th Beer Festival "Tree Days and Tree Nights..." in Vingis Park Org.: JSC "Vilniaus parkai" Tel. 61 10 37, (8-299) 2 02 11 (A.Nomeika) Fax 225334 E-mail nomeika@lithill.lt http://www.lithill.lt/nomeika September 8-12 The 11th Old World Music Festival "Banchetto Musicale" in the Lower Castle, St. Bernard Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church Org.: The Division of Culture and Art of the Department of Culure, Education and Sports of Vilnius City Municipality

77. Financial Support - Department Of Botany - Miami University
Miami is recognized as one of the best undergraduate institutions in the US, a Becauseour department is consistently among the largest botany programs in the
http://www.cas.muohio.edu/botany/bot/fs.html
Financial support
Botany Dept., Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056 USA The stipends for continuous, year round registration in the 2002-2003 year are $13,906 for Master's students and $14,437 for Ph.D. students. Instruction fees (currently $3,286 per semester) are waived for the academic year. Half of the University fees, which totals $1,312 for the academic year is also waived. The required health-and-accident insurance premium (currently $624 per year) is not waived. The general fee and insurance premium are subject to increase, as are stipend amounts. Supplemental Graduate Academic Achievement Scholarships of $5,000 are available from the Graduate School for outstanding applicants. These scholarships are allocated on a competitive basis and are non-renewable. Graduate students may apply to our department's Academic Challenge Grant Program, whereby students write NSF-format short proposals for consideration by a panel of faculty that meets twice a year. Students can access up to $2,000 per proposal for virtually any legitimate research need and in doing so not only acquire funds for their own work but also gain valuable experience in grant writing. We spend over $25,000 in departmental funds each year on graduate student research projects. Additional grants for field research trips are also available. In addition, we feel that attending scientific conferences and presenting your work at national and international meetings is essential. To assist you in this effort, our policy is to provide at least $250 per meeting in departmental support to you if you are presenting a national/international paper, and $100 per meeting if you are attending and not presenting. Miami Botany graduate students annually present some 30-40 abstracted papers and we expend over $8,000 per year in meeting support.

78. Division
The Division of botany is presently collaborating with many institutions andscientists in interlocked research projects designed to provide essential
http://www.sciencebuff.org/bot_global_resrch.html

Anthropology

Botany-

Geology-

Invertebrate Zoology
... Home
Global Research in Western New York R. Zander 31 May 2000 The Buffalo Museum of Science is part of a network of collections-based institutions dedicated to environmental analysis and prediction that is expected to greatly assist alleviation of human suffering and privation associated with or expected soon from present-day rapid ecological changes. The Division of Botany is presently collaborating with many institutions and scientists in interlocked research projects designed to provide essential information about the environment and maintain a robust informational network to disburse the data to interested parties in all walks of life. These projects include: Flora NeoTropica, an identification manual for all the green plants of tropical New World is a multi-institutional project like the Flora of North America. The Curator and the Research Fellow are also contributing scientific treatments to this large work that will illuminate biodiversity in a critical area of the world. The International Association for Plant Taxonomy establishes the rules for the Code of Nomenclature used by all botanists in describing the results of their research in biodiversity. Presently, electronic publication of new names is not allowed by the rules, but this must change. Exactly how the rules must be modified is the responsibility of the Special Committee on Electronic Publication and Databasing, whose Secretary is the Curator of Botany. By the next International Botanical Congress in Vienna, 2005, new rules governing electronic publication must be finalized for consideration and a vote by the botanical community.

79. Admissions Check List
of botany Applicant Information Form botany/Biology Course History Form of Recommendation(no special form required) Transcripts (all institutions of higher
http://www.botany.wisc.edu/ADMISS.HTML
Admissions Check List
This list provides a quick check for items required in the admissions process by both the Botany Department and Graduate School. Be sure to follow carefully the thorough directions given on the official admissions forms. Items to Botany Dept. Domestic Applicants: Application for Admission (photocopy of booklet form) or electronic application
Dept. of Botany Applicant Information Form
Botany/Biology Course History Form
Reasons for Graduate Study (i.e. statement of purpose)
*(3) Letters of Recommendation (no special form required)
Transcripts ( all institutions of higher learning attended for credit)
Official GRE scores from ETS test
International Applicants: Application for Admission (photocopy of booklet form) or electronic application
Dept. of Botany Applicant Information Form
Botany/Biology Course History Form
Reasons for Graduate Study (i.e. statement of purpose) * (3) Letters of Recommendation (no special form required) Transcripts ( all institutions of higher learning attended for credit) Official GRE scores from ETS Official TOEFL scoresminimum 580 * We recommend that, if at all possible, you include letters of recommendation with the departmental application materials. Request that your referees seal and sign the envelopes containing the letter of recommendation (we do not require a form for letters) so that you may insert these into your application packet. If this is not possible, please be sure that these letters are sent

80. Section Of General And Systematic Botany And Geobotany
Members of the section continue in a cooperation with foreign institutions andpartner Institute of botany (Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovak Republic
http://prfholnt.upol.cz/botany/botodgeoen.htm
Section of General and Systematic Botany and Geobotany
History in Brief Research activities The Section of General and Systematic Botany and Geobotany presents the biggest section of those of botany. Both teaching and scientific activities of all the staff vary. In spite of the wide heterogeneity we can distinguish several basic areas:
  • study of anatomical and morphological features of selected groups of vascular plant genera ( Dryopteris, Lactuca, Pseudolysimachion, Molinia ), an anatomical and histological study of the underground organs of orchids, a pollen analysis [J. Jurèák, V. Vinter];
  • - floristics, taxonomy and chorology of vascular plant genera including some taxonomically critical groups i.e. Rubus Taraxacum Pseudolysimachion Scilla Molinia Glyceria Koeleria Allium ) and bryophytes ( Fissidens ), protection and conservation of plants [M. Danèák, B. Trávníèek, Z. Hradílek, M. Duchoslav];
  • research of vegetation communities (especially forest communities, dry grassland communities, vegetation of walls and forest fringes),study of vegetation of selected areas (CHKO Litovelské Pomoraví) [L. Kincl, M. Duchoslav];
  • population biology of some plant species and genera Allium Leucojum Galanthus, Orchis
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