Vijayadas ji,

 

The book 2B Flora of Presidency of Bombay - T. cooke, reprint 2006, has two 
volumes. Vol I is Ranunculaceae to Rubiaceae and Vol II-Compositae to Gramineae.

 

Dr. Almeida 's Flora of Mah. volumes have added the missing plants in these 
volumes and also the new and changed names.

 

In the latest list from Nataraj publishers the book nos 30 and 31 too are 
available 

 

 

regards,

Rashida.  

 


 



Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2010 19:48:20 +0530
Subject: [efloraofindia:30488] Re: Books on Indian Trees & Plants
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]


Some further feedback required:
"I like to know more about the following numbered texts,
 
2B, 14, 19,30, and 31" from Vijayadas ji.


On 20 March 2010 12:46, J.M. Garg <[email protected]> wrote:


A reply:

"Garg ji a new volume vol V pertaining to monocots has already come out  by Dr. 
Almeida as Flora of Maharahstra. I have been informed  a sixth volume too wil 
be coming out on grasses and so on in some time.
 
regads,
Rashida." 





On 20 March 2010 09:55, J.M. Garg <[email protected]> wrote:


I have combined the feed back received from the members of Indiantreepix for 
the benefit of everybody & reproduced below (also attached as well as available 
for download from http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix/files):

1. Trees of Delhi - A field guide by Pradip Krishen (Rs.799)- Dorling 
Kindersley publication- A very good book for identifying trees all over India 
(though much more relevant to the members from Delhi) as it gives account of 
252 species with 1100 good quality photographs. Kudos to the author- an 
excellent publication! It is definitely worth having it on your 
bookshelf. 

2. Shrikant Ingalhalikar's Flowers of Sahyadri, 2001, Corolla Publications, 
Pune, (Ph. 020- 24351388) printed by Pragati Offset, Hyderabad. The flowers are 
restricted to the Western Ghats, specifically to Maharashtra. It can also be 
carried in your daypack.

Concluding Part of Shrikant Ingalhalikar's  Further Flowers of Sahyadri, 2007- 
Field guide to additional 1200 flowers of North- Western Ghats of India, Price- 
Rs. 800. Though the field guide is titled as Flowers of Sahyadri, it is useful 
for most plants of all the regions. Besides it also covers trees found in urban 
habitats. May be it is the first ever such publication.  It has breath- taking 
photographs!  Every species described has beautiful photograph. The design, 
description, photos and the layout are par excellence! 

2B. Forest Flora of the Bombay Presidency and Sind/ W.A. Talbot. Reprint. First 
published: Poona, Government of Bombay, 1909. 1984, 2 v., 508, 574 p., 541 
figs., $63. Reprint of The Flora Of The Presidency Of Bombay 1903-1908 2 Vols. 
Set by T. Cooke-Publisher: Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, 1983 (Reprint), 
Dehradun.

3. Concise flowers of the Himalayas by Oleg Polunin & Adam Stainton (Rs.450)- 
Oxford 
Publication- A very good book for identifying & knowing about the flowers of 
the Himalayas. It explains about 1002 species of Himalayan flowers with colours 
photographs & Drawings. 

4. Tropical garden plants by Bose, Choudhary and Sharma. Certain names may have 
changed since but it has 1661 plates of trees, shrubs, climbers, house plants, 
cacti and succulents. Worth every bit of about Rs 2000/-. It’s one of the best 
books for the layman, and horticulturist. 

5. Common Flowers of India by D.S.Pandey & N.P.Singh by Publications division 
(Rs. 250) - highlights 150 common plants. I have not gone through the book, 
though it appears quite good with good quality pictures.


6. The book of Indian Trees by K.C. Sahni- Oxford publication (Rs.275)- 
Explains 153 Indian species in quite technical way. A difficult read for the 
beginners, though good for advance readers. It explains species with the help 
of 70 drawings & 20 colours photographs of about 90 species. It is produced by 
the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) in Mumbai. 

7. The BNHS has published *Trees of Mumbai*, 2006. Price Rs. 465/-. Sadly, it 
is not even half as good as Trees of Delhi. 

8. Isaac Kehimkar's book, *Common Indian Wild Flowers*, BNHS, 2000. Price Rs. 
375/-. Highly recommended and can be carried in the field. 

 9. Beautiful trees & shrubs of Kolkata by R.K.Chakraverty & S.K.Jain- 
published by Botanical Survey of India, Indian Botanical Garden, Howrah- Rs.128 
(198 pages)- Very good book for Kolkata members although it is quite useful for 
others also. Quality of photographs is not upto the mark. However details about 
Kolkata are very good. 

 10. *Trees of India*, 1999 by Dr Subhadra Menon & Pallava Bagla. A large book 
published by Timeless Books, New Delhi. Contains photo descriptions of approx. 
80 trees. 

11. "The Secret life of Trees" by Colin Tudge, Penguin Books, 2006. It is very 
interesting and absorbing- more so since the author visited India too. 

12.  Indian Trees- Dietrich Brandis-1978- antic reference book. 

13. Maharashtra flora- 4 volumes- Dr. M.R. Almeida-Good reference book to get 
species account. It is not a field guide. 

14.  North East Indian Orchids- Mohan Pradhan- very good book. 

15.  Some beautiful Indian trees- E. Blatter and Walter Millard- for beginners. 

16. Our tree neighbors- Chakravarti. S. Venkatesh- National Council of 
Educational research and training- OK book with some useful tips. 

17. Some beautiful Indian climbers and shrubs- N.L. Bor and Raizada- Many 
exotics are included in this book. 

18. Focus on sacred groves and ethnobotany- Prof.V.D.Vartak- this book deals 
with conservation of trees in older days. 

19. Endemic plants of the Indian region- M.Ahmeddullah and M.P. Nayar- 
Botanical survey of India- for further reading it is useful. 

20. The private life of plant- David Attenborough- Good to have in collection. 
Informative. 

21. The secret life of plants- Peter Tomkins and Christopher Bird- Informative. 
Good to have. 

22.  Freaks and marvels of plants life- M.C.Cook- antic book. 

23. Taxanomy of vascular plants- George H.M. Lawrence- Oxford and IBH- 
Scientific information. 

24. Dictionary of Economic plants in India- Umrao Singh, A.M. Wadhwani, B.M. 
Joshi 

25. Kolhapur flora, Corbett flora, Tadoba flora, Khandala flora by Botanical 
Survey of india. 

26.   Other antic Marathi books (Vanashree Sristi) also have very good 
information on trees and their properties, uses etc. 

27. Flowering Trees by M.S. Randhawa- Nation Book Trust- Rs. 65/- (208 pages)- 
explains 56 species with the help of plates & figures along with details about 
which species to be planted in Gardens, villages, Towns, Cities, Avenues, 
Highways etc. 

28. Our Trees by R.P.N. Sinha- Publications Division- Rs.40/- (88 pages).Give 
account of most common 51 Indian Trees with lot of emphasis on their 
association with Indian Mythology. 

29. A new coffee table book, "Celebration of Indian Trees" by Dr. Ashok 
Kothari, 2007 has been published by Marg under the aegis of Natural Society of 
Friends of the Trees. It is a large format book covering approx. 140 species 
with some full page photographs. The book is very expensive at Rs. 2700 
discounted. 

30. 'A Revised Survey of the Forest Types of India'; H.G. Champion and S. K. 
Seth; Government of India Press, 1968 (Reprinted 2005, Natraj Publishers, 
Dehradun). This is a classic and an excellent guide to the vegetation and 
biogeography of plant habitats in India.

31. 'Forest Flora of the Chakrata, Dehra Dun and Saharanpur Forest Divisions, 
United Provinces'; Upendranath Kanjilal & Basant Lal Gupta; Government of India 
Publications 1928 (Reprinted 200?, Natraj Publishers, Dehradun). Another 
classic, this is somewhat technical, but excellent for the field identification 
of plants in Northern India, and especially in the Terai region. Natraj 
Publishers have recently reprinted the book with some sparse illustrations.

There is another book, which is in the same genre as Upendranath Kanjilal's 
book, but on the trees of Southern India. As a very limited number of copies 
(1000) were printed, it may be difficult to find (I believe I have one of the 
last copies to be sold.). It is profusely illustrated and an excellent field 
guide. I hope that there are plans to produce more copies in the near 
future. 

32. 'Forest Trees of South India'; S. G. Neginhal, IFS (Retd.), Navbharath 
Press, Bangalore. 2004.

33. ”Sen’trees’ of Mumbai”, a new coffee table book, rather oddly titled, 
brought out on the occasion of the sesquicentennial year of Mumbai University 
and supported by Oil & Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC).The full frame 
photographs do justice to the size and shape of the trees depicted and I am 
happy that there is fair amount of written information. Price Rs. 2000/- but 
discounted at Rs.1500 at Strand Book Shop.

E-books
Links to some e-books available on Trees at 
http://www.vidyaonline.net/arvindgupta/
1. Flowering Trees & Shrub in India by DVCowen
www.vidyaonline.net/arvindgupta/cowen.pdf
2. Forty Common Indian Trees & how to know them by RNParkar
http://www.vidyaonline.org/arvindgupta/parkertrees.pdf
3. Nature Guide Common Trees of India by Pippa Mukherjee
 http://vidyaonline.org/arvindgupta/pippatrees.pdf
 -- 
With regards,
J.M.Garg ([email protected])
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jmgarg1
'Creating awareness of Indian Flora & Fauna'
Image Resource of more than a thousand species of Birds, Butterflies, Plants 
etc. (arranged alphabetically & place-wise): 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:J.M.Garg
For learning about Indian Flora, visit/ join Google e-group- 
Efloraofindia:http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix



-- 
With regards,
J.M.Garg ([email protected])
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jmgarg1
'Creating awareness of Indian Flora & Fauna'
Image Resource of more than a thousand species of Birds, Butterflies, Plants 
etc. (arranged alphabetically & place-wise): 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:J.M.Garg
For learning about Indian Flora, visit/ join Google e-group- 
Efloraofindia:http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix



-- 
With regards,
J.M.Garg ([email protected])
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jmgarg1
'Creating awareness of Indian Flora & Fauna'
Image Resource of more than a thousand species of Birds, Butterflies, Plants 
etc. (arranged alphabetically & place-wise): 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:J.M.Garg
For learning about Indian Flora, visit/ join Google e-group- 
Efloraofindia:http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix



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