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You are viewing sources for:
Bryophyta
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Arctoa is a bryological journal, publishing scientific papers on mosses (Musci, or Bryophyta), liverworts (Hepaticae, or Marchantiophyta) and hornworts (Anthocerotae, or Anthocerotophyta). Arctoa is published since 1992 by KMK Scientific Press Ltd. The journal is issued once a year. Arctoa accepts for publication original results that were never published earlier. [Information of the supplier]
Other reference worksResource type
http://arctoa.ru/en/
Founded in 1956, the Swiss Association of Bryology and Lichenology (BRYOLICH) is devoted to the study and conservation of bryophytes and lichens and it supports research and education in bryology and lichenology especially in Switzerland. Approximately 250 individuals worldwide, both amateurs and professionals, held membership in the society. Since 1992, BRYOLICH is a member of the Swiss Academy of Sciences (SAS). [Information of the supplier]
Academic societies, professional associations, working groupsResource type
http://www.bryolich.ch/
This glossary contains 1181 English terms and their definitions from the original publication of mosses, as well as French, German, and Spanish translations. [On-line version of Glossarium Pollyglottum Bryologiae: A multilingual glossary for bryology; originally published in Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden Vol. 33, 1990.] [Information of the supplier, modified]
Discipline based dictionaries and encyclopaediasResource type
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/tropicos/most/Glossary/glosefr.html
The Dutch Bryological and Lichenological Society (BLWG, founded in 1946), is a society with about 400 members (50 from abroad), which are interested in bryophytes and lichens. Among BLWG's online resources, there are online distribution maps and photographs of bryophytes based on 950.000 field records and specimens, and a Checklist of Dutch Bryophytes. [Information of the supplier, modified]
Discipline based websitesResource type
http://www.blwg.nl/mossen/mossen/mossen.aspx
BLAM was founded about 40 years ago to facilitate contact between people working in any field of lichenology or bryology in Central Europe. Today, BLAM is a registered association with 320 members, EU-European and abroad, professionals and amateurs. [Information of the supplier]
Academic societies, professional associations, working groups; Newsletter, mailing lists, forums, blogsResource type
http://www.blam-hp.eu/
For more than ten years I have been working on a book on bryophyte ecology and was joined by Heinjo During, who has been very helpful in critiquing multiple versions of the chapters. But as the book progressed, the field of bryophyte ecology progressed faster. No chapter ever seemed to stay finished, hence the decision to publish online. Furthermore, rather than being a textbook, it is evolving into an encyclopedia that would be at least three volumes, with the first being physiological ecology, ... [Information of the supplier, modified]
Textbooks / Online-textbooksResource type
http://www.bryoecol.mtu.edu/
This PDF file illustrates Bryophyte Phylogeny. The hypothetical tree of nonvascular land plants is based on molecular phylogenetic data (Feb. 2012). Branch lengths are deliberate, not expressing actual time scale; the position of many characters on the tree is still unclear; some minor orders/families have been omitted; if a character is marked as being a potential synapomorphy at a particular node/for a clade, this does not mean that all members of that clade possess that character. [Information of the supplier, modified]
Other reference worksResource type
http://www2.biologie.fu-berlin.de/sysbot/poster/BPP-E.pdf
The aim of "Bryophytes de France" (Bryophytes of France) is to provide a plattform for experts and enthusiasts in bryology, who up to now form a rather dispersed community in France, with limited opportunities for scientific communication and sharing of bryological information. [Information of the supplier, translated and modified]
Discipline based websitesResource type
http://www.bryophytes-de-france.org/
The bryophyte herbarium at the Botanical Museum, the University of Oslo, Norway, comprises a Norwegian herbarium (ca. 150,000 specimens, of which ca. 100,000 mosses, ca. 15,000 peat mosses and ca. 35,000 hepatics), a general herbarium (ca. 75,000), a type herbarium with ca. 100 types and a collection of older exsiccata (ca. 5,000 specimens). Buildup of a herbarium database was started in 1997, and is still at an early stage with ca. 3.200 specimens recorded by January 2001. As part of this work, ... [Information of the supplier]
Discipline based websitesResource type
http://www.nhm.uio.no/botanisk/mose/tax_alfa.htm
Liverworts (Marchantiophyta) are pivotal in our understanding of early land plant evolution. They form a conspicuous and important component in many terrestrial ecosystems throughout the world. The objective is to unify the vastly scattered biological literature and data on liverwort taxonomy, nomenclature, and geography. The unification of nomenclatural, taxonomic, and geographical data has many implications and useful applications, including the study of species richness, patterns of diversity, ... [Information of the supplier]
Discipline based websitesResource type
http://elpt.fieldmuseum.org/
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