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19 August 2021 | dataset

Batiri kei Baravi: the enthnobotany of Pacific Island Coastal plants

Jonathan Sauer (1961) remarked, in his Coastal Plant Geography of Mauritius, that the chance to study the coastal vegetation there was like being "admitted to a field worker's paradise"
and stressed that "most tropical coasts are beautiful and exciting, particularly to people concerned with natural processes . . .." The same can certainly be said for the tropical coasts of the often Edenized islands of the Pacific Ocean. Their "beauty and excitement" is considerably enhanced,
however, when one is also "concerned" with cultural processes and ethnobotany, in particular, the immense cultural utility of coastal plants, a factor which strongly influences the distribution and character of plant communities.

Available online

Call Number: [EL]

Physical Description: 63 p.

Field Value
Publisher Smithsonian Institution
Modified 15 February 2022
Release Date 19 August 2021
Source URL https://library.sprep.org/content/batiri-kei-baravi-enthnobotany-pacific-island…
Identifier VL-34657
Spatial / Geographical Coverage Location SPREP LIBRARY
Relevant Countries Pacific Region
License Public
[Open Data]
Author Thaman, R.R,
Contact Name SPREP Records and Archives Officer
Contact Email [email protected]