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Now available
2/2008. 336 pages. 301 color photos, 1 map
978-0-89672-613-0
$34.95 paper
Grover E. Murray Studies in the American Southwest
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Little Big Bend: Common, Uncommon, and Rare Plants of Big Bend National Park By Roy Morey
Plant life in Big Bend National Park is incredibly diverse. The wide range of habitats within the parkdesert, foothills, mountains and moist woodlands, river canyons and floodplainas well as the Big Bends three major blooming seasons of spring, summer, and fall guarantee a stunning show of botanical variety throughout the year.
Little Big Bend is not a traditional guide to the areas common plants. Although it features many species that are characteristic of the Chihuahuan Desert environment, species such as orchids are also included precisely because they are uncommon or rare and therefore a special thrill to find. Plants not seen in other wildflower guides, or those with a limited geographic range that the reader will less likely encounter elsewhere, are pictured here.
This guide describes 109 species found in the United States only in Trans-Pecos Texas; 62 of these occur only in the Big Bend portion of the Trans-Pecos, and 24 of them only within Big Bend National Park. Of the 252 featured species, 71 are considered sensitive plants; in Texas, 28 are classified as critically imperiled, 18 as imperiled, and 25 as vulnerable.
The emphasis of this book is on the little in the Big Bend, the overlooked small plants or inconspicuous tiny flowers of larger plants that so often go unnoticed. In a landscape so immense, these plants may be right before our eyes but seldom seen, or they may be tucked away and quite difficult to find. Here, in glowing photographs and insightful text, Roy Morey has brought them to light.
Roy Morey has been photographing Big Bend National Park and state parks since 1986. His photographs have been published in Texas Parks and Wildlife and Rangefinder magazines, and he has exhibited in Alpine, Texas, and at the Barton Warnock Center in Lajitas, the headquarters of Big Bend Ranch State Park.
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