Center for Digital Scholarship Press
https://monographs.lib.unb.ca/index.php/cds
<p align="justify"><strong>CDS Press</strong> Eleifend felis nonummy eros vel suspendisse vel, amet integer nulla id, elementum risus ipsum in fusce, orci tincidunt, suscipit per. Suscipit enim nulla, primis malesuada, quam erat elit at sed, porro maecenas elementum in tincidunt, mauris inceptos id dolor vivamus. Facilisi vivamus, quis tortor vestibulum justo ut magna tincidunt, posuere eget sodales, ante in purus non nisl, dui at rhoncus non nonummy ullamcorper id. Amet nunc nec ultricies purus, maecenas nam in dictum tellus nec, ut dolor vitae cursus. Tincidunt in nulla, egestas metus imperdiet vitae bibendum. Sapien augue erat, a amet quis elit, praesent fermentum convallis at, tempus ornare ut nibh nullam, arcu volutpat lacus. Sit vitae urna facilisi ac interdum, elementum magna.</p> <p align="justify"> </p> <p><img src="http://lorem-ipsum.perbang.dk/cms_perbang/images/space.gif" alt="+" width="1" height="0"></p>en-USCenter for Digital Scholarship PressNative Woods of New Brunswick
https://monographs.lib.unb.ca/index.php/cds/catalog/book/2
<p>An artifact in book form of wood specimens produced from the Acadian Forest in 1861 is described and considered in relation to tree and shrub diversity within New Brunswick. Specimen names in this ‘wood book’ reveal problems in species nomenclature and classification that continue to affect forest management practices in Canada. Analysis of the historical setting prompted reflections about conservation, physiological diversity, silviculture, forestry education and tree science in relation to sustaining future survival fitness in trees.</p>Rodney Arthur Savidge
Copyright (c) 2000 Rodney Arthur Savidge
2017-03-092017-03-09Nature's Bounty
https://monographs.lib.unb.ca/index.php/cds/catalog/book/1
<p>This study of plant exploration in New Brunswick from 1604 to 2000 is placed firmly within a regional framework. It encompasses short biographical sketches and tells the stories of naturalists and botanists in the light of the times in which they lived. The account illustrates the development of the science of botany and shows how, as museums and learning centres were established in the new land, North Americans became masters in their own house, taking over the botanical enquiry that had previously been the prerogative of Europeans. It examines early ecological studies and curious anomalies of plant distribution, as well as the modern-day emphasis on plant diversity and the need for conservation. It embodies implicit lessons that speak to our present-day concerns with climate change and the environment. Finally, it claims a place for early UNB botanists and for New Brunswick in botanical and environmental historiography.</p>C. Mary Young
Copyright (c) 2015 C. Mary Young
2017-03-072017-03-07