Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
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Elias Landolt

    24 juillet 1926 – 1 avril 2013

    Elias Landolt était un géobotaniste suisse dont les travaux se sont concentrés sur la flore de Suisse et sur les plantes aquatiques de la famille des lentilles d'eau. Ses publications sont considérées comme essentielles à la compréhension de la flore indigène et d'espèces végétales spécifiques. Landolt a exploré en profondeur les subtilités du règne végétal dans ses recherches, apportant ainsi des contributions significatives à la connaissance botanique.

    Der Wald und die Alpen: Ein öffentlicher Vortrag
    Der Wald, seine Verjüngung, Pflege und Benutzung
    Der Wald Im Haushalt Der Natur Und Der Menschen: Vortrag Gehalten Den 17. März 1870 Auf Dem Rathhaus in Zürich.
    Der Wald, seine Verjüngung, Pflege und Benutzung
    Unsere Alpenflora
    Extreme adaptations in angiospermous hydrophytes
    • 1998

      Hydrophytes, that are aquatic or subaquatic vascular plants, represent a class of plants extremely variable, but at the same time extremely heterogeneous in terms of their systematic position, the variability of their habitats and their modes of life. A direct consequence of that heterogeneity is the wide range of anatomic peculiarities of hydrophytes, which is very hard, if not impossible to capture in a single volume. It was, therefore, chosen to treat three families of hydrophytes, Lemnaceae (Duckweeds), Hydrostachyaceae and Podostemaceae. They differ most markedly from terrestrial plants, notably by having a partly or completely thalloid vascular system. These families turned out to be a lucky choice, as their morphology has developed (or rather preserved) aberrant structures which force the question of their evolution to be asked anew. A model which explains the observed features as extreme adaptions, tacitly implies that these aquatic plants were initially terrestrial plants which have returned to an aquatic habitat, instead of plants which survived in the aquatic or 'amphibious' environment they originally evolved in. This question of origin must be asked for all major adaptions, such as the diverse types of heterotrophy observed in phanerogams; the answer may be found looking at the biogeography or ecological conditions, but most likely these questions may not be answered by studying the anatomy of these plants.

      Extreme adaptations in angiospermous hydrophytes