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Livros Técnicos e Científicos Editora
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Sistemática de angiospermas do Brasil
Alan Smith, R. Tryon, A. Tryon (1982)
Ferns and Allied Plants with Special Reference to Tropical AmericaKew Bulletin, 38
W. Thomas, A. Carvalho, A. Amorim, J. Garrison, Alba ARBELA´EZ (1998)
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Rudolf Schmid, W. Clayton, S. Renvoize (1987)
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The Genera of AraceaeWilldenowia, 1
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C. Oliveira, J. Pirani, A. Giulietti (1983)
The Brazilian seagrassesAquatic Botany, 16
M. Wanderley, George Shepherd, T. Melhem, Ana Giulietti, Suzana Martins, Mizué Kirizawa (1996)
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The world list of threatened trees
O. Yano (1984)
Checklist of Brazilian liverworts and hornwortsJournal of The Hattori Botanical Laboratory
Gradstein Gradstein, Da Costa Da Costa (2003)
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How many species of seed plants are thereTaxon, 51
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Juncaceae. Flora Neotropica monograph 68
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An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG IVBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 181
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Cacti of eastern Brazil, 77
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Genera Graminum. Grasses of the WorldBrittonia, 39
Landolt Landolt (1986)
The family of Lemnaceae: a monographic study. Volume 1Verhandlung der Geobotanische Institut ETH, Stiftung Rübel, Zürich, 71
Jana Frahm (1991)
Dicranaceae: Campylopodioideae, Paraleucobryoideae
R. Schmid, K. Kubitzki, K. Kramer, P. Green (1991)
The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants. Vol. 1. Pteridophytes and GymnospermsTaxon, 40
G. Prance (1977)
Floristic Inventory of the Tropics: Where Do We Stand?Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 64
O. Yano (1996)
A checklist of the Brazilian bryophytes
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Aquatic Botany 16:251–267
W. Anderson (1982)
An Integrated System of Classification of Flowering PlantsBrittonia, 34
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A tribo Olyreae (Poaceae: Bambusoideae) no estado da Bahia
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R. Barreto, A. Giulietti (1997)
Levantamento das espécies de Commelinaceae R. Br. nativas do Brasil
N. Hodgetts, T. Hallingbäck (2000)
Mosses, liverworts, and hornworts : status survey and conservation action plan for bryophytes
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MartyniaceaePlants of the Rio Grande Delta
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Adamantinia, a showy new genus of Laeliinae from eastern Brazil
E. Filho, F. Berchez (1978)
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Revisão de Helietta e Balfourodendron
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LabiataePlants of the Rio Grande Delta
(1998)
Biodiversidade do estado do São Paulo. Síntese do conhecimento ao final do século XX
E. Hennipman, R. Tryon, A. Tryon (1982)
Ferns and Allied PlantsTaxon, 33
O. Yano (1995)
A new additional annotated checklist of Brazilian bryophytesJournal of The Hattori Botanical Laboratory
O. Yano (1989)
An Additional checklist of Brazilian bryophytesJournal of The Hattori Botanical Laboratory
Oliveira‐Filho Oliveira‐Filho, Pirani Pirani, Giulietti Giulietti (1983)
The Brazilian sea grassAquatic Botany, 16
(1998)
estimated between 1200 and 1300 species of pteridophytes in Brazil, of which 50% occur in the state of São Paulo
Oliveira Filho, Eurico de (1977)
Algas marinhas bentônicas do Brasil
Abstract: With more than 56,000 species (excluding fungi), Brazil has one of the richest floras in the world—nearly 19% of the world flora. Our knowledge of the diversity and status of nonvascular plants in Brazil is still fragmentary, although localized studies on algae have revealed loss of species resulting from environmental pollution. Emphasis on local floral surveys, rather than wider taxonomic studies, has obscured estimates of national totals for most taxonomic groups. Knowledge of angiosperms, especially monocotyledons (of which 45% of the species are endemic), is more complete than most. For this group figures are more reliable, with some distribution patterns, endemism levels, and centers of diversity identified. Much, however, still awaits discovery. Coordinated efforts to catalog Brazil's flora are in progress and include projects such as the conservation priority‐setting workshops of the Brazilian Ministry of the Environment, which have identified key conservation areas in the major biomes; development of threatened species lists for plants; and the assembly of type data on species of northeastern Brazil through the Darwin Initiative—all of which greatly assist in increasing our knowledge. These initiatives also underline the urgent need to expand the numbers and geographic spread of projects on plant systematics and taxonomy in Brazil, a measure that demands adequate provision of funding and training programs for plant specialists. Finally, Brazil's environmental agency (IBAMA) could play a proactive role in opening protected areas under its jurisdiction, thereby facilitating botanical research by university departments and research institutes.
Conservation Biology – Wiley
Published: Jun 1, 2005
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