(alphabetical order)

101. Anker PJ. 2001. Imperial Ecology: Environmental Order in the British Empire, 1895–1945. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

102. Anker PJ. 2002. The context of ecosystem theory. Ecosystems 5, 611–613.
[A philosophical contextualization of Tansley’s 1932 paper “The Temporal Genetic Series as a Means of Approach to Philosophy,” which is also published for the first time]

103. Boney AD. 1991. The ‘Tansley Manifesto’ affair. New Phytologist 118, 3–21.

104. Bower FO. 1918. Botanical bolshevism. New Phytologist 17, 106-107.

105. Cameron L. 1999. Histories of disturbance. Radical History Review 74, 2–24.

106. Cameron L. 2008. Sir Arthur George Tansley. In Koertge N, ed. New Dictionary of Scientific Biography. London: Thomson Gale, 7, 3-10.

107. Cameron L, Forrester J. 1999. A nice type of the English scientist: Tansley and Freud. History Workshop Journal 48, 64-100.
[revised as Cameron L, Forrester J. 2004. A nice type of the English scientist: Tansley, Freud and a psychoanalytic dream’. In Pick D, Roper L, eds., Dreams and History: The Interpretation of Dreams from Ancient Greece to Modern Psychoanalysis. London: Routledge, 199-236.]

108. Cameron L, Forrester J. 2000. Tansley’s psychoanalytic network: an episode out of the early history of psychoanalysis in England. Psychoanalysis and History 2, 189–256.

109. Cannadine D. 2004. Trevelyan, George Macauley. New Dictionary of National Biography 55, 328-32.

110. Cassidy VM. 2007. Henry Chandler Cowles: Pioneer Ecologist. Chicago: Sigel Press.

111. Clements FE. 1916. Plant Succession: an Analysis of the Development of Vegetation. Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 242.

112. Collingwood RG. 1944. Idea of Nature. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

113. Forrester J, Cameron L. 1999. A Cure with a Defect: A previously unpublished letter by Freud concerning ‘Anna O’. International Journal of Psychoanalysis 80, 929–942.

114. Grime JP. (1979). Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes. Chichester: J Wiley & Sons.

115. Godwin H. 1957. Arthur George Tansley, 1871–1955. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 3, 227–46.
[draws on ‘Factual Biographical Notes’ written by AGT for the Council of the Royal Society, 1953]

116. Godwin H. 1977. Sir Arthur Tansley: the man and his subject. Journal of Ecology 65, 1–26.

117. Godwin H. 1985. Early development of the New Phytologist. New
Phytologist
100, 1–4.

118. Harper JL. 1977. Population Biology of Plants. London: Academic Press.

119. Körner C. 2001. Hundred years after A.F.W. Schimper - a founder of functional plant ecology. In: Zotz G, Körner C (eds) Funktionelle Bedeutung von Biodiversität - The functional importance of biodiversity. Verhandlungen der Gesellschaft für Ökologie 31, 7-9. Berlin: Parey Buchverlag.

120. Körner C. 2003. Limitation and stress - always or never? Journal of Vegetation Science 14, 141-143.

121. Körner C. 2004. Individuals have limitations, not communities - A response to Marrs, Weiher and Lortie et al. Journal of Vegetation Science 15, 581-582.

122. Körner C. 2007. Climatic treelines: conventions, global patterns, causes. Erdkunde 61,316-324.

123. Lewis DH, Ingram J (2002). A brief history of New Phytologist. New Phytologist 153, 2-16.

124. MacArthur RH. 1972. Geographical Ecology. Patterns in the Distribution of Species. London: Harper & Row.

125. Oliver FW 1912. A letter. Tansley MSS. Library of the School of Life Sciences, University of Cambridge.
[a testimonial written when Tansley considered applying for a Chair at the University of Adelaide – he never applied]

126. Paskauskas A. 1993. The Complete Correspondence of Sigmund Freud and Ernest Jones, 1908-1939. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.
[the letter cited is from Freud to Jones on 6 April 1922]

127. Phillips JFV. 1931. The biotic community. Journal of Ecology 19, 1-24.

128. Phillips JFV. 1934. Succession, development, the climax, and the complex organism: an analysis of concepts. Part I. Journal of Ecology 22, 554-571.

129. Phillips JFV. 1935. Succession, development, the climax, and the complex organism: an anlysis of concepts. Part II. Development and the climax. Journal of Ecology 23, 210-246.

130. Phillips JFV. 1935. Succession, development, the climax, and the complex organism: an analysis of concepts. Part III. The complex organism: conclusions. Journal of Ecology 23, 488-508.

131. Real LA, Brown JH. 1991. Foundations of Ecology: Classic papers with Commentaries. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

132. Schimper AFW. 1898. Pflanzen-Geographie auf Physiologischer Grundlage. Jena: G. Fischer.
[translated into English in 1903 by P Groom and IB Balfour. Plant Geography upon a Physiological Basis. Oxford: Clarendon Press.]

133. Schroeter C. 1908. Pflanzenleben der Alpen. Zürich: Albert Raustein.

134. Schulte Fischedick K, Shinn T. 1993. The International Phytogeographical Excursions, 1911-1923, in Denationalising science (ed E. Crawford et al.), 107-31.

135. Schulte Fischedick K. 2000. From survey to ecology: the role of the British Vegetation Committee, 1904-1913, Journal of the History of Biology 33, 291-314.

136. Sheail J. 1987. Seventy-five Years in Ecology: The British Ecological
Society.
Oxford, U.K.: Blackwell Scientific Publications.

137. Sheail, J 1998. NatureCconservation in Britain: The Formative Years. The Stationery Office, London.

138. Smuts JC. 1926. Holism and Evolution. London: Macmillan.

139. Trevelyan GM. 1929. Must England’s Beauty Perish?: A Plea on the Behalf of the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty. London: Faber and Gwyer.

140. Tutin TG. 1956-7. Arthur George Tansley. Proceedings of the Botanical Society of the British Isles 2, 99-100.

141. Warming JEB. 1896. Lehrbuch der ökologischen Pflanzengeographie. Eine Einführung in die Kenntnis der Pflanzenvereine. Berlin: Borntraeger.
[translated into English in 1909 by P Groom and IB Balfour. Oecology of Plants: An Introduction to the Study of Plant Communities. Oxford: Clarendon Press.]

 


©New Phytologist Trust - Website Management Byte Sized Solutions