Preface to the First Edition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
The idea for this book arose from a conversation I had one day with two of my neighbors. Neither is a plant specialist but both are keen gardeners. One has in his garden a number of large trees of which not everyone is an unqualified admirer, including the other neighbor. For one thing, the trees shade adjacent gardens from direct sunlight for much of the day, including that of the second neighbor, a somewhat sensitive matter at this northerly latitude where there is a relatively short growing season. In the autumn, immense numbers of leaves find their way into the general neighborhood, often late in the season since some of these particular trees continue shedding leaves even after the first snow. The task of cleaning up frozen, congealed, decaying leaves is not universally appreciated.
Not for the first time, then, the owner of one of the shaded gardens was trying to persuade the tree-loving neighbor to remove his trees which, to the former, were obstacles to productive gardening. As the conversation developed, it became obvious that the aggrieved party thought the main bulk of a tree came from the soil since he made repeated reference to the fact that the offending trees were taking in significant quantities of nutrients through their roots. Of course, plants do absorb many essential minerals and water from soil but we have known for a long time, for more than 200 years in fact, that air, not soil, is the source of the main building block (carbon) from which the bulk of green plants is manufactured.
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- Reaching for the SunHow Plants Work, pp. ix - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011