Green above, paler below: descriptions in the literature of the colour in trees from southwest Australia

This paper outlines descriptions of colour in the literature pertaining to the flora of the Southwestern Australian Floristic Region, comparing pre-settlement exploration by Dutch, French and English voyagers with modern general texts. It was found that colour has been and continues to be poorly described, preventing any analysis of the biological diversity of colour to enable comparison across or between floras or species. Forthcoming work on more accurate colour description using the Natural Color System of Sweden is foreshadowed.

[1]  D. Clark,et al.  New Holland Journal, November 1833-October 1834 , 1995 .

[2]  A. George William Dampier in New Holland: Australia's First Natural Historian , 1999 .

[3]  B. Brown,et al.  Citizen Labillardière: A Naturalist's Life in Revolution and Exploration (1755–1834) , 2006 .

[4]  S. Hopper South-western Australia, Cinderella of the World's Temperate Floristic Regions 1 , 2003 .

[5]  M. Brooker,et al.  Field Guide To Eucalypts , 2000 .

[6]  W. B. Alexander The Discovery of Australia , 1914, Nature.

[7]  Christine Cornell,et al.  The journal of Post Captain Nicolas Baudin, Commander-in-Chief of the Corvettes Géographe and Naturaliste : assigned by order of the government to a voyage of discovery , 1974 .

[8]  A. Mitchell,et al.  Arid Shrubland Plants of Western Australia , 1989 .

[9]  Hugh Edwards Islands Of Angry Ghosts , 1966 .

[10]  J. Isaacs Bush Food: Aboriginal Food and Herbal Medicine , 1989 .

[11]  C. Willard,et al.  Colour and Culture: Practice and Meaning from Antiquity to Abstraction , 2001 .

[12]  Thomas Griffiths Hunters and Collectors: The Antiquarian Imagination in Australia , 1996 .

[13]  J. Grimes Plant life of Western Australia , 2008, Brittonia.

[14]  Q. Cronk Plant evolution and development in a post-genomic context , 2001, Nature Reviews Genetics.

[15]  F. Horner Looking for La Perouse: D'Entrecasteaux in Australia and the South Pacific 1792-1793 , 1996 .

[16]  N. M. Penzer,et al.  A new voyage round the world , 2013 .

[17]  P. Gioia,et al.  Species richness and endemism in the Western Australian flora , 2000 .

[18]  D. Mabberley,et al.  Ferdinand Bauer’s field drawings of endemic Western Australian plants made at King George Sound and Lucky Bay, December 1801 – January 1802. I , 2000 .

[19]  A. George The genus Banksia L.f. (Proteaceae) , 1981, Nuytsia—The journal of the Western Australian Herbarium.

[20]  F. Fornasiero,et al.  Encountering Terra Australis: The Australian Voyages of Nicolas Baudin and Matthew Flinders , 2005 .

[21]  Thomas Griffiths How many trees make a forest? Cultural debates about vegetation change in Australia , 2002 .

[22]  Q. Beresford The Salinity Crisis: Landscapes, Communities and Politics , 2001 .

[23]  H. Walter Lack,et al.  Recording colour in late eighteenth century botanical drawings: Sydney Parkinson, Ferdinand Bauer and Thaddäus Haenke , 1997 .

[24]  P. Gioia,et al.  The Southwest Australian Floristic Region: Evolution and Conservation of a Global Hot Spot of Biodiversity , 2004 .

[25]  Blanche Henrey British botanical and horticultural literature before 1800 comprising a history and bibliography of botanical and horticultural books printed in England, Scotland, and Ireland from the earliest times until 1800 , 1975 .

[26]  S. Hopper South-Western Australia, Cinderella of the World's Temperate Floristic Regions 2 , 2004 .

[27]  Timothy Bonyhady,et al.  The Colonial Earth , 2002 .

[28]  J. Diamond A sense of place , 1997, Nature.

[29]  C French Colour theory and its application in art and design ?, 137 pp., illus., Springer-Verlag, New York, 1979, DM 49 , 1981 .