The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum - Arnoldia - Harvard University
The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum - Arnoldia - Harvard University
The Magazine of the Arnold Arboretum - Arnoldia - Harvard University
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40 <strong>Arnold</strong>ia 68/1<br />
— integrifolia ssp. integrifolia, in<br />
China 3: inside front cover, 2, 4–7, 4<br />
— — x grandis 3: 7<br />
— — x quintuplinervia 3: 7<br />
— pseudointegrifolia 3: 7<br />
Medicinal crops 3: 29–30<br />
Mediterranean beetles, damaging<br />
1: 33<br />
Mesopotamia, quince in 1: 3<br />
Mespilus 1: 4; 3: 21<br />
Metasequoia glyptostroboides, fall<br />
color 4: 23<br />
Mexico, oaks native to 4: 3<br />
Meyer, Paul 1: 21, 22, 23, 24<br />
Michigan, EAB in 1: 34<br />
Microbiota decussata cutting 4: 18<br />
Midwest, Aronia in 3: 23<br />
Miller, George 4: 26<br />
Min Shan mountains 2: 1<br />
Missouri Botanical Garden 4: 27<br />
Morchella spp. 3: 30<br />
Morels 3: 27, 30<br />
Morphology, oak speciation and 4:<br />
2–13<br />
— scientific classification and 4:<br />
25–27<br />
Morris <strong>Arboretum</strong>, camellia selection<br />
at 1: 20–30, 25–30<br />
— — — Korean expeditions <strong>of</strong><br />
[1979–1991] 1: 20–24, 20–23<br />
Morton <strong>Arboretum</strong>, oak research at<br />
4: 4–14<br />
— — herbarium specimens 4: 3–5, 9<br />
Mountain ash, Korean 1: 24<br />
— habitats 2: 22–28<br />
— — Afganistan 3: 36<br />
— — Burma 3: 36<br />
— — Maine 3: 19<br />
— — Tennessee 3: 20<br />
— — Sichuan/Tibet 3: 2–13, 3, 5, 8,<br />
9, 12<br />
Mt. Emei 2: 26<br />
Mt. Wachusett 3: 26<br />
Mudge, Ken, “Forest Farming” 3:<br />
26–35<br />
Murray, Joseph, “Tree Hormones and<br />
Why <strong>The</strong>y Matter” 4: 15–19<br />
Museum <strong>of</strong> Science 1: 16<br />
Mushroom cultivation 3: 28, 30–33,<br />
31, 33<br />
— income from 3: 30<br />
— nutrient process 3: 31<br />
— spawn 3: 31, 33<br />
— wild-collected 3: 27<br />
Mutagen breeding 3: 24<br />
N<br />
Nadkarni, Nalini M., Dr. 2: 29<br />
— — — “Between Earth and Sky: Our<br />
Intimate Connections to Trees”<br />
[excerpt] 2: 29–31<br />
Nakai (Japanese botanist) 4: 28<br />
Naming Nature: <strong>The</strong> Clash Between<br />
Instinct and Science [Yoon,<br />
reviewed] 4: 25–27<br />
National <strong>Arboretum</strong> 2: 7<br />
National Plant Germplasm System<br />
(NPGS) 1: 6, 7, 9<br />
Native Americans and plants 3: 27, 29<br />
Nebraska, Aronia in 3: 23<br />
Nematode, pinewood 2: 29<br />
New England, hydrangeas in 1: 44<br />
Newton, Amanda A., 1909 illustration<br />
by 1: back cover<br />
New York forests 3: 27–28<br />
Nightshade family, blights 4: 20<br />
Nikko fir 4: 22<br />
Nineteenth-century aerial photography<br />
1: 10, 10<br />
— — garden trends 1: 44<br />
Nomenclature, binomial 4: 26<br />
— <strong>of</strong> Aronia 3: 21<br />
Non-native pests 1: 31–35<br />
North America, flora <strong>of</strong> 1: 44; 3:<br />
14–25<br />
— — forest-farming in 3: 27<br />
— — oaks <strong>of</strong> 4: 2–13, map 6<br />
— — pests from 2: 29<br />
North Carolina, chokeberry in 3: 18<br />
Nor<strong>the</strong>ast Aerial Photos 1: 15<br />
Nor<strong>the</strong>ast, versatile shrub for 3: 14–25<br />
— — reforestation trends in 3: 26, 28<br />
Nuclear data, and black oaks 4: 3<br />
Nursery trade 2: 14, 32<br />
Nut groves 3: 30, 32<br />
Nutraceutical fruit crop 3: 14–25<br />
O<br />
Oak 3: 31, 32, 36<br />
— black 4: 5–6, 10–13, 10–11,<br />
back cover<br />
— — hybrids 4: 7<br />
— — petioles 4: 11<br />
— genome 4: 7–11<br />
— Hill’s, disturbance and 4: 13<br />
— — interbreeding and taxonomy<br />
4: 1–13, 2–5, map 6, genetic chart 7,<br />
9–10<br />
— nor<strong>the</strong>rn pin 4: 2–13<br />
— pin 4: 5<br />
— red 4: front cover<br />
— scarlet 4: 3–10, 4, 6, map 6, genetic<br />
chart 7, 8–9, 12<br />
— white 4: 12<br />
Oaks, as beetle host 1: 35<br />
— black group 4: 2–13, map 6, genetic<br />
chart 7<br />
— white group 4: 2–3<br />
Ohio Valley, camellias in 1: 27<br />
Olmsted style 1: 6, 12<br />
Ophiostoma spp. 1: 33<br />
Orchids, wild 2: 25<br />
Oregon, Aronia in 3: 23<br />
— exotic beetle in 1: 35<br />
— USDA genebank in 1: 7, 9<br />
Ornamentals, forest-grown 3: 33–35,<br />
33, 34<br />
— woody 1: 2–9, 20–30, 44; 2: 2–21,<br />
32; 3: 14–25, 36; 4: 28<br />
Osmanthus forest, in China 2: 24<br />
Oyster mushroom 3: 30, 31<br />
P<br />
Panax quinquefolius, as crop 3:<br />
28–30, 29, 30<br />
Panda, giant 2: 22, 23, 24, 28<br />
Pao-chung, Kao, Pr<strong>of</strong>. 2: 28<br />
Paris fargesii, in China 2: 25<br />
Parks, Clifford, Dr. 1: 24, 28<br />
Pawpaw fruit 3: 28, 28, 30<br />
Pear 1: 3, 4, 5<br />
— ‘Beurre Hardy’ 1: 5<br />
— ‘Bradford’ Callery 4: 28<br />
— ‘Comice’ 1: 5<br />
— Japanese 1: 4<br />
— ‘Old Home’ 1: 5<br />
— quince hybrid 1: 4, 4<br />
— quinces and 1: 3–7<br />
— sand, at <strong>Arboretum</strong> 4: inside<br />
covers, 28<br />
— — fruit <strong>of</strong> 4: 28<br />
— — vigor <strong>of</strong> 4: 28<br />
— tribe 1: 3