{"id":47408,"date":"2016-08-01T08:41:14","date_gmt":"2016-08-01T00:41:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/besgroup.org\/?p=47408"},"modified":"2023-06-24T17:10:21","modified_gmt":"2023-06-24T09:10:21","slug":"book-review-plants-in-tropical-cities-singapore-uvaria-tide","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/besgroup.org\/2016\/08\/01\/book-review-plants-in-tropical-cities-singapore-uvaria-tide\/","title":{"rendered":"Book Review: Plants in Tropical Cities, Singapore: Uvaria Tide"},"content":{"rendered":"

\u201cPlants in Tropical Cities by Boo Chin Min, Sharon YJ Chew & Jean WH Yong, privately published in 2014, Uvaria Tide (uvaria@hotmail.com; contact 65-9783-4814).<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"Plants<\/p>\n

\u201cThe campaign to turn Singapore into a Garden City, then into a City in a Garden, resulted in hundreds of flowering plants being brought in from all over the world. Keeping track of these introductions was a problem until the National Parks Board published 1001 Garden Plants in Singapore in 2003, now in its third edition. In 2014 Boo Chih Min, the lead author in the first two editions, privately published Plants in Tropical Cities (together with Sharon YJ Chew and Jean WH Yong) after she left NParks.<\/p>\n

\"Plants<\/p>\n

\u201cThis new, improved and updated volume is crammed with nearly 2,800 species within its 990 pages.<\/p>\n