UTAR Agriculture Science Journal
Next month, January 2015, we will be launching a new journal called the UTAR Agriculture Science Journal. UTAR stands for Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman, I am the editor of this journal and we have been working on it for a year.
Not another journal!! That is the incredulous response I have been getting. We are indeed flooded with journals, mostly dying ones. Every week I get invitations to contribute articles to this or that 'international journal of science' or join the editorial board or become a peer reviewer. I ignore all of them. Originally scientists published to spread information for the public good. Now publication is business. Publishers make profits by selling journals to libraries and to readers. Some make scientists pay a publication fee. Scientists try to get published in the journals that have the best international circulation. Such journals charge heavy subscription fees because they believe that good libraries have no choice but to pay up. The scientist is just a pawn in this business.
The UTAR Agriculture Science Journal will provide scientists with a global audience at no cost to them. We will make the journal totally free of charge on the Internet. Readers will be able to download the contents without restrictions.For libraries that need to have printed copies we will provide printed copies at absolutely no charge, not even for postage.
How long with this journal survive? Stay with this blog and we will find out.
Tuesday, December 09, 2014
Tuesday, November 04, 2014
Price tag on Tropical Fruits, Seeds, Seedlings and Trees
I checked with the Publication Unit in FRIM today on the pricing of the book Tropical Fruits, Seeds, Seedlings and Trees. The price at the FRIM bookshop is 250 Malaysian Ringgit. I mailed one copy to a friend in the USA today and that cost me RM 180 by postal air mail. The cost by Courier would have exceeded RM 300. The weight after packing was over 2 kg.
For overseas orders, the FRIM price is USD 150, not including postage.
As author I would like the book to be distributed quickly and cheaply but that is our of my hands.
For overseas orders, the FRIM price is USD 150, not including postage.
As author I would like the book to be distributed quickly and cheaply but that is our of my hands.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Tropical
Forest Fruits, Seeds, Seedlings and Trees
Author: F.S.P. Ng
Published in October 2014 by The Forest Research Institute
Malaysia (FRIM), Kepong, Selangor, Malaysia.
The biggest, most majestic, and least understood of all living things are the giant trees of high forests. It has been said that we know more about the big animals like elephants and whales than about the big trees.
The idea for this book began to take shape in the 1960s when
tropical forests were vast and challenging, and foresters considered it their
duty to restore logged forests by collecting and germinating seeds and tending
the seedlings until they grew into mature trees. This book was intended to be their
reference manual.
To ensure accuracy and consistency, all the relevant data
were obtained first-hand by personal observation and experiment. Other sources were
used to provide supplementary information. The book deals with over 600 species
of tropical forest trees, representing 309 genera and 86 families. It describes
the structure of their fruits and seeds, their germination characteristics, and
their subsequent development.
At maturity, the big trees are characterized by towering cylindrical
free-standing pillars rising 30 – 50 m or more above the ground, topped by spreading
leafy crowns. These pillars, which
foresters call clear boles, provide the logs of the timber industry. Clear
boles are ‘clear’ because all their branches have been shed and their scars smoothed
over so that no traces of branching remain.
Trees are built from ground up incrementally, according to genetically
predetermined programmes. These programmes were first recognized and described in
the early 1970s as tree architectural models. The recognition of these models
was the exciting highlight of dendrology—the science of trees—of the 1970s and
1980s.
With the recognition of post-architectural development, we
are closer to deciphering the complete development of trees.
Through the 1970s and 1980s, forest nurseries were
maintained in every forest district in Peninsular Malaysia to raise seedlings for
planting. This practice is now implemented strongly in Sabah but has lapsed in the
Peninsula, where forests are being left to regenerate themselves. Most forest nurseries
have closed and the ability of staff to recognize fruits, seeds, seedlings and
trees is rapidly being lost. Commercial nurseries have come into operation,
raising forest trees for establishment in urban areas, but the range of species
they grow is only a fraction of the diversity of tropical forests. The future
of many species now hangs in the balance, for without greater effort to
propagate and grow them to maturity, they will surely become extinct.
This book is sold at RM 250 at the bookshop in FRIM,
Kepong. Weighing 1.86kg, the book is 429 pages long and crammed with
germination data, line drawings of fruits and seeds, photographs of seedlings,
and illustrations of tree form and structure.
………………………….
The author joined the Forest
Research Institute Malaysia as Forest Botanist in 1964 and was its Deputy
Director-General in 1986 – 1990. He headed the Forest Research, Education and
Training Service of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United
Nations in Rome in 1991 – 1994. In 1994 – 1996 he was one of the founding
Directors of the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) in Bogor.
Dr Ng was awarded the David Fairchild Medal for Plant Exploration in 2009 in
Miami. Among his other books are Tropical
Horticulture and Gardening (2006) and 100
Years of Tropical Forestry Research (2010). He is currently Consulting Editor to the Journal of Tropical Forest Science and
Editor of the UTAR Agriculture Science
Journal.
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