Background
Kozloff, Eugene Nicholas was born on September 26, 1920 in Tehran, Iran. Came to the United States, 1921. Son of Nicholas Emilianovich and Eugenie Afanasievna (Kuzenkova) Kozloff.
( This is the definitive botanic guide to the wetlands, ...)
This is the definitive botanic guide to the wetlands, woodlands, coastlines, hills, and valleys of the beautiful and diverse San Francisco Bay Region. For this extensively revised and redesigned third edition of Plants of the San Francisco Bay Region, the identification keys have been thoroughly updated to include 21 new families, 155 new species, and approximately 330 changes in the scientific names, ensuring that this popular book will continue to be the most comprehensive and authoritative identification guide to the region’s native and introduced plants. Easy-to-use keys describe more than 2,000 species of wild flowers, trees, shrubs, ferns, and weeds. Hundreds of line drawings and color photographs support accurate identification. Plants are identified by both common and scientific names, making this guide an essential resource for amateur naturalists, students, and professionals.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0520278593/?tag=2022091-20
(Now available in a paperback edition, updated with 30 pag...)
Now available in a paperback edition, updated with 30 pages of additions and corrections, this work provides a systematic treatment of almost every group of marine invertebrates of the Pacific Northwest. Close to 4,000 species are covered and many are illustrated by photographs or drawings. Developed over a period of more than 30 years by zoologists associated with the Friday Harbor Laboratories of the University of Washington and several other institutions, the keys, taxonomic lists, and bibliographies are relevant tonvertebrates of intertidal and shallow subtidal habitats between southern Oregon and the Queen Charlotte Islands of British Columbia. This book is essential for students of invertebrate zoology, marine biology, marine ecology, and fisheries ecology.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0295975628/?tag=2022091-20
(On the northern Pacific coast, from Monterey Bay to Vanco...)
On the northern Pacific coast, from Monterey Bay to Vancouver Island, zoologist Eugene Kozloff explores the rich variety of seashore life of the northern Pacific coast. Hundreds of plants and animals that inhabit the rocky shores, sandy beaches, and quiet bays and estuaries are described and illustrated with encyclopedic thoroughness. Two hundred and ninety-nine color illustrations and nearly 400 black-and-white photographs and line drawings show sponges, molluscs, crustaceans, comb jellies, flatworms, seaweeds, and many other kinds of seashore life, making for easy identification. The text, cross-referenced with figures and plates, describes in precise terms the size, color, activities, and peculiarities of the plants and animals most likely to be encountered. This book is a greatly expanded version of the author’s popular Seashore Life of Puget Sound, the Strait of Georgia, and the San Juan Archipelago, published in 1973. It includes much new material on marine life along the open coast and in coastal bays, and extends the coverage to Oregon and northern California. Years of additional study make this the definitive work on the common seashore life of the northern Pacific coast. Kozloff discusses the geology and geography of the area, and gives the reader “some instant zoology and botany” with which to make the most of seashore exploration. He presents more than 650 species of plants and animals, each in its individual habitat, in chapters dealing with “Floating Docks and Pilings,” “Rocky Shores of the Puget Sound Region,” “Rocky Shores of the Open Coast,” “Sandy Beaches,” and “Quiet Bays and Salt Marshes.” He also explains the laws and customs governing the collection of biological material and how animals respond to changes in their environment. Clearly and convincingly, he communicates pleasure in, and respect for, diverse marine habitats. This book is not only for the use of professional biologists and students; it will add to the pleasure of all who visit the Pacific seashores, ranging from secluded inlets in the San Juan Islands to the magnificent rocky outer coast and tidal estuary of San Francisco Bay.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0295960841/?tag=2022091-20
(A great resource for botanists, native plant enthusiasts,...)
A great resource for botanists, native plant enthusiasts, ecologists, conservationists, and amateur naturalists who desire a comprehensive, up-to-date, and well-illustrated book for the identification of plants of the Pacific Northwest. This is the definitive guide to the rich and varied plant life of the region, from the ocean shore to the crest of the Cascades, from British Columbia south through the Klamath Mountains of southwestern Oregon and the Siskiyous in northwestern California. Its botanical coverage is complete, including plants native to the region as well as those that have been introduced and become naturalized. More than 2500 species are fully described, with user-friendly keys and more than 700 color photographs and 350 line drawings to facilitate successful identification.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0881927244/?tag=2022091-20
( Here is the definitive botanical guide to the wetlands,...)
Here is the definitive botanical guide to the wetlands, woodlands, coastlines, hills, and valleys of the San Francisco Bay Region. For this extensively revised and redesigned edition of Plants of the San Francisco Bay Region, the identification keys have been improved and line drawings scattered throughout the text, ensuring that this popular book will continue to be the most comprehensive and authoritative identification guide to the region's native and introduced plants. o Easy-to-use keys describe more than two thousand species of wildflowers, trees, shrubs, weeds, and ferns o Exceptionally clear illustrations include 457 color photographs and 227 line drawings o Plants are identified by both common and scientific names, making this guide an essential resource for amateur naturalists, students, and professionals
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0520231724/?tag=2022091-20
( In the lowlands of the Pacific Northwest, from southern...)
In the lowlands of the Pacific Northwest, from southern Oregon to British Columbia, the plant and animal life is rich and vast. Previously anyone interested in identifying and learning about the fauna and flora has had to consult a different book for each life form: a tree book for the Pacific yew, a wildflower guide for Indian pipe, and some other reference for garter snakes. In this guidebook, Eugene Kozloff has compile a general natural history of the region, including about 450 species of plants and animals. In order to be as thorough as possible and still preserve the portability of the book, the author has included those species that are fairly common, widely distributed, and can be easily identified by nonspecialists. This book is substantially complete for trees, shrubs, vines, major wildflowers, ferns and fern allies, and amphibians and reptiles. A few especially abundant or conspicuous mammals are discussed, and there are helpful suggestions for beginning the study of birds of the region. Also included is a wide selection of mosses, liverworts, and lichens, as well as the more common snails, slugs, millipedes, centipedes, and certain other invertebrates.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/029595597X/?tag=2022091-20
Kozloff, Eugene Nicholas was born on September 26, 1920 in Tehran, Iran. Came to the United States, 1921. Son of Nicholas Emilianovich and Eugenie Afanasievna (Kuzenkova) Kozloff.
Bachelor of Arts in Zoology, University California, Berkeley, 1942. Master of Arts in Zoology, University California, Berkeley, 1946. Doctor of Philosophy in Zoology, University California, Berkeley, 1950.
Lecturer University California, Berkeley, 1945. From instructor to professor Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon, 1945-1966. Professor zoology University Washington, Seattle, since 1966.
Associate director Friday Harbor (Washington) Laboratories, 1966-1973, acting director, 1979-1981.
(A great resource for botanists, native plant enthusiasts,...)
(Now available in a paperback edition, updated with 30 pag...)
(On the northern Pacific coast, from Monterey Bay to Vanco...)
( This is the definitive botanic guide to the wetlands, ...)
( Here is the definitive botanical guide to the wetlands,...)
( In the lowlands of the Pacific Northwest, from southern...)
(Subtitle: An Illustrated Guide to the Natural History of ...)
Member American Microscopical Society (editorial board), Society Protozoologists, Marine Biol.Assn., Western Society Naturalists (president 1962).
Married Anne Solomon, October 20, 1944. 1 child, Rae Annette.