Errata

Illustrated Guide to Home Biology Experiments

Errata for Illustrated Guide to Home Biology Experiments

Submit your own errata for this product.

The errata list is a list of errors and their corrections that were found after the product was released. If the error was corrected in a later version or reprint the date of the correction will be displayed in the column titled "Date Corrected".

The following errata were submitted by our customers and approved as valid errors by the author or editor.

Color key: Serious technical mistake Minor technical mistake Language or formatting error Typo Question Note Update

Version Location Description Submitted By Date submitted Date corrected
Printed
Page 5
United States

The fifth bullet reads, ". . . record it as Amoeba sp. to indicate the phylum is known . . .".

It should read, " . . . record it as Amoeba sp. to indicate the genus is known . . ."

Note from the Author or Editor:
The erratum report is correct. Please change "phylum" to "genus" where indicated.

Joseph Angermeier  Jun 09, 2012  Feb 13, 2015
Printed
Page 27
United States

The second to last paragraph should refer to Figure 2-3, not Figure 2-4.

Note from the Author or Editor:
This erratum is correct. Please change "Figure 2-4" to "Figure 2-3" where indicated.

Joseph Angermeier  Jun 09, 2012  Feb 13, 2015
Other Digital Version
276
Fig X-1-7 caption

There is no such thing as a "brophophyll"; that's a piece of vandalism that sat in the Wikipedia "Fern" article for four years undetected. Also, since "phyll" means leaf, "sporophyll leaf" is redundant; "sporophyll" is usually sufficient.

Note from the Author or Editor:
On p. 275, please replace the bottom paragraph in the left column with the following:

"Although mosses have leaf-like structures with chloroplasts, they are not true leaves. Ferns, conversely, possess two types of true (vascular) leaves, which are referred to collectively as megaphylls. Trophophylls are similar in appearance and structure to the leaves on seed plants, and perform the same function: using photosynthesis to produce and store saccharides. Sporophylls appear similar to trophophylls, and also engage in photosynthesis, but also produce spores. In that respect, they are functionally similar to the cone scales of gymnosperms and the pistils and stamens of angiosperms."

On p. 276, please replace "Sori form on sporophyll or brophophyll leaves" with "Sori form on sporophylls"

Christopher Hoess  Jun 26, 2012  Feb 13, 2015