EXCELLENCE IN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
Sprinter and Sprummer
Australia’s Changing Seasons
- Publisher
CSIRO Publishing - Published
5th September 2014 - ISBN 9781486302031
 - Language English
 - Pages 184 pp.
 - Size 5.125" x 7.875"
 - Images 15 illus & 18 maps
 
Sprinter and Sprummer opens with the origins and theory of the traditional seasonal system and goes on to review the Aboriginal seasonal classifications used across Australia. Entwisle then proposes a new five-season approach, explaining the characteristics of each season, along with the biological changes that define them. The book uses seasons to describe the fascinating triggers in the life of a plant (and plant-like creatures), using charismatic flora such as carnivorous plants, the Wollemi Pine and orchids, as well as often overlooked organisms such as fungi. The final chapter considers climate change and how the seasons are shifting whether we like it or not.
Proceeds from the sale of this book will assist the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne to advance the knowledge, conservation and enjoyment of plants.
Introduction 
 Acknowledgements 
 List of illustrations 
1. The Vivaldi option 
The seasons we had to have 
The Earth, spinning like a top 
A quick seasonal tour of the world 
Seasons of the sun 
Opinions divided on the need for seasonal change 
2. Knock'em down storm and other Indigenous seasons 
From west to north – two to six Australian seasons 
Spotlight on Sydney seasons 
The south-east – anything from three to seven seasons 
3. Five very Australian seasons 
If it ain't broke, why fix it? 
Sprinter 
Sprummer 
Summer 
Autumn 
Winter 
Seasonal rumblings in the motherland 
Why I'm right 
4. Sprinter, the early spring: August and September 
Celebrating the start of spring 
Wattle Day on the wrong day 
Flowery sprinter 
Animals spring to life in sprinter 
Sprinter, come rain or shine 
Sprinter by any other name 
Botanising in sprinter 
Think global, act local 
5. Sprummer, the cranky one: October and November 
Biological cycles 
Sprummer is cranky in London too 
What to do about the mountains 
Sprummer, the Australian fall? 
6. The long hot summer: December to March 
Fruit in summer and other seasons 
Life and death in summer 
The endless summer 
An English summer, if you're lucky 
Plants on fire 
Plant survivors 
7. Autumn's fat spiders and fungi: April and May 
Stocking up for winter 
The fungal season 
Changeable weather 
Autumnal colour 
8. Wakeful winter: June and July 
Budding up 
Chilled out 
A weedy history 
Night-time is party-time for some 
The winter that isn't 
9. Changing seasons 
The inexorable creep of spring 
Australia's changing seasons 
Say it with flowers 
Ready for change 
Endnotes 
 Bibliography 
 Index
Timothy J. Entwisle
Timothy J. Entwisle is a highly respected botanist, broadcaster and author, with over 30 years’ experience as head of the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney and Melbourne, and in a senior role at Kew Gardens in London.