Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"botanist" Definitions
  1. a scientist who studies botany

1000 Sentences With "botanist"

How to use botanist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "botanist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "botanist". Mastering all the usages of "botanist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Anthony Ambrose, a tree-climbing botanist from the University of California, Berkeley, estimates the tree—which he has named Munz, after a celebrated 20th-century botanist—is around 1,500 years old.
Michaux's father, André, was a prominent, adventurous botanist as well.
The first is a botanist searching for a miracle healing plant.
I particularly like saying I'm a botanist, because I love plants.
The previous owner, a botanist, clearly knew what she was doing.
From the dark green needles of the hemlock spruce in the east to the aromatic flowers of the coastal California bay, French botanist François-André Michaux and English botanist Thomas Nuttall documented every known North American tree.
A botanist might do the same with a specific grass or tree.
Botanist George Washington Carver works in his greenhouse in this undated photograph.
She then asked a botanist to identify the flowers, introducing another degree
It was the quiet work of Gregor Mendel, the Austrian botanist and
This solar-powered camera alone could be your new all-purpose botanist.
His mother, Otylie (Hajmaarova) Kral, was a botanist who played classical piano.
Four years later, she started her career as a botanist and explorer.
Pace is a botanist studying the diversity and evolution of New World orchids.
But you, reader, have received your botanist awakening, and now you're the wiser.
Ms. Madara calls herself a "hobby botanist," with a focus on poisonous plants.
It all started around 150 years ago with a botanist named Joseph Hooker.
Patrick Blanc is another huge industry player, although he's a botanist, not an architect.
We asked her what exactly a botanist looks for in order to classify flowers.
A Canadian botanist is also suspected to have been killed by the two teenagers.
A great-uncle was Heinrich Anton de Bary, a noted 19th-century German botanist.
"It takes a botanist to appreciate the charisma of a plant," Dr. McDonald said.
The son of a botanist and a potter/horticulturalist, EJ grew up surrounded by plants.
He was a scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, painter, sculptor, architect, botanist, musician, and writer.
Not being a botanist, he decided to run them by one at Rutgers University -- Lena Struwe.
"There's so much despair in terms of conservation these days," a botanist named Nicky Meeson said.
The childhood friends were charged with murder in the death of Leonard Dyck, 64, a botanist.
She is a biologist and botanist, and she owns a single-house garden near the restaurant.
The botanist David Hosack transformed this landscape into the country's first public botanical garden in 1801.
A collaboration with Phillip Andrew Lewis, a botanist, it attempts to combine psychoactive plants with human DNA.
Boeri's team works with botanist Laura Gatti and her team to analyze the climate of the site.
While Planetario featured a collaboration with astrophysicist Fabio Peri, Botanica includes a collaboration with botanist Stefano Mancuso.
Like Clusius I am a botanist, but I focus on trade in plants collected from the wild.
Vocations Janel Johnson, 39, is a botanist with the Nevada Natural Heritage Program in Carson City, Nev.
A university-trained botanist, he started his own farm in 21950; Hurricane Maria took his entire crop.
Erika Ranee: I wanted to be an ornithologist, entomologist, or a botanist when I was a child.
A fantastic synthesis of performance, physics, and biology mark Polish botanist Urszula Zajączkowska's new video, Metamorphosis of Plants.
"The nickname for the hospital is 'the morgue,'" says Kris Kitalong, a pharmaceutical botanist and local health campaigner.
"Very interesting," Frank N. Meyer, a department botanist, wrote in 270 in response to one of her letters.
He also named an unpleasant-smelling weed after Johann Siegesbeck, a German botanist and one of Linnaeus's enemies.
In her reflections on the natural world, botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer emphasizes how collective and individual benefits overlap.
She's a botanist hired by Westmead to decorate the ballroom where he plans to find his future wife.
They also worked with a botanist to determine what trees and plants would realistically grow in the area.
It's encouraging to see, as a journalist in the disappearing print era, that for the botanist, newspapers remain essential.
On July 30th Cook, his crew and a bumptious young botanist named Joseph Banks left their last London anchorage.
"You're not doing any harm by cutting down a Christmas tree," botanist Clint Springer told the New York Times.
NASA released a new summary of some of those advantages, based on the work of space botanist Ray Wheeler.
Joanna Osborne (botanist, Royal Botanic Gardens of Kew): We took a local guide with us, a very nice guy.
In a spoof on The Martian, Rock himself plays NASA botanist Mark Watney, who's just been marooned on Mars.
Susanne Masters is a botanist who writes about plants as well as conducting research on their uses and conservation.
They bought their home in January, and continued to nurture their 211-acre property, originally planted by a botanist.
Tradescant was an avid plant collector and botanist, a prime example of the English aristocracy's longstanding fascination with plants.
Furufue is a bryologist—a botanist who studies mosses—hired by the factory to oversee a green roof initiative.
His only salvation is to marry rich, which leads him to Henrietta Lowell (May), a bumbling heiress and botanist.
He hired Joseph Loudon, a Scottish botanist who had already designed the Birmingham Botanical Gardens, to create a botanical garden.
Single mom Kristie Scarazzo, a botanist with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, was one of the hundreds of thousands stranded.
Dr. Kalev Freeman, an emergency room physician, and Monique McHenry, a botanist, helped create these courses to address several needs.
In 1968 it was rediscovered by Elsie Quarterman, a legendary Vanderbilt botanist, who immediately went to work to protect it.
I take issue with IVIE and his explanation of how its clue evolved from botanist to landscaper — that's "ivy," guys.
THE FOOD EXPLORER The True Adventures of the Globe-Trotting Botanist Who Transformed What America Eats By Daniel Stone Illustrated.
I'm a real plant person, and if wasn't a painter, I would probably have been a naturalist or a botanist.
Some of her artwork is also in the expansive private collection of Shirley Sherwood, a British botanist, writer and philanthropist.
When Perlman began working as a botanist in the mid-1970s, there were probably around 150 Brighamia insignis plants, he says.
The murders of a US woman, her Australian boyfriend, and a Canadian botanist took place in July in northern British Columbia.
It was Leslie, a botanist who struggled with the loneliness of living on the colony, but found solace in her plants.
Springer, the botanist, says his backyard in North Central West Virginia still hosts a Christmas tree he planted 35 years ago.
The dean of students for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, David Cohen, a botanist, was going to teach ballet.
I spent some time recently in the Swiss Alps with a man named José Vouillamoz, a world-renowned geneticist and botanist.
On Monday, botanist James Wong posted the following, impressively scientific breakdown of exactly how Groot biology works...  THE BIOLOGY OF BABY GROOT.
Mistletoe coming from any other country will be held until a botanist from a local plant inspection station can take a look.
The fact that this outlandish statement was being made by a botanist, rather than one of their own, only increased their scorn.
There's a good number of interesting compound phrases, ranging from a 19th century botanist to an over-the-top NBA arcade game.
"Exponential growth is the nature of invasive species," said Pawel Wasowicz, a botanist and lupine expert at the Institute of Natural History.
In 2015, three years after his death, a botanist reported having found a rare plant poison in Mr. Perepilichny's preserved stomach contents.
Jonathan Timberlake (independent botanist): I looked at it on Google Earth and … realized that it was really quite a very, very unusual situation.
Consider The Martian, a movie in which Matt Damon's botanist astronaut Mark Watney is basically a near-future Sherlock stranded on another planet.
When Ford set out on his Brazilian endeavor, he had refused to consult a botanist when planting the foundation of the rubber trees.
Some 75 years later, the French botanist Édouard André came to Tochecito to conduct a detailed study of the palms Humboldt had described.
But they weren't called "marimo" until Takuya Kawakami, another botanist, found them along Lake Akan in Hokkaido, Japan, more than a century later.
In 1801 the French botanist Augustin Augier used a tree as a kind of chart, for bringing order to the diversity of plants.
It's a fitting situation for Williams, a state botanist, who rappelled down the cliff to retrieve a rare plant growing on the rockface.
For instance, the Mr. Easy cocktail she created uses fancy ingredients like Botanist gin; Yuzushu, a Japanese liqueur; and Suze, a French aperitif.
"This has me puzzled," Peter Latz, a botanist from central Australia, wrote after a 1974 field trip in which he encountered the plant.
The botanist Ludwig Pappe, later Colonial Botanist, prepared herbarium specimens from the garden plants.
Edmond Davall (Orbe, 1793 - Lausanne, 1860) was a Swiss botanist and politician. He was son of the English-Swiss botanist Edmund Davall.
Sir Geoffrey Evans CIE (1883–1963) was a botanist who was Economic Botanist and acting Director at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
Title page of The Marine Botanist. A book by Isabella Gifford, 1848 Isabella Gifford (1825–1891) was a Welsh-born botanist. In 1848, she published The Marine Botanist, a book which focuses on algology. Some of her specimens are in the Ulster Museum.
James Backhouse (1825–1890) was an English botanist, archaeologist, and geologist. He was the son of James Backhouse (1794–1869), a botanist and missionary.
The generic name, Decaisnina honours the French botanist Joseph Decaisne (1807–1882), and the specific epithet, hollrungii, honours the botanist Udo Max Hollrung (1858-1937).
Richard Cunningham (12 February 1793 – April 1835) was an English botanist who became Colonial Botanist of New South Wales and superintendent of the Sydney Botanic Gardens.
Frans Hubert Edouard Arthur Walter Robyns (1901-1986), known as Walter Robyns, was a Belgian botanist. His son, André Robyns (1935–2003), was also a botanist.
Alphonse Louis Pierre Pyramus (or Pyrame) de Candolle (28 October 18064 April 1893) was a French-Swiss botanist, the son of the Swiss botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle.
Ipomoea polymorpha is a morning glory species that was first described by Swiss botanist Johann Jacob Roemer and Austrian botanist Josef August Schultes. It is endemic to Australia.
Henry Chichester Hart MRIA FLS (1847–1908) was an Anglo-Irish botanist and explorer.J. Akeroyd, 2004, "Henry Chichester Hart (1847-1908), botanist and polymath", Sherkin Comment, 38:21.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Rich. when citing a botanical name. His son was another notable botanist, Achille Richard. He also discovered Morgat in the 1880s.
Botanist Joseph Gaertner Joseph Gaertner (12 March 1732 – 14 July 1791) was a German botanist, best known for his work on seeds, De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum (1788-1792).
The type specimen was collected by botanist Robert Brown from King George Sound in 1801. In 1821 French botanist Jacques Etienne Gay placed the species in the genus Thomasia.
Juan Ismael CalzadaHUH - Databases - Botanist Search Results is a Mexican botanist and collector. Dr Calzada is credited with the discovery of the elm Ulmus ismaelis, named in his honour.
Anna (Worsley) Russell (November 1807 – 11 November 1876) was a British botanist. She has been described as "perhaps the ablest and most outstanding woman field botanist of her time".
Stylidium humphreysii is a species of trigger plant endemic to desert regions of Western Australia. American botanist Sherwin Carlquist named the species after West Australian amateur botanist Fred Humphreys.
Carl Hartman Carl Hartman (5 June 1824 in Solna – 19 April 1884 in Örebro) was a Swedish botanist. He was the son of Carl Johan Hartman, also a botanist.
She married George Simonds Boulger, a botanist, in 1879.The Times, Friday, May 05, 1922; Issue 43023; pg. 18; col C — "The Times" Botanist. Death Of Professor G. S. Boulger.
Mary Sophia Bentham ( 1765 – 1858) was a British botanist and author. Bentham was daughter of chemist George Fordyce, wife of mechanical engineer Samuel Bentham, and mother of botanist George Bentham.
Caroline Barbey-Boissier (4 August 1847, in Geneva – 18 January 1918, in Pregny-Chambésy) was a Swiss botanist, author and translator. She was the daughter of botanist Pierre Edmond Boissier.
The botanist John Smith originally described this species as Caelebogyne ilicifolia in 1839, from three specimens collected by Allan Cunningham in 1829. The Swiss botanist Johann Müller gave it its current name in 1865. The generic name Alchornea honours the English botanist Stanesby Alchorne. Ilicifolia refers to the holly like leaves (Ilex).
Disciples of Anders Jahan Retzius include the botanist Carl Adolph Agardh, the zoologist and archaeologist Sven Nilsson, the botanist and entomologist Carl Fredrik Fallén, and the entomologist Johan Wilhelm Zetterstedt. He was also an influence on the botanist Elias Fries who arrived in Lund by the time Retzius was already an old man.
Jane Colden (March 27, 1724 – March 10, 1766) was an American botanist,Makers of American Botany, Harry Baker Humphrey, Ronald Press Company, Library of Congress Card Number 61-18435 described as the "first botanist of her sex in her country" by Asa Gray in 1843. Although not acknowledged in contemporary botanical publications, she wrote a number of letters resulting in botanist John Ellis writing to Carl Linnaeus of her work applying the Linnaean system of plant identification to American flora, for which botanist Peter Collinson stated "she deserves to be celebrated". Contemporary scholarship maintains that she was the first female botanist working in America. She was regarded as a respected botanist by many prominent botanists such as: John Bartram, Peter Collinson, Alexander Garden, and Carl Linnaeus.
Brackenridge in 1880 William Dunlop Brackenridge (1810–1893) was a British- American nurseryman and botanist. Brackenridge emigrated to Philadelphia in 1837, where he was employed by Robert Buist, nurseryman. He was appointed horticulturalist, then assistant botanist, for the United States Exploring Expedition from 1838-1842. Originally, the well-known botanist Asa Gray was to be the chief botanist, and William Rich, a Washington, DC socialite and son of an ambassador, was politically appointed as his assistant.
George Stephen West (1876–1919) was a British botanist specialist of algae and protistology. With his brother William (W.West, 1875–1901), he is the son of botanist William West (West, 1848–1914).
Alfred Huet du Pavillon (January 1829 in Blain, Loire-Atlantique – 1907 in Frohsdorf) was a French botanist. His brother, Édouard Huet du Pavillon (1819-1908), with whom he often collaborated, was also a botanist. He spent his childhood in Switzerland, later studying under botanist Alphonse de Candolle. From 1852 to 1856 he was curator of de Candolle's herbarium.
The name A. nilotica was first published by the German botanist Georg Heinrich Mettenius in the book Plantis Tinneanis, that was published in 1865, who credits French botanist Joseph Decaisne for the name.
Eucalyptus howittiana was first formally described in 1882 by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in The Southern Science Record. The specific epithet honours the bushman, explorer, botanist, geologist and magistrate, Alfred William Howitt.
Arrhenia was named for the Swedish botanist Johan Peter Arrhenius.
The name Lonicera stems from Adam Lonicer, a Renaissance botanist.
Another botanist, Matthaeus Lobelius, also refers to her Antwerp garden.
The genus is named after the Russian botanist E. Vesselowsky.
The genus is named after the Russian botanist E. Vesselowsky.
The specific epithet honors professor Tuna Ekim, a Turkish botanist.
The earlier epithet (willisii) honours the botanist James Hamlyn Willis.
Grace Greylock Niles was an American botanist, author, and artist.
The tree is named for the Danish botanist Nathaniel Wallich.
This species is named after fern botanist Konrad H. Christ.
The species was first described by the botanist Robert Brown.
Andrew Smith Melville the botanist was his son.Collins, p. 101.
Jones' second wife was Anna May Clark, a fellow botanist.
According to Bougainville's account, Baret was herself an expert botanist.
The generic name honours the French botanist Antoine Gouan (1733-1821), Nardo's original name Covania being a latinisation of Gouan, while the specific name honours another botanist, the German Carl Ludwig Willdenow (1765-1812).
The species was first formally described in 1844 by botanist Carl Meissner. In 1995, botanist Michael Crisp placed the species in the genus Nemcia. In 2002, Chandler et al returned it to the Gastrolobium.
Alexander Theodorowicz Batalin (; 13 August 1847 – 13 October 1896), alternatively known as Alexandr Fedorovich Batalin, was a Russian botanist. He was the Chief Botanist and Director of the Imperial Botanical Garden in St. Petersburg.
Agnete Seidelin (5 November 1874 - 4 June 1956), also credited as Agnete Seidelin-Raunkiaer was a Danish botanist noted for her study of freshwater plants. She was married to Danish botanist Christen C. Raunkiær.
Rosette Batarda Fernandes Rosette Mercedes Saraiva Batarda (1 October 1916 in Redondo, Alentejo – 28 May 2005) was a Portuguese botanist and taxonomist who was married to Abílio Fernandes (1906–1994), another Portuguese botanist and taxonomist.
Johann (or Jean) Caspar Bauhin (12 December 1541 – 26 October 1613) was a Swiss botanist, born in Basel. He was the son of physician Jean Bauhin and the brother of physician and botanist Gaspard Bauhin.
Thomas Archibald Sprague (7 October 1877 Edinburgh – 22 October 1958 Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England) was a Scottish botanist. In 1938 he married botanist Mary Letitia Green, and together they authored several supplements to the Index Kewensis.
Alma Holland Beers (1892-1974) was an American botanist known for being the first woman botanist at the University of Chapel Hill, including her work plant collecting, co-authoring multiple publications, and creating botanical illustrations.
Hakea lehmanniana was first formally described in 1845 by Swiss botanist Carl Meisner and the description was published in Plantae Preissianae. The species was named in honour of the German botanist, Johann Georg Christian Lehmann.
Described as Cymbalaria by the English botanist, John Hill in 1756.
Enrique Forero González (born 1942 in Bogota, Colombia) is a botanist.
The genus takes its name from Portuguese botanist Luís Wittnich Carrisso.
Named for French botanist Charles Gaudichaud- Beaupré; also named D. decandrum.
The specific epithet honors botanist Raymond Harley, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
He was the son of botanist Carl Moritz Gottsche (1808-1892).
The botanist Dr Richard Parnell FRSE (1810-1882) was born here.
Jean Hector Paul Auguste Ghesquière (born 1888) was a Belgian botanist.
This genus is named for the French botanist Adolphe-Théodore Brongniart.
He is the grandfather of physician and botanist Christoph Jacob Treu.
Beckett is married to Madeline Olin, a botanist from Southern California.
It was initially described in 1854 by American botanist Asa Gray.
Dariusz Lucjan Szlachetko (born 1961) is a Polish botanist and orchidologist.
His son George Bentham, born in 1800, became a noted botanist.
The buttonwood is named in honour of the botanist Bernard Hyland.
Helen Isobel Aston (born 1934) was an Australian botanist and ornithologist.
The specific epithet (cunninghamii ) honours the explorer and botanist Allan Cunningham.
The species name honors Brazilian botanist Othon Xavier de Brito Machado.
Roy Emile Gereau (born 1947) is an American botanist and explorer.
The specific name honours the French botanist Philibert Commerson (1727-1773).
The name of this bird commemorates the French botanist Jean Dybowski.
Odontonema brevipes is a species of plant in the family Acanthaceae which is endemic to Trinidad and Tobago. The species is only known from four localities in the Main Ridge of Tobago. It was described by German botanist Ignatz Urban in his Symbolae Antillanae, based on collections made by Danish botanist Henrik von Eggers and English-born Trinidadian botanist Walter Elias Broadway.
French botanist André Michaux described candyroot as a variety of Polygala lutea in 1803. Swiss botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle reclassified it as a species in 1824. The species name is the Latin word nanus "dwarf".
Having spent much time with him in the Himalayas, Indira became deeply influenced by Kaul's passion for nature. Among Kaul's natural scientist friends were Frank Hawking, a British biologist and physician and Stephen Hawking's father; Sir Edward James Salisbury, a British botanist and ecologist; Ronald Melville, a British botanist; Arthur John Cronquist, an American botanist; Birbal Sahni, an Indian palaeobotanist; G.C. Mitra, an Indian botanist; Alexandr Innokentevich Tolmatchew, a Soviet botanist; Kiril Bratanov, a Bulgarian biologist; Ronald Pearson Tripp, a British palaeontologist; and René Dumont, a French agronomist. His other friends included Todor Zhivkov, former President of Bulgaria; Alfred Jules Ayer, a British philosopher, Herbert V. Günther, a German philosopher and linguist, and Margaret Mee, a British botanical artist.
The species was first described by Ferdinand von Mueller. He was a botanist that was appointed chief botanist for the colony of Victoria in 1853. He discovered many Australian plants, including the showy burr daisy (Morris, 1974).
The species was first formally described by the botanist Allan Cunningham in 1834 in the journal Botanical Magazine. The plant is named in honour of Charles Fraser, first superintendent of the Sydney botanical gardens and colonial botanist.
Susan Adams Delano McKelvey (1883-1964) was an American botanist and author, noted for being the botanist of the Arnold Arboretum. McKelvey traveled around the United States throughout her life gathering plant specimens, and authored several books.
This genus was named for American botanist Jason Richard Swallen (1903-1991).
Sophia Hennion Eckerson ( - July 19, 1954) was an American botanist and microchemist.
The species epithet banksiana is after the English botanist Sir Joseph Banks.
William Batt, M.D. (1744–1812), was an English physician, chemist, and botanist.
He married the daughter of Thomas Cooper (1815–1913), another Kew botanist.
John George Champion (1815–1854) was an English soldier, botanist, and explorer.
18; col C — "The Times" Botanist. Death Of Professor G. S. Boulger.
Paul Hubertus Hiepko (1932-2019) - was a German botanist and journals editor.
Adrien Rivard, 1933 Brother Adrien Rivard (1890-1969) was a Canadian botanist.
Edward Forster, the younger (1765–1849) was an English banker and botanist.
The species was first formally described by botanist Robert Brown in 1810.
His father Antonio (1775-1869) was a physician and botanist in Bologna.
Mary J. P. "Maura" Scannell (1924–2011) was a leading Irish botanist.
Séamus Mac An Iomaire (1891-1967) was an Irish botanist and writer.
Catherine Jérémie (1664-1744), was a midwife and botanist in New France.
Alicia Lourteig (1913–2003) was an Argentine botanist, world specialist in Oxalidaceae.
Romulea sabulosa was described by the German botanist Rudolf Schlechter in 1907.
Ira Schreiber Nelson (1911–1965) was an American botanist, working in Louisiana.
The genus name honors German master botanist Johann Gottfried Zinn (1727–59).
Anton Romanovich Zhebrak (1901–1965) was a Soviet botanist, geneticist and professor.
The species was first formally described by botanist George Bentham in 1867.
The Latin name Lindera commemorates the Swedish botanist Johan Linder (1676-1724).
Aaspere was the birthplace of physician and botanist Bernhard Saarsoo (1899–1964).
Sourindra Mohan Sircar was a botanist specializing in plant physiology and anatomy.
Dr William Lauder Lindsay FRSE FLS LRCS (19 December 1829-24 November 1880) was a Scottish physician and botanist. As a physician he largely worked in the field of mental health. As a botanist he specialised in lichens.
The orchid genus Aa is said to be named after him by the botanist Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach because he was the printer for the Dutch botanist Paul Hermann's "Paradisus Batavus". Published posthumously in 1698, this explanation is disputed.
Sally T. Reynolds (born 1932) is an Australian botanist. Reynolds worked at the Queensland Herbarium as principal botanist. She was a specialist on Australian Sapindaceae. Paul Forster named Synima reynoldsiae in recognition of her work on the species.
Libocedrus bidwillii is named after J. C. Bidwill, the New Zealand botanist and explorer. The species is commonly named by its Maori name pāhautea or kaikawaka. However, according to DOC botanist Geoff Rogers, pāhautea is preferred correct form.
Calothamnus oldfieldii was first formally described by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1862 in Volume 3, Part 21 of Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae. The specific epithet (oldfieldii) honours Augustus Frederick Oldfield, an English botanist and plant collector.
Following further classification contributions by botanist W. John Kress, the spiral gingers were recognised as a sister clade to the Zingiberaceae and moved to the family Costaceae, as originally suggested by the Japanese botanist Takenoshin Nakai in 1941.
Royal Botanical Garden of Madrid (Spain). Sculpted by Andrés Rodríguez (1829–?) in 1866. José Quer y Martínez (1695–1764), was a Spanish doctor and botanist. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Quer when citing a botanical name.
Portrait of Turner, c. 1816 Dawson Turner (18 October 1775 - 21 June 1858) was an English banker, botanist and antiquary. He specialized in the botany of cryptogams and was the father-in-law of the botanist William Jackson Hooker.
Anthony Norman Rodd, known as Tony Rodd, (born 1940) is an Australian botanist.
Samuel Alexander Stewart (1826, Philadelphia – 1910) was an American Irish botanist and geologist.
Botanist Alice Eastwood used California specimens to give the plant its formal name.
Julius Grøntved (sometimes spelled Gröntved) (1899–1967) was a Danish botanist and phycologist.
Moysés Kuhlmann (December 4, 1906 – January 12, 1972) was a Brazilian born botanist.
Jonas Carlsson Dryander (5 March 1748 - 19 October 1810) was a Swedish botanist.
The species was named in honor of the Portuguese botanist Félix Avelar Brotero.
Moisey Elevich Kirpicznikov () (June 5, 1913 - May 18, 1995) was a Russian botanist.
Victor Petrovitch Botchantsev () (October 30, 1910 - August 30, 1990) was a Russian botanist.
Parker's estate, Munden, near Bricket Wood, was inherited by the botanist George Hibbert.
The genus was named in honor of the German botanist, Heinrich Gustav Flörke.
The species is named to honor Janaki Ammal Edathil Kakkat, an Indian botanist.
Susan Lim married George Liew, a botanist, in 1979 and had two children.
John Drew Salmon (4 September 1802 – 1859) was an English ornithologist and botanist.
Heni has been in a relationship with French botanist Patrick Blanc since 1985.
James Townsend Mackay (1775–1862) was a Scottish botanist who lived in Ireland.
The scientific name of the Jameson's snipe commemorates the Scottish botanist William Jameson.
Patricia Gabbey Gensel (born March 18, 1944) is an American botanist and paleobotanist.
The specific epithet deckenii commemorates botanist Karl Klaus von der Decken (1833-1865).
The binomial commemorates the German botanist and explorer Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius.
Its scientific name commemorates the French botanist Jean Baptiste Leschenault de la Tour.
The specific leschenaultii commemorates the French botanist Jean Baptiste Leschenault de la Tour.
His correspondents included cryptogamic botanist William Gilson Farlow and lichenologist George Knox Merrill.
Andrés Barbero (1877, Asunción - 1951, Buenos Aires) was a Paraguayan scientist and botanist.
Willem Vink (born 1931 in Schiedam, South Holland, Netherlands) is a Dutch botanist.
William Ramsay McNab (1844 – 3 December 1889) was a Scottish physician and botanist.
Zabta Khan Shinwari (; born 3 March 1959) is a Pakistani botanist and researcher.
Sylvia Anita Edlund (August 15, 1945 - November 15, 2014) was a Canadian botanist.
He was also a keen botanist and trustee of the Queensland Acclimatisation Society.
David Frederick Cutler PPLS (born 1939) is an English botanist and plant anatomist.
Friedrich Laibach (born April 2, 1885 in Limburg, Germany) was a German botanist.
Gerard Edwards Smith (1804–1881) was a Church of England cleric and botanist.
Federico Kurtz, also known as Fritz, (1854-1920) was a German-Argentine botanist.
Henry Roland Totten (November 6, 1892 - February 9, 1974) was an American botanist.
Alexander Carroll Maingay (1836 - 1869) was a British physician, botanist and botanical collector.
Anna Isabel Mulford (1848 – June 16, 1943), was an American botanist and teacher.
Gomphidius oregonensis was first described in 1897 by botanist Charles Horton Peck.Peck, Charles H. University of the State of New York Annual Report of the State Botanist. 2nd Ed. Albany: University of the State of New York, 1897. Google Books. Web.
Saurauia merrillii is a species of plant in the family Actinidiaceae. It is native to the Philippines. Adolph Daniel Edward Elmer, the American botanist who first formally described the species, named it in honor of Elmer Drew Merrill, another American botanist.
Maude Kellerman Swingle (1888-1992) was an American botanist who co-authored works with her husband the botanist Walter Tennyson Swingle. She was educated at the Ohio State University and worked as a librarian at the United States Department of Agriculture.
Natalya Tikhonovna Osadcha-Yanata Natalya Tikhonovna Osadcha-Yanata (1891-1982) was a Ukrainian botanist and folklorist noted for studying the medicinal plants of Ukraine and publishing some of her works in English. She was married to Ukrainian botanist Alexander Yanata.
Friedrich Karl Max Vierhapper (7 March 1876 in Weidenau – 11 July 1932) was an Austrian plant collector, botanist and professor of botany at the University of Vienna. He was the son of amateur botanist Friedrich Vierhapper (1844–1903), botanical abbreviation- "F.Vierh.".
South African botanist Olive Mary Hilliard and English botanist Brian Burtt described Felicia wrightii in 1971, based on a specimen collected in 1967, by Wright on the banks of a tributary of the Mooi River, KwaZulu- Natal province of South Africa.
German botanist Johann Christoph Wendland first described this species as Mimosa binervia in 1798, before American botanist James Francis Macbride reclassified it in the genus Acacia in 1919. Common names include coast myall and rosewood. Acacia glaucescens is an illegitimate name.
Plate 147 from H. G. Reichenbach (1874), Xenia orchidacea - vol. 2 Thecostele is a monotypic genus of orchids (family Orchidaceae) and of subtribe Cymbidiinae. The only species in the genus is Thecostele alata, first described as Cymbidium alatum by the Scottish botanist William Roxburgh in 1832. It was transferred to the genus Thecostele in 1874 by the English botanist Charles Samuel Pollock Parish and the German botanist Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach.
Joan Winifred Cribb (née Herbert; born 1930) is an Australian botanist and mycologist. She was born in Brisbane, Queensland, the daughter of botanist Desmond Herbert. She graduated from the University of Queensland with a Bachelor of Science with Honours and a Master of Science. She married fellow botanist Alan Cribb in 1954, and several years later joined him at the University of Queensland as a part-time lecturer and tutor.
Diedrich Henne (1834 – 21 January 1913) was a German-born botanist and plant collector. He emigrated to Australia and was employed as an assistant to the colonial botanist Ferdinand von Mueller at the Melbourne Herbarium. He collected six cases of plants when employed as a botanist on the Burke and Wills rescue expedition. Frederick Manson Bailey lists twelve species of plants in the Queensland herbarium, collected by Henne.
Emily Stackhouse was born on 15 July 1811 in Modbury, Devon, one of six children of Rev. William Stackhouse III and Sarah Stackhouse. The Stackhouses were an old Cornish family that included several naturalists; her great-uncle was the botanist John Stackhouse. Emily may have lived for a time with her second cousin Frances Stackhouse Acton, a botanist and botanical artist whose father Thomas Andrew Knight was also a botanist.
David Taylor Fish FRHA (1824–1901) was a 19th-century botanist and horticultural author.
John Wyndham Dawson (1 February 1928 – 11 March 2019) was a New Zealand botanist.
Mary Pirie (20 January 1822 – 8 February 1885) was a Scottish botanist and teacher.
The genus Leuzea was dedicated to Deleuze by Swiss botanist Augustin Pyrame de Candolle.
Jacob Bobart, the younger, (2 August 1641 – 28 December 1719), was an English botanist.
Teodoro Rojas Vera (25 September 1877, Asunción – 3 September 1954) was a Paraguayan botanist.
Conway MacMillan (August 26, 1867 – June 5, 1929) was an American botanist from Minnesota.
Prof John Walton LLD (1895-1971) was a 20th-century British botanist and paleobotanist.
Christen August Hesselbo (1 March 1874 – 1952) was a Danish pharmaceutical botanist and bryologist.
Charles Noyes Forbes (1883-1920) was an American botanist who primarily worked on Hawaii.
Richard Eric Holttum (20 July 189518 September 1990) was an English botanist and author.
This species was named in honour of the botanist and explorer John Carne Bidwill.
The latter name is a taxonomic patronym honoring the Swedish botanist Erik Leonard Ekman.
Jan Frederik Veldkamp (31 March 1941, Amsterdam - 12 November 2017) was a Dutch Botanist.
American botanist Emery Clarence Leonard transferred the species to the genus Dicliptera in 1954.
John Clayton (1694/5–1773) was a Colonial plant collector and botanist in Virginia.
Fabio Colonna (called Linceo; 1567 - 25 July 1640) was an Italian naturalist and botanist.
Louis Hermann Pammel (1862–1931) was an American botanist, conservationist, and professor of botany.
Strasburgeria has been named in honor of Eduard Strasburger (1844-1912), a German botanist.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Harv. when citing a botanical name.
Guglielmo Gasparrini (3 January 1803 – 28 June 1866) was an Italian botanist and mycologist.
Józef Motyka (23 March 1900 – 6 July 1984) was a Polish botanist and lichenologist.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Vahl when citing a botanical name.
The Latin specific epithet wildpretii honours the 19th century Swiss botanist Hermann Josef Wildpret.
The genus Trinia is named after the German-born botanist Carl Bernhard von Trinius.
Cyril Tenison ("C.T.") White (17 August 1890 – 15 August 1950) was an Australian botanist.
The genus Vaupelia was named in his honor by botanist August Brand (1863–1930).
Robert James Shuttleworth (February 1810 – 18 April 1874) was an English botanist and malacologist.
The specific name ashei pays homage to American forester and botanist William Willard Ashe.
Paul Weatherwax (1888–1976) was an American botanist, professor of botany, and botanical illustrator.
Prof John McLean Thompson FRSE FLS (1888–1977) was a 20th-century Scottish botanist.
Heinrich Göppert ' (25 July 1800 – 18 May 1884) was a German botanist and paleontologist.
He died in Paris. Botanist Michel Adanson named the genus Aubrieta in his honour.
Ernst Heinrich Georg Ule (12 March 1854 - 15 July 1915) was a German botanist.
James Bolton (1735 – 7 January 1799) was an English naturalist, botanist, mycologist, and illustrator.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation C.Morren when citing a botanical name.
Charles Austin Gardner (6 January 1896 – 24 February 1970) was a Western Australian botanist.
One installation incorporated biographical references to writer James Baldwin and French botanist Jeanne Baret.
Charles Abbott (24 March 1761 – 8 September 1817) was a British botanist and entomologist.
John Duncan (19 December 1794 – 9 August 1881) was a Scottish weaver and botanist.
Francisco de Ascensão Mendonça (30 May 1889 - 28 September 1982) was a Portuguese botanist.
Francesco Ardissone (8 September 1837 – 4 April 1910) was an Italian algologist and botanist.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Baxter when citing a botanical name.
Robert J. "Rob" Bates (born 1946) is an Australian botanist, plant collector, and illustrator.
Ruth Mary Tristram (25 April 1886 – 22 October 1950) was a British amateur botanist.
The cultivar is named for the 16th-century Flemish physician and botanist Rembert Dodoens.
The cultivar is named for Jan Commelin, a Dutch botanist of the 17th century.
James Britten James Britten (3 May 1846 – 8 October 1924) was an English botanist.
It was first described in 1848 by the Dutch botanist Willem Hendrik de Vriese.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Wedd. when citing a botanical name.
The genus name honours botanist Boris Skvortzov, who collected crust fungi extensively in Brazil.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation L.C.Leach when citing a botanical name.
Thomas Dancer Thomas Dancer (c. 1750–1811) was a British physician and colonial botanist.
Inga disticha is a species of Fabaceae that was described by botanist George Bentham.
The name of this genus commemorates the South African botanist Henry Harold Welch Pearson.
Elizabeth Dale (27 March 1868 - ?) was a British botanist, paleobotanist, plant pathologist, and author.
A local botanist told me it was pipsissewa, which my dictionary says is wintergreen.
Hermann August Theodor Harms (16 July 1870 - 27 November 1942) was a German taxonomist and botanist. Harms was born in Berlin. He worked as a botanist at the Botanical Museum in Berlin. He was a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences.
Henry de Ponthieu (14 February 1731 – 10 December 1808) was a London merchant of Huguenot ancestry who collected fish and plant specimens from the West Indies for botanist Joseph Banks. The orchid genus Ponthieva was named by botanist Robert Brown in his honour.
Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach (Dresden, 3 January 1823 – Hamburg, 6 May 1889) was a botanist and the foremost German orchidologist of the 19th century. His father Heinrich Gottlieb Ludwig Reichenbach (author of Icones Florae Germanicae et Helveticae) was also a well-known botanist.
George S. Vasey (February 28, 1822 – March 4, 1893) was an English-born American botanist who collected a lot in Illinois before integrating the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), where he became Chief Botanist and curator of the greatly expanded National Herbarium.
The genus Calandrinia was erected in 1823 by German botanist Carl Sigismund Kunth. It was named for Jean Louis Calandrini (1703–1758), a Genevan botanist. The genus is classified in the family Montiaceae. It was previously placed in the purslane family, Portulacaceae.
Stephen Thayer Olney (February 15, 1812 – July 27, 1878) was an American manufacturer and botanist with expertise in the genus Carex. The monotypic plant genus Olneya (Olneya tesota, desert ironwood) was named in his honor by his friend and fellow botanist Asa Gray.
Andrey Aleksandrovich Fedorov (; 1908 – 5 March 1987) was a Soviet Russian biologist, botanist, taxonomist and phytogeographer, who was from 1970 a corresponding member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. He was the brother of the botanist Alexander Fedorov (1906-1982).
Billardiera is a genus of small vines and shrubs in the family, Pittosporaceae, which is endemic to Australia. The genus was first formally described in 1793 by botanist James Edward Smith who named it in honour of Jacques Labillardière, a French botanist.
John Bartram (March 23, 1699 – September 22, 1777) was an early American botanist, horticulturist, and explorer. Carl Linnaeus said he was the "greatest natural botanist in the world."Duyker, Edward, Nature's Argonaut. Daniel Solander 1733–1782 (Melbourne: Miegunyah Press, 1988), p. 66.
Hexalobus bussei is a species of plant in the family Annonaceae. It is native to Cameroon. Ludwig Diels, the German botanist who first formally described the species, named it after another German botanist, Walter Busse, who collected the sample that Diels examined.
The first man to ascend Torreys Peak, botanist Charles C. Parry, named the peak for his botanist colleague John Torrey. Torrey actually did not see the peak until 1872, 11 years later. It is nearly always mentioned in conjunction with nearby Grays Peak.
Portrait of John Gilbert Baker, Journal of Botany, British and Foreign, vol. 39 (1901) by Berthold Carl Seemann. John Gilbert Baker FRS (13 January 1834 – 16 August 1920) was an English botanist. His son was the botanist Edmund Gilbert Baker (1864–1949).
In 1968 Fosberg transferred to the Department of Botany, where he became curator. In 1976 he became Senior Botanist, and in 1993 Botanist Emeritus. José Cuatrecasas and Fosberg were largely responsible for the founding of UNESCO's Organization for Flora Neotropica in 1964.
The accepted synonym Phalaenopsis lueddemanniana var. hieroglyphica reflects its naming in 1887 by German orchidologist H. G. Reichenbach.See In 1969, American botanist H. R. Sweet elevated its ranking to species.See The accepted synonym Polychilos hieroglyphica is traced to Malaysian botanist Shim in 1982.
Elizabeth Dorothy Wuist Brown (1880-1972) was an American botanist noted for studying apogamy in plants, as well as flora of New Zealand, French Polynesia, and Hawaii. She was married to botanist Forest Buffen Harkness Brown, with whom she was a coauthor.
Galium paschale was first described by the Swedish botanist Peter Forsskål in his 1775 work '.
This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Burtt Davy when citing a botanical name.
Georg Heinrich Wilhelm Schimper (19 August 1804 - October 1878) was a German botanist and naturalist.
The species was formally described in 1957 by botanist Norman Wakefield in The Victorian Naturalist.
Rev. Thomas Morong (April 15, 1827 – April 26, 1894) was an American botanist and clergyman.
William M. Wilson (1799–1871) was an English botanist, known for his focus on bryology.
William C Carruthers (29 May 1830 – 2 June 1922) was a Scottish botanist and paleobotanist.
Lindberg died at Helsingfors. He was the father of the botanist Harald Lindberg (1871–1963).
Gregory M. Plunkett (born 21 February 1965 in Bayonne, New Jersey) is an American botanist.
The specific name, coi, honours Leonard Co, who is a Philippine botanist and conservation biologist.
Peter Goldblatt (born 1943) is a South African botanist, working principally in the United States.
Friedrich Markgraf (1 February 1897 in Berlin-Friedenau - 8 March 1987) was a German botanist.
Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole. The specific epithet bellii honours American botanist Clyde Ritchie Bell.
The species was transferred to the genus Grevillea by Swiss botanist Carl Meissner in 1856.
Harold Ernest Robinson (born 1932, Syracuse, New York) is an American botanist and an entomologist.
Besides being a surgeon & botanist, he was a poet; he wrote poetry especially in Marathi.
Arthur "Willie" James Wilmott (1888–1950) was an English international table tennis player and botanist.
A story about a botanist who falls into the clutches of a mysterious mountain family.
George Don (29 April 1798 – 25 February 1856) was a Scottish botanist and plant collector.
Carleton Rea (7 May 1861 – 26 June 1946) was an English mycologist, botanist, and naturalist.
Alfred James Ewart, FRS (12 February 1872 - 12 September 1937) was an English- Australian botanist.
Theodor Hartig (21 February 1805 – 26 March 1880) was a German forestry biologist and botanist.
The species is named for John Gill Lemmon, husband of American botanist Sarah Plummer Lemmon.
Hans Peter Nooteboom (born 1934) is a Dutch botanist, pteridologist, plant taxonomist, and journal editor.
William Chambers Coker (October 24, 1872 – June 26, 1953) was an American botanist and mycologist.
Kurt Kreuzinger (1905–1989) was a German botanist, best known for his work with cacti.
Gisèle Lamoureux, (October 5, 1942 – June 23, 2018) was a Canadian photographer, botanist and ecologist.
Kelly Anne Shepherd (born 1970) is an Australian botanist, who has published some 91 names.
The Latin specific epithet Bakeriana is in honor of the English botanist John Gilbert Baker.
Girish Chandra Bose (October 29, 1853 – January 1, 1939) was an Indian educator and botanist.
William Brooks Drew (December 11, 1908 – December 14, 1997) was an American botanist and professor.
Richard Hook Richens (1919–1984) was a botanist and an early researcher in Computational Linguistics.
Benjamin Alvord (August 18, 1813 – October 16, 1884) was an American soldier, mathematician, and botanist.
Henrik Hesselman (28 January 1874 - 11 July 1943) was a Swedish professor, foresters, and botanist.
Humphry Marshall (October 10, 1722 – November 5, 1801) was an American botanist and plant dealer.
Jaap J. Vermeulen (born 1955) is a Dutch botanist, specializing in the Orchidaceae genus Bulbophyllum.
Charles Lyell (1767–1849) was a Scottish botanist, known also as a translator of Dante.
He was an older brother to botanist Theodor Friedrich Ludwig Nees von Esenbeck (1787–1837).
Michael Gottlieb Agnethler (June 10, 1719 – June 15, 1752) was a German botanist and numismatist.
Elsie May Zeile (1885-1988), also known as Elsie Zeile Lovegrove, was an American botanist.
Shirley Clifford Atchley (14 January 1871 - 20 June 1936) was a British diplomat and botanist.
The species was formally described in 1786 by German botanist Georg Forster, who gave it the name Ophrys squamata. It was then transferred to the genus Cymbidium as Cymbidium squamatum by the Swedish botanist Olof Swartz in 1800. In 1810, Scottish botanist Robert Brown noted the similarity of Cymbidium squamatum to his newly erected genus Dipodium, but did not make the combination, thus the commonly used author citation Dipodium squamatum (G.Forst.) R.Br. is incorrect.
European science formally named and described this genus and the type species in 1847, authored by botanist Carl Ludwig Blume. In 1879 botanist Ludwig A. T. Radlkofer published formal scientific descriptions of numerous species new to European science. In 1993 botanist Hubert Turner formally described 8 species new to science found growing naturally in New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and north eastern Australia. In 1994 his treatment of the genus in Flora Malesiana was published.
Conn's first appointment as a botanist was with the Lae Herbarium in 1974. He then became herbarium curator and a lecturer at the Papua New Guinea Forestry College, Bulolo (1976–1979). He is a scientific advisor to the Food and Agriculture Organisation. In Australia, he has been senior botanist at the National Herbarium of Victoria (1982–1987), and botanist (and principal research scientist) at the National Herbarium of New South Wales (1987–2015).
European science formally named and described this genus in 1879 using C. anacardioides for the type species, authored by Bavarian botanist Ludwig A. T. Radlkofer. In 1991 a 190-page monograph of the whole genus was published by Dutch botanist Frits Adema. Australian botanist Sally T. Reynolds, from 1984 to 1991 published new formal scientific names, descriptions, updates and species clarifications, in her scientific journal articles and the Flora of Australia treatment.
Maxwell Tylden Masters FRS (15 April 1833 - 30 May 1907) was an English botanist and taxonomist. He was the son of William Masters, the nurseryman and botanist of Canterbury and author of Hortus duroverni. Desmond, R. (1994). Dictionary of British & Irish Botanists & Horticulturists, p.475.
Joseph Pitton de Tournefort (5 June 1656 – 28 December 1708) was a French botanist, notable as the first to make a clear definition of the concept of genus for plants. The botanist Charles Plumier had been his pupil and accompanied him on his voyages.
The species was first formally described by Russian botanist, Nikolai Turczaninow in 1852 who named it Beaufortia velutina. In 1964, the Australian botanist Charles Austin Gardner transferred it to the genus Regelia. The specific epithet is derived from the New Latin velutinus, meaning "velvety".
Flat- stalked pondweed was first described in 1847 by the Austrian botanist Franz Josef Ruprecht. The specific name friesii commemorates the Swedish mycologist and botanist Elias Magnus Fries. It is related to other fine-leaved pondweeds such as P. obtusifolius, P. foliosus and P. pusillus.
Bentley's signature Robert Bentley (25 March 1821 – 24 December 1893) was an English botanist. He is perhaps best remembered today for the four-volume Medicinal Plants, published in 1880 with Henry Trimen and containing over three hundred hand-colored plates by botanist David Blair.
The species was first formally described in 1799 by German botanist Carl Willdenow who gave it the name Dillenia scandens. The specific epithet scandens is derived from Latin, and means "to climb". In 1805, Swedish botanist Jonas Dryander transferred the species into the genus Hibbertia.
Saurauia whitfordii is a species of plant in the Actinidiaceae family. It is native to the Philippines. Elmer Drew Merrill, the American botanist who first formally described the species, named it after Harry Nichols Whitford, another American botanist who collected the specimen Merrill examined.
Wilhelm Sulpiz Kurz (5 May 1834 – 15 January 1878) was a German botanist and garden director in Bogor, West Java and Kolkata. He worked in India, Indonesia, Burma, Malaysia and Singapore. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Kurz when citing a botanical name.
The duo end up in a complicated plot involving the Marsupilami, an evil botanist (Testot) who discovers the elixir of youth, and a major, (Timsit) whom the botanist teams up with to overthrow the Palombian president (Wilson) and said president's love for Celine Dion.
In addition to her own research, Holmgren became chief editorial assistant during the preparation of the last two volumes of the Vascular Plants of the Pacific Northwest with Hitchcock. Patricia married fellow botanist Noel H. Holmgren (son of botanist Arthur H. Holmgren) in 1969.
Winifred Josephine Robinson in 1914 Winifred Josephine Robinson (1867-1962) was an American botanist, educator, and educational administrator. As a botanist, she studied ferns and wrote several papers and books. She was the first dean of the Women's College of the University of Delaware.
Peter Thonning Peter Thonning (9 October 1775 – 29 January 1848) was a Danish physician and botanist.
"Botanist John Heslop Harrison faked rare plant discoveries". Alastair Jamieson, The Daily Telegraph, 2 October 2008.
Felix Joseph Widder (16 December 1892 – 5 September 1974) was an Austrian mycologist, botanist, and naturalist.
Henry Baines (15 May 1793 - 1 April 1878) was a notable botanist who lived in York.
Professor Stefan T. Buczacki (b. 16 Oct 1945) is a British horticulturist, botanist, biographer and broadcaster.
Lela Viola Barton (1901-1967) was an American botanist who specialized in seed germination and storage.
Joannes Charles Melchior Chatin (19 August 1847 – 4 July 1912) was a French botanist and zoologist.
Jens Laurentius Moestue Vahl (27 November 1796 – 12 November 1854) was a Danish botanist and pharmacist.
Antonino Borzì (20 August 1852, in Castroreale - 24 August 1921, in Lucca) was an Italian botanist.
Patrick Millington Synge VMH (17 September 1910 - 1982) was a British botanist, writer and plant hunter.
Notable attendees have included the botanist David Bellamy and racehorse trainers Ginger McCain and Jenny Pitman.
Roger James Hnatiuk (born 1946) is a Canadian-Australian botanist specialising in biogeography and plant ecology.
William Phillips (4 May 1822 – 23 October 1905) was a Wales-born English botanist and antiquary.
The genus Garberia was named by Asa Gray in honour of American botanist Abram Paschal Garber.
Muhammad Ajmal Khan was a Pakistani botanist and the 17th Vice-Chancellor of University of Karachi.
Joseph Andorfer Ewan (1909–1999) was a botanist, naturalist, and historian of botany and natural history.
John Imray (11 January 1811 – 22 August 1880) was a Scottish physician, legislator, agriculturist and botanist.
John William Bews (16 December 1884 — 10 November 1938) was a Scottish born South African botanist.
Noël Martin Joseph Necker (25 December 1730 – 30 December 1793) was a Belgian physician and botanist.
Gottlieb Emanuel von Haller (1735-1786) was a Bernese historian, numismatist, botanist, politician, diplomat and librarian.
Google Books Botanical Society His son Giuseppe (1804-1874) was a botanist and entomologist in Bologna.
Bertha Marion (née Sherwood) Lahman (1872-1954) was an American botanist specializing in cacti of Oklahoma.
The calyx is a prominent ruby color. Salvia eigii is named after the botanist Alexander Eig.
Bust in Segorbe. Carlos Pau y Español (1857, Segorbe, Spain – 1937, Segorbe) was a Spanish botanist.
Eileen Adelaide Bruce (15 February 1905 Petersham, London – 1954/1955) was an English taxonomist and botanist.
Louise Guthrie (October 10, 1879 – February 20, 1966) was a South African botanist and botanical artist.
Turner, Billie Lee 1985. Phytologia 58: 219 The species is named for American botanist Andrew McDonald.
He died in Copenhagen, Denmark at age 55. His son Jens Vahl also became a botanist.
George Arnott Walker-Arnott of Arlary (6 February 1799 – 17 June 1868) was a Scottish botanist.
The genus Kniphofia is named after Johann Hieronymus Kniphof, an 18th-century German physician and botanist.
Philipp Wilhelm Albrecht Zimmermann (23 April 1860, Braunschweig – 22 February 1931, Berlin) was a German botanist.
Leonard Rodway (5 October 1853 – 9 March 1936) was an English-born Australian dentist and botanist.
Charles Hercules Boissevain (1893–1946) was a Dutch tuberculosis researcher and botanist in the United States.
During his 1898-99 expeditions to the Pamirs, Olufsen was accompanied by Danish botanist Ove Paulsen.
Prof Meirion Thomas FRS FRSE (1894-1977) was a 20th-century Welsh botanist and plant physiologist.
Harriet Baldwin Creighton (27 June 1909 - January 9, 2004) was an American botanist, geneticist and educator.
He was also a photographer, his brother John Dillwyn Llewelyn being a pioneer photographer and botanist.
The Latin specific epithet dyeriana honours the English botanist Sir William Turner Thiselton-Dyer (1843-1928).
John Lindley FRS (5 February 1799 – 1 November 1865) was an English botanist, gardener and orchidologist.
See BirdLife International (2007a,b). The scientific name commemorates the Brazilian botanist Guido Frederico João Pabst.
Catherine Gage (18 May 1815 – 16 February 1892) was an Irish botanist, botanical and ornithological illustrator.
Theodore George Bentley Osborn (2 October 1887 – 3 June 1973) was a botanist, ecologist and academic.
A.L. Kathleen King (1893-1978) was an Irish botanist and one of Ireland's leading field bryologists.
While at the Gray Herbarium, he began a long association with fellow botanist Jesse More Greenman.
Ian Hepburn (29 May 1902 – 3 July 1974) was a British schoolmaster, botanist, ecologist and author.
Gerald Webber Prescott (September 25, 1899 – July 7, 1988) was an American botanist, phycologist, and professor.
Karl Friedrich Schimper (15 February 1803 - 21 December 1867) was a German botanist, naturalist and poet.
Gordon Douglas Rowley (1921–2019) was a British botanist and writer specialising in cacti and succulents.
Albert Charles Seward FRS (9 October 1863 – 11 April 1941) was a British botanist and geologist.
Norman Hartweg named this species after Eizi Matuda, Japanese–Mexican botanist and his host in Chiapas.
Jean Massart Jean Massart (7 March 1865 in Etterbeek – 16 August 1925) was a Belgian botanist.
Bernardo Rosengurtt in 1975. Bernardo Rosengurtt Gurvich (1916–1985) was a Uruguayan botanist, professor and agrostologist.
Johann Georg Gmelin (8 August 1709 – 20 May 1755) was a German naturalist, botanist and geographer.
Calaway Homer Dodson (December 17, 1928 – August 9 2020) was an American botanist, orchidologist, and taxonomist.
Tatiana Krasnoselskaia (1 January 1884 – 17 February 1950) was a Russian botanist specializing in plant physiology.
Emily Frances Fletcher (1845-1923) was an American botanist notable for collecting plants in New England.
Joseph Young Bergen Joseph Young Bergen (February 22, 1851 – October 10, 1917) was an American botanist.
Ludwig Jungermann Ludwig Jungermann (4 July 1572 – 7 June 1653) was a German botanist and physician.
Albert Frederik Hendrik Buining (25 August 1901 in Groningen – 9 May 1976) was a Dutch botanist.
Anders Jahan Retzius (3 October 1742 – 6 October 1821) was a Swedish chemist, botanist and entomologist.
A. colensoi was named in honour of William Colenso, a New Zealand missionary, botanist and politician.
Gil Nelson (born 1949) is a botanist, naturalist, author and speaker in the Southeastern United States.
The Wych Elm cultivar Ulmus glabra 'Luteo Variegata' was first described by Richard Weston in The Universal Botanist and Nurseryman (1770) as "the gold- striped broad-leaved wych elm".Weston, Richard, The Universal Botanist and Nurseryman 1: 315, 1770 See also Ulmus glabra 'Latifolia Aureo-Variegata'.
2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 23 August 2007. Robert Elias Fries, the Swedish botanist who first formally described the species using the basionym Cremastosperma williamsii, named it after Llewelyn W. Williams, the Welsh economic botanist, who collected the holotype specimen he examined.
Beatrice Armari (1877 - 1918) was an Argentinian-Italian botanist, noted for her study the flora of Eritrea. Her name appears with the North African species Arnebia lutea (A.Rich.) Armari. Armari was married to fellow botanist Biagio Longo who, like her, specialized in the large clade of spermatophytes.
Saurauia clementis is a species of flowering plant in the family Actinidiaceae. It is endemic to the Philippines. Elmer Drew Merrill, the American botanist who first formally described the species, named it after Mary Strong Clemens, the American botanist who collected the specimen that he examined.
Hypolepis poeppigii is a fern species in the family Dennstaedtiaceae that has no common name. It was first described by German botanist Georg Heinrich Mettenius, but his description was not considered validly published, and American botanist William Ralph Maxon later described the species in a valid publication.
Reinier Cornelis Bakhuizen van den Brink Jr. (11 September 1911, Panjinangan, Sukabumi Regency, Java – 1 May 1987, Leiden) was a Dutch botanist. He was the son of Djahini of Tjiampea and Dutch botanist Reinier Cornelis Bakhuizen van den Brink (1881–1945) of the Dutch East Indies.
Vincenzo Tineo Vincenzo Tineo (Militello in Val di Catania, 27 February 1791 - Palermo, 25 July 1856) was an Italian Botanist. From 1814 to 1856 he was the director of the Palermo Botanical Garden. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Tineo when citing a botanical name.
Paeonia daurica subsp. mlokosewitschii was first described as a species, Paeonia mlokosewitchii, by Aleksandr Lomakin in 1897. It was named after the Polish botanist Ludwik Młokosiewicz who first discovered it.. p. 134. In 2002, the Chinese botanist Hong Deyuan reduced it to a subspecies of Paeonia daurica.
Grevillea endlicheriana, also known as spindly grevillea, is a shrub which is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. The species was first formally described by botanist Carl Meissner in 1845, based on plant material collected from the Darling Scarp. The species name honors botanist Stephan Endlicher.
Mary Letitia (Green) Sprague (1886-1978) was a British botanist and bibliographer at Kew Gardens. In 1938 she married Scottish botanist Thomas Archibald Sprague, the Deputy Keeper of the Kew Herbarium, and together they compiled several supplements to the Index Kewensis. She was an expert on Loranthaceae.
Dr Harold Roy Fletcher FRSE (14 April 1907-27 August 1978) was an English botanist and horticulturalist. He was Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh from 1956 to 1970 and Her Majesty's Botanist 1966 to 1978. As an author he is known as H.R. Fletcher.
Wilhelm Philippe Schimper Wilhelm Philippe Schimper (January 12, 1808 – March 20, 1880 in Lichtenberg) was an Alsatian botanist with French, later German citizenship. He was born in Dossenheim-sur-Zinsel, but spent his youth in Offwiller, a village at the foot of the Vosges mountain range in Alsace. He was the father of botanist Andreas Franz Wilhelm Schimper (1856-1901), and a cousin to naturalist Karl Friedrich Schimper (1803-1867) and botanist Georg Heinrich Wilhelm Schimper (1804-1878).
The species was first described by German botanist Max Burret in 1937 based on a collection made in November 1936 by Colombian botanist J.M. Duque. The generic epithet, Aiphanes, coined by German botanist Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1801, derives from Greek ai, meaning "always" and phaneros, meaning "evident", "visible" or "conspicuous". The specific epithet, duquei, honours the collector, J.M. Duque. Burret placed Aiphanes duquei in the subgenus Brachyanthera, one of the two subgenera into which he divided the genus.
Christian Ferdinand Friedrich Hochstetter (16 February 1787 - 20 February 1860) was a German botanist and Protestant minister.
The specific name duthieae was given in honour of Dr. Augusta Vera Duthie, a South African botanist.
Giovanni Antonio Scopoli named the genus after botanist and physician Heinrich Johann Nepomuk von Crantz (1722–1799).
Giovanni Battista Libero Badaró (1798 - November 21, 1830) was an Italian Brazilian physician, botanist, journalist and politician.
Joseph Francis Charles Rock (1884 – 1962) was an Austrian-American botanist, explorer, geographer, linguist, ethnographer and photographer.
The Latin specific epithet griffithii refers to William GriffithD. Gledhill (1810-1845), a British naturalist and botanist.
Flora May Woodard Tuttle (April 15, 1868 to February 1931) was an American writer, botanist, and geologist.
Bernhardt Jungmann (1671 - 1747) was a German botanist who was a professor in Germany and visited America.
Ellen Marion Delf-Smith FLS (née Delf, 31 January 1883 – 23 February 1980) was a British botanist.
Lidija Ivanovna Savic-Ljubickaja (October 24, 1886 - September 18, 1982) was a Soviet botanist, bryologist, and professor.
Dr Maarten Joost Maria Christenhusz (born 27 April 1976) is a Dutch botanist, natural historian and photographer.
The specific epithet hemsleyana honours English botanist William Botting Hemsley, who described N. macfarlanei and N. smilesii.
Frederick Turner (17 April 1852 Burton Salmon, England – 17 October 1939 Chatswood, Australia) was an Australian botanist.
Angela Piskernik Angela Piskernik (27 August 1886 – 23 December 1967) was an Austro-Yugoslav botanist and conservationist.
Russian botanist Andrei Famintsyn was the first to use artificial light for plant growing and research (1868).
Rudolf Jakob Camerarius or Camerer (February 12, 1665 – September 11, 1721) was a German botanist and physician.
Fryxell's son, Roald, was a geologist and archaeologist. One of his nephews, Paul Fryxell, was a botanist.
Madhuca woodii is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It is named for the botanist Geoffrey Wood.
Martin Henrichsen Vahl (October 10, 1749 – December 24, 1804) was a Danish- Norwegian botanist, herbalist and zoologist.
Madhuca kingiana is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It is named for the botanist George King.
Olga Evertovna Knorring (1887-1978) was a Russian botanist known for studying the plants of Central Asia.
Roelof Benjamin van den Bosch (1810–1862) was a Dutch botanist known for studying ferns and mosses.
Hettie Morse Chute (1888-1962) was an American-Canadian botanist and professor of botany at Rutgers University.
James' son and Donald's nephew James Currie FRSE (1863-1930) was a prominent amateur mineralogist and botanist.
Prof George Dickie MD (23 Nov 1812, Aberdeen – 1882) was a Scottish botanist, who specialised in algae.
The plant genus Rothmannia was named after him by his friend, the Swedish botanist Carl Peter Thunberg.
Admiral du Petit- Thouars was a significant enough botanist to have his name given an official abbreviation.
Hermann Hoffmann (22 April 1819 – 26 October 1891) was a German botanist and mycologist born in Rödelheim.
They had two daughters. Willis Hayes Wheeler became a plant pathologist and botanist, working for the USDA.
Castanopsis motleyana is a tree in the family Fagaceae. It is named for the botanist James Motley.
The tree is named for Matthias de L'obel, the Flemish botanist also commemorated by the genus Lobelia.
Mathieu Tillet (10 November 1714 Bordeaux - 13 December 1791) was a French botanist, agronomist, metallurgist and administrator.
General William Munro (1818–1880) was a senior English Army officer and plant collector, botanist and agrostologist.
The tree is named for S. S. Chang, the Chinese botanist who identified the species in 1936.
Alexander Stuart Watt FRS(21 June 1892 – 2 March 1985) was a Scottish botanist and plant ecologist.
Una Vivienne Cassie Cooper (née Dellow, born 29 September 1926) is a New Zealand planktologist and botanist.
Knud Jessen Knud Jessen (29 November 1884 – 14 April 1971) was a Danish botanist and quaternary geologist.
Alire Raffeneau Delile (23 January 1778, in Versailles – 5 July 1850, in Montpellier) was a French botanist.
Dr Dukinfield Henry Scott FRS HFRSE LLD (28 November 1854 – 29 January 1934) was a British botanist.
Erik Albert Mennega (January 6, 1923 – January 27, 1998) was a Dutch botanist, plant taxonomist, and author.
Samuel George Gottlieb Gmelin (4 July 1744 – 27 July 1774) was a German physician, botanist and explorer.
The species was first formally described in 1810 by botanist Robert Brown in Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae.
The specific name, plei, is in honor of French botanist Auguste Plée.Beolens et al. 2011, p. 208.
Thorvald (Thorwald) Julius Sørensen (4 July 1902 – 21 June 1973) was a Danish botanist and evolutionary biologist.
Ralph Anthony Blakelock (1915-1963) was a British botanist. He particularly focused on the research of spermatophites.
Alice Albertson Shurrocks (née Alice Owen Albertson February 10, 1880 – January 13, 1967) was an American botanist.
Moritz August Seubert (2 June 1818 in Karlsruhe – 8 April 1878 in Karlsruhe) was a German botanist.
The species was first formally described by English botanist George Bentham in his Flora Australiensis in 1878.
Theodore (`Ted') Robert Dudley (1936-1994) was an American botanist, who died prematurely of a brain tumour.
Florence Hannah Bacon Marsh (1881-1948) was a British botanist noted for studying the flora of Herefordshire.
George Edward Massee (20 December 1845 – 16 February 1917) was an English mycologist, plant pathologist, and botanist.
George Karl Ludwig Sigwart (28 October 1784 – 29 March 1864) was a German biochemist, botanist and physician.
Gavino Gulia (1835–1889) was a Maltese botanist and author of books on flora of that island.
The species was first formally described in 1810 by botanist Robert Brown in Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae.
George Stacey Gibson FLS (20 July 1818 – 11 April 1883), was a British banker, botanist and philanthropist.
Dr Robert Spittal MD FRSE (c.1800-1852) was a 19th-century Scottish physician and amateur botanist.
Gindetta Mariani (1870-1950), also credited as Guiditta Mariani was an Italian botanist, mycologist, and plant taxonomist.
Lindsay Stuart Smith (27 November 1917 – 12 September 1970) was an Australian botanist, naturalist and public servant.
Chase, Mary Agnes Meara, American botanist, widely regarded as an expert in agrostology, the study of grasses.
The species was first formally described by Swiss botanist Carl Meissner in 1856 from a specimen collected in 1844 near the Swan River by James Drummond. The specific epithet recognises the English collector, botanist and malacologist Robert J. Shuttleworth. The closest relative of P. shuttleworthiana is Petrophile macrostachya.
The name Gunnianus comes from the botanist Ronald Campbell Gunn. Gunn worked closely with Ronald Lawrence; who knew British botanist Joseph Hooker. The authority of this species was named after Hooker. Gunn travelled around Tasmania, collecting specimens and sending them back for Hooker's book "Introduction to Flora Tasmaniae".
Saurauia copelandii is a species of plant in the Actinidiaceae family. It is native to the Philippines. Adolph Daniel Edward Elmer, the American botanist who first formally described the species, named it in honor of Edwin Copeland, another American botanist who collected many botanical samples in the Philippines.
Knut Fægri (17 July 1909 – 10 December 2001) was a Norwegian botanist and palaeoecologist. Fægri was born in Bergen. He was the son of Major Ole A. Fægri (1875–1962) and Gudrun Stoltz (1881–1940) and the nephew of the botanist, natural scientist, and politician Jørgen Brunchorst (1862–1917).
Self-taught British botanist Rupert Charles Barneby formally named the species and is responsible for characterizing much of the endemic new world legume species. The species was named after 19-year-old botanist Fanny Searls. She was the first to collect a specimen of this species in 1871.
Wilhelm Gerhard Walpers (26 December 1816 in Mühlhausen – 18 June 1853 in Berlin) was a German botanist. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Walp. when citing a botanical name. He received his education at the Universities of Greifswald and Breslau, earning his habilitation in 1848 at Berlin.
John Gill ("J.G.") Lemmon (January 2, 1831 or 1832, Lima, Michigan – November 24, 1908 Oakland, California) was an American botanist and Civil War veteran and former prisoner of Andersonville. He was married to fellow botanist, Sara Plummer Lemmon, and the two jointly cataloged numerous western and desert plants.
Joseph Robert Sealy (1907 – 1 August 2000) was an English botanist. His career in Botany in 1925,working at Kew Gardens, with Thomas Archibald Sprague in the tropical crops section. Later (1927) he worked in the Herbarium with Arthur William Hill. He was appointed Assistant Botanist in 1940.
It is commonly found in coastal areas on sandy soils in banksia woodland and shrubland communities. The species was first formally described in 1824 by botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in Prodomus. In 1876, botanist Ferdinand von Mueller transferred it to the genus Hybanthus in Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
R. acraeus was first discovered in 1940 but it was mistaken for a subspecies of R. haastii. In 1998, a gardener saw the plant during a hike in Mount St. Mary in North Otago and took it to a botanist. The botanist validated that it is a new species.
Victorian Government botanist Ferdinand von Mueller described I. anemonifolius var. tenuifolius in 1870, now recognised as I. prostratus. Australian botanist Edwin Cheel described forma simplicifolia in 1923, from collections from Mount Victoria and Hornsby. He described it as having mostly unlobed (simple) leaves compared with the typical form.
The European tradition of sending doctors with botanical training to Japan was a long one. Sent on a mission by the Dutch East India Company, Engelbert Kaempfer (1651–1716), a German physician and botanist who lived in Japan from 1690 until 1692, ushered in this tradition of a combination of physician and botanist. The Dutch East India Company did not, however, actually employ the Swedish botanist and physician Carl Peter Thunberg (1743–1828), who had arrived in Japan in 1775.
Gymnocalycium spegazzinii is a species of Gymnocalycium from Argentina and Bolivia named after the botanist C. L. Spegazzini.
France Staub France Staub (September 29, 1920 – July 2, 2005) was a Mauritian ornithologist, herpetologist, botanist, and conservationist.
John "Jack" Heslop-Harrison FRS FAAAS (10 February 1920 - 8 May 1998) was a British soldier and botanist.
His uncle, Gunnar "The Bomb" is a botanist in his spare time. Here he is fixing the orf.
Ove in the 1930s Ove Fredrik Arbo Høeg (25 November 1898 - 7 July 1993) was a Norwegian botanist.
William Jack FRSE (1795 in Aberdeen – 1822 in Bencoolen, Sumatra) was a noted Scottish botanist and medical practitioner.
The species is named for the Mexican botanist and collector Dr Juan Ismael Calzada, who discovered the tree.
João Geraldo Kuhlmann (1882 Blumenau, Santa Catarina -1958 Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro) was a Brazilian botanist.
Professor Hedberg and his wife Inga (also a botanist) had five children: Per, Bengt, Göran, Björn and Maria.
Jens Wilken Hornemann in 1830 Jens Wilken Hornemann (6 March 1770 – 30 July 1841) was a Danish botanist.
John Jeffrey (14 November 1826 – 1854) was a Scottish botanist and plant- hunter active in the United States.
Canarium kostermansii is a tree in the family Burseraceae. It is named for the Indonesian botanist André Kostermans.
Dr Robert Kidston, FRS FRSE LLD (29 June 1852 – 13 July 1924) was a Scottish botanist and palaeobotanist.
Dacryodes elmeri is a tree in the family Burseraceae. It is named for the American botanist Adolph Elmer.
Accessed online, 10 November 2013. It was first described by the German botanist Otto Wilhelm Sonder in 1845.
Prof Karl Heinz Rechinger HFRSE (16 October 1906, Vienna – 30 December 1998) was an Austrian botanist and phytogeographer.
Frederick "Camp" Campion Steward FRS (16 June 1904 – 13 September 1993) was a British botanist and plant physiologist.
Henrik [Heinrich] Franz Alexander Baron von Eggers (4 December 1844 – 1903), was a Danish professional soldier and botanist.
James Snowden Calvert (13 July 1825 – 22 July 1884), was an explorer and botanist, active in colonial Australia.
He was the father of famous zoologist and botanist Peter Simon Pallas, and of physician August Friedrich Pallas.
Nathaniel John Winch (1768–1838) was an English merchant and botanist, known also as a lichenologist and geologist.
Weinmannia, for German botanist J. A. Weinmann (1782–1858); trichosperma, from Latin: hairy seeds. And tineo, Mapuche name.
Gustav Lindau (May 2, 1866 in Dessau - October 10, 1923 in Berlin), was a German mycologist and botanist.
The species epithet commemorates Jean Marie Bosser, a Mauritian botanist who contributed largely to the flora of Madagascar.
Dysoxylum carolinae is a tree in the family Meliaceae. It is named for the English botanist Caroline Pannell.
Tyge Ahrengot Christensen (31 March 1918 in Nykøbing Mors – 17 January 1996) was a Danish botanist and phycologist.
Liubov Manucharovna Kemularia-Nathadze (1891–1985) was a Georgian botanist noted for collecting and describing plants of Georgia.
Prof William Henry Lang FRS FRSE FLS LLD (12 May 1874-29 August 1960) was a British botanist.
Douglas Miller Reid (1897-1959) was a 20th-century Scottish schoolmaster and noted amateur botanist and botanical author.
Succisa pentaphylla is a species in the honeysuckle family. It was first described by German botanist Conrad Moench.
Cratoxylum maingayi is a plant in the family Hypericaceae. It is named for the botanist Alexander Carroll Maingay.
Simon Jan van Ooststroom (2 January 1906 in Rotterdam - 28 September 1982 in Oegstgeest) was a Dutch botanist.
The species is named in honor of Jacques Cambessèdes, a French botanist who collected in the Balearic Islands.
Gabriele Rabel in Cambridge in 1938. Gabriele Rabel (1880–August 27, 1963) was an Austrian physicist and botanist.
Ping Tao Li (; born 1936) is a Chinese botanist who co-authored articles in the Flora of China.
Rolla Kent Beattie (1875–1960) was an American botanist and plant pathologist.Rolla Kent Beattie at the SIA archives.
The specific name honour the collector of the type specimen, the Brazilian botanist Frederico Carlos Hoehne (1882-1959).
Richard Thomas Baker (1 December 1854 – 14 July 1941) was an Australian economic botanist, museum curator and educator.
The specific name bequaerti honours Joseph Charles Bequaert, a Belgian botanist, entomologist, and malacologist who collected the holotype.
William Ashbrook Kellerman (May 1, 1850 Ashville, Ohio – March 8, 1908) was an American botanist, mycologist and photographer.
She was married to the botanist, her colleague Joseph Robert Sealy, whom she first met at Chelsea Polytechnic.
Botanist and naturalist Alexander von Humboldt visited the area in 1801, describing new species such as the frailejón.
His two other sons were the botanist Léon de la Fontaine and the zoologist Alphonse de la Fontaine.
This species first appeared in the scientific literature in 1810, authored by the prolific Scottish botanist, Robert Brown.
João Murça Pires (born 1917) was a Brazilian botanist, who worked principally at the Instituto Agronômico do Norte.
Adrian Hardy Haworth (19 April 1767, Hull – 24 August 1833, Chelsea) was an English entomologist, botanist and carcinologist.
John Adolph Shafer(1863–1918) John Adolph Shafer (February 23, 1863 - February 1, 1918) was an American botanist.
Castanopsis foxworthyi is a tree in the family Fagaceae. It is named for the botanist Frederick William Foxworthy.
Engelhardia roxburghiana is a tree in the family Juglandaceae. It is named for the Scottish botanist William Roxburgh.
Michel Adanson (7 April 17273 August 1806) was an 18th-century French botanist and naturalist of Scottish descent.
Cecil Arden, a mezzo-soprano with the Metropolitan Opera, and botanist Otto Warburg sailed on the same trip.
La Leche League Ireland was founded in Dublin in 1966 by the biologist and botanist Nora A. Leach.
Johann Friedrich Gmelin (8 August 1748 – 1 November 1804) was a German naturalist, botanist, entomologist, herpetologist, and malacologist.
František Kotlaba (20 May 1927 in Vlastiboř – 11 June 2020 in Prague) was a Czech botanist and mycologist.
Edward Palmer (January 12, 1829 – April 10, 1911) was a self-taught British botanist and early American archaeologist.
Pehr Löfling (31 January 1729 – 22 February 1756) was a Swedish botanist and an apostle of Carl Linnaeus.
Christian Nikolai Richard Pohle (, Richard Richardovytch Pohle; 5 August 1869-4 August 1926) was a Baltic German botanist.
Johann Rudolf Suter (29 March 1766, Zofingen - 24 February 1827, Bern) was a Swiss physician, botanist and philologist.
Carl Niclas von Hellens Carl Niclas von Hellens (1 August 1745 – 26 January 1820) was a Finnish botanist.
Lidia Palladievna Sergievskaya (1897–1970) was a Soviet botanist, professor, and herbarium curator. She described over 100 plants.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Allan Cunningham in 1834 in the journal Botanical Magazine.
Forest Buffen Harkness Brown (1873–1954) was an American botanist known for his work on pteridophytes and spermatophytes.
Helena Krzemieniewska (1878–1966) was a Polish botanist and microbiologist, noted for studying myxobacteria and myxophyta in soil.
Ross married his wife Wilda, a botanist, in 1942, and had two children with her, Martha and Clark.
Katherine Davies Jones (1860 – February 15, 1943) was an American botanist known for her developments in California horticulture.
Carolyn Phinney Sweetser (1863-1952) was an American watercolorist and amateur botanist who lived and worked in Oregon.
Francesco Ambrosi Francesco Ambrosi (November 17, 1821 – 9 April 1897) was an Italian botanist, librarian, ethnologist and historian.
It was also discovered in the Waimea Estuary near Nelson during a survey by DOC botanist Shannel Courtney.
Antoine Magnin Antoine Magnin (15 February 1848, Trévoux - 15 April 1926, Beynost) was a French physician and botanist.
The pea-shaped flowers, which are produced in terminal heads, are yellow with a red centre. These appear between October and January in the species' native range. The species was first formally described by botanist George Bentham in 1864 in Flora Australiensis. The specific epithet honours botanist Ferdinand von Mueller.
134 The book was criticized by botanist C. Stuart Gager for containing "numerous statements about plants that are inaccurate or incorrect, and sure to mislead readers not familiar with botany." Botanist Edward James Salisbury described the work as "frankly unorthodox" and noted that its facts are "often only partially apprehended".
The species was formally described in 1851 by British botanist William Griffith who gave it the name Grammatophyllum paludosum. Griffith had collected the plant from swampy upland in Malacca, growing in association with Nepenthes species. It was transferred to the genus Dipodium by German botanist Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach in 1862.
Edward Frederick Anderson (Covina, California, June 17, 1932 – March 29, 2001) was an American botanist who conducted extensive explorations in Mexico. He was a leading specialist in the cactus family. He was Senior Research Botanist at the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix. He chaired the International Organization for Succulent Plant Study.
Constance Endicott Hartt Constance Endicott Hartt (November 2, 1900 – December 21, 1984) was a U.S. botanist notable for her research on sugarcane. She was born in Passaic, New Jersey. She taught at St. Lawrence University and Connecticut College. She also worked as a botanist for the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association.
Louis Marie Bernard Dangeard (April 29, 1898 in Poitiers, France to April 15, 1987 in Paris, France) was a French geologist and oceanographer. He was son of the botanist and mycologist Pierre Augustin Dangeard. His brother was the botanist Pierre Dangeard. Louis Dangeard was one of the founders of modern oceanography.
William Coles (1626–1662), botanist, also known as William Cole, was born in 1626 at Adderbury, Oxfordshire, being the son of John Cole. He is known for the doctrine of signatures of medicinal herbs or 'simples', whereby the plant has some attribute which shows the botanist what its use may be.
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Botanist, Herbarium Curator turns 100 He died on September 24, 2009.
Priscilla Susan Bury, born Falkner (12 January 1799 Liverpool – 8 March 1872 Croydon), was an English botanist and illustrator.
Alexander Clifford (Cliff) Beauglehole (26 August 1920 – 19 January 2002) was an Australian farmer, botanist, plant collector and naturalist.
Plants collected in Africa were sent to Swiss botanist Hans Schinz for further examination.Mek.Oszk biographical information translated from Hungarian.
Olga Margaret Stewart née Mounsey (1 July 1920 – 6 August 1998) was a prolific Scottish botanist and botanical artist.
William Higgins Coleman (18 July 1812England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 – 12 September 1863) was an English botanist.
Fernando da Costa Leal (15 October 1846 – 4 April 1910) was a Portuguese army officer, writer, poet and botanist.
Canarium merrillii is a tree in the family Burseraceae. It is named for the American botanist Elmer Drew Merrill.
Johannes Boye Petersen (September 29, 1887 – March 22, 1961) was a Danish botanist and phycologist, mainly working on diatoms.
It got its genus name after botanist Muehlenbeck, and earned its species name due to its tangled growth habit.
Ferris' papers are held at the California Academy of Sciences. He was married to botanist Roxana Judkins Stinchfield Ferris.
Debabarta Chatterjee (born 1911) was a botanist from India, whose primary scholarly focus was the endemic flora of India.
Elsa Pooley (born Elsa Susanna Bond: 1947 in Johannesburg), is a South African botanist, landscaper, tour guide, and artist.
Caladium lindenii is a species of flowering plant in the family Araceae, named after Belgian botanist Jean Jules Linden.
Anthony Leo Primavesi (1917–2011) was an English botanist best known for his work on the Flora of Leicestershire.
Caspar Commelijn Caspar Commelijn or Caspar Commelin (14 October 1668 Amsterdam – 25 December 1731 Amsterdam), was a Dutch botanist.
David James Bellamy (18 January 1933 – 11 December 2019) was an English botanist, television presenter, author and environmental campaigner.
Plant Physiology 128(2), 615-24. The genus is named after Jonathan Stokes (1755–1831), English botanist and physician.
Johann Jakob Bernhardi (1 September 1774 in Erfurt – 13 May 1850 in Erfurt) was a German doctor and botanist.
Karl Hirn (1872–1907) was a Finnish botanist, specialized in freshwater algae. He was also a high school teacher.
These included Captain William Bowen, General Daniel Smith, Isaac Bledsoe, Andrew Jackson, John Overton and French botanist André Michaux.
Olga Iakinfovna Kuzeneva (1887-1978) was a Russian botanist who specialized in conifers. She identified at least five species.
Sextus Otto Lindberg (29 March 1835 – 20 February 1889) was a Swedish physician and botanist, known as a bryologist.
Friedrich Adolph Haage (24 March 1796 in Erfurt – 20 September 1866 in Erfurt) was a German gardener and botanist.
Chisocheton koordersii is a tree in the family Meliaceae. It is named for the Dutch botanist Sijfert Hendrik Koorders.
Wilhelm Knechtel (; 13 August 1837, Pihlerbaustellen-22 October 1924, Bucharest) was an ethnic German Austrian-Romanian gardener and botanist.
The specific epithet benstonei honours botanist Benjamin Clemens Stone, who was one of the first to collect the species.
Heinrich Friedrich Link Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link (2 February 1767 – 1 January 1851) was a German naturalist and botanist.
The specific epithet is named for the American botanist Townshend Stith Brandegee (1843–1925). It is sometimes misspelled "brandegeana".
Portrait of John Martyn John Martyn or Joannes Martyn (12 September 1699 – 29 January 1768) was an English botanist.
Sofia Gennadievna Gorschkova (1889-1972) was a Russian botanist noted for her discovery of over thirty species of plants.
The specific name of this fish honours the collector of the type, the botanist Aristide-Horace Letourneux (1820-1890).
Cedric Bucknall, born 2 May 1849 in Bath and died 12 December, 1921, was an English organist and botanist.
The species was first formally described by botanist Robert Brown in 1830 in Supplementum primum prodromi florae Novae Hollandiae.
Thomas Gordon Hartley (9 January 1931 in Beaumont, Texas – 8 March 2016 in Canberra, Australia) was an American botanist.
Madhuca korthalsii is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It is named for the Dutch botanist P. W. Korthals.
Prof Nils Eberhard Svedelius ForMemRS HFRSE (1873-1960) was a Swedish botanist. He was an expert on marine algae.
Vicente (Vincente) de Cervantes (Ledrada, Salamanca España; 1755 - México; 1829) was a notable Spanish and Mexican physician and botanist.
Friedrich Karl Georg Fedde (June 30, 1873, Breslau (now Wrocław) – March 14, 1942, Berlin-Dahlem) was a German botanist.
Teloschistes is a genus of lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It was circumscribed by Norwegian botanist Johannes Musaeus Norman.
Jacques Delisse (born Dax, Landes, 13 May 1773; died Bordeaux, 13 March 1856) was a French pharmacist and botanist.
Jan-Peter Frahm (February 14, 1945 – February 5, 2014) was a German botanist dedicated to the study of mosses.
Lithocarpus hatusimae is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the Japanese botanist Sumihiko Hatusima.
Lithocarpus kochummenii is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the botanist K. M. Kochummen.
Giuseppe Giovanni Antonio Meneghini (30 July 1811, Padua - 29 January 1889, Pisa) was an Italian botanist, geologist and paleontologist.
Named after the renowned chemist Acharya Prafulla Chandra Roy and the renowned physicist and botanist Acharya Jagadish Chandra Bose.
William Randolph Taylor (December 21, 1895 - November 11, 1990) was an American botanist known as an expert in phycology.
James Marion Shull (1872–1948) was an American botanist known for his iris and daylily cultivars and botanical illustrations.
George Duryea Hulst George Duryea Hulst (9 March 1846 – 5 November 1900) was an American clergyman, botanist and entomologist.
Celestino Fernández-Villar (April 2, 1838 – April 29, 1907) was an Augustinian friar and botanist born in Asturias, Spain.
The genus and species were first formally described by botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1865 in Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
Xanthophyllum korthalsianum is a tree in the family Polygalaceae. It is named for the Dutch botanist Pieter Willem Korthals.
American botanist Sherwin Carlquist named a triggerplant from the Great Victoria Desert, Stylidium humphreysii, in his honour in 1969.
Hatschbachiella polyclada is a South American daisy species that was first described by Swedish botanist Per Karl Hjalmar Dusén.
Ljubov Nikolaevna Vassiljeva (Любовь Николаевна Васильева; January 6, 1901 – July 7, 1985) was a Soviet botanist, mycologist, and bryologist.
Michael Melkonian (born 1948 in Hamburg) is a German botanist and professor of botany at the University of Cologne.
The Swedish Nightingale, soprano Jenny Lind became her daughter-in-law. The botanist Otto Warburg had been her grandson.
Scleria poklei is a plant in the family Cyperaceae. It is named for the Indian botanist Dileep Sadashivrao Pokle.
She also collected specimens for the Queensland Herbarium, run by her friend and Queensland Government Botanist C. T. White.
Devendra Prasad Gupta (; 2 January 1933 – 26 December 2017) was an Indian pre- democratic political sufferer, botanist and academician.
Lithocarpus beccarianus is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the Italian botanist Odoardo Beccari.
Illa Martin (born Sybilla Kesselburg; 25 February 1900 – 6 August 1988) was a German dendrologist, botanist, conservationist and dentist.
Parry circa 1875 Charles Christopher Parry (August 28, 1823 – February 20, 1890) was a British-American botanist and mountaineer.
Elba Emanuel Watson (1871 – September 27, 1936) was an American botanist, noted for his study of the genus Helianthus.
Eduard Friedrich Poeppig. Eduard Friedrich Poeppig (16 July 1798 – 4 September 1868) was a German botanist, zoologist and explorer.
The German botanist Wilhelm Schimper named several mosses after him as well. The remaining existent specimens Blytt collected on his studies are held at the Botanical Museum of the University of Oslo. The Buffalo Museum of Science in Buffalo, New York also holds a collection of specimens attributed to a collector identified as "Blytt", who is likely Axel Blytt. This is evidenced by Charles Peck, the New York State Botanist from 1883 to 1913, in his 1872 Report of the Botanist to the New York Senate.
Binukaw belongs to the genus Garcinia (the mangosteens) of the family Clusiaceae. The first description of the correct name of the species is attributed to the French botanist Jacques Denys Choisy in Description des guttifères de l'Inde (1849) based on the basionym Cambogia binucao from the Spanish friar and botanist Francisco Manuel Blanco in Flora de Filipinas in 1837. It was also described from Vietnam as Garcinia duodecandra by the French botanist Jean Baptiste Louis Pierre in Flore Forestiere de la Cochinchine (v. 28, 1883).
Italian botanist Guglielmo Gasparrini broke up the genus Ficus in 1844, placing the species in the genus Urostigma as U. rubiginosum. In 1862, Dutch botanist Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel described Urostigma leichhardtii from material collected from Cape Cleveland, Queensland, noting it had affinities to F. rubiginosa. In 1867, he placed Urostigma as a subgenus in the reunited Ficus, which resulted in the taxon becoming Ficus leichhardtii. Miquel also described Ficus leichhardtii variety angustata from Whitsunday Island, later classified as F. shirleyana by Czech botanist Karel Domin.
The earliest botanical description of a species in the genus was made by French botanist Charles Plumier, who described two species based on his visits to the West Indies between 1689 and 1695. Both of Plumier's species are now considered to be Aiphanes minima. The same species was described by Dutch botanist Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin in 1763. Spanish botanist José Celestino Mutis produced a detailed description of A. lindeniana and illustrations of that species and what is thought to be A. horrida in 1779.
In 1865, European science formally published the name and description of this genus using John Dallachy's northeastern Queensland Gillbeea adenopetala type specimen collection, authored by Melbourne based German–Australian botanist Ferdinand von Mueller. Mueller named this genus after Melbourne medical doctor William Gillbee. In 1915, the species name Gillbeea papuana and description was formally scientifically published by German botanist Rudolf Schlechter. In 1960, a revision of this genus and three more related genera of the family Cunoniaceae was published by Dutch botanist Ruurd Dirk Hoogland.
Cuéllar left the botanist position in Seville to take up the position in the Philippines. This was a scientific expedition at the same level as that of Ruiz and Pavón, and Cuéllar asked the king to give him the title of botánico real (royal botanist). This the king did, without an actual salary, naming him botánico real sin sueldo (royal botanist without pay). At the beginning of January 1786 Cuéllar sailed on the Águila Imperial for Manila by way of the Cape of Good Hope.
Ferdinand Didrichsen, in a photograph by Budtz Müller (1868). Didrik Ferdinand Didrichsen (3 July 1814 in Copenhagen – 19 March 1887 in Frederiksberg) was a Danish botanist and physicist. He participated as botanist in the first Galathea Expedition (1845—1847). In 1851 he began work as a librarian at the botanical gardens in Copenhagen.
James Ramsay Drummond (1851-1921) was a civil servant in India, and amateur botanist. Born in Scotland, he graduated BA from New College, Oxford in 1872. He had a distinguished botanical ancestry; his great-uncle was the botanist James Drummond (1784-1863), while his grandfather was the botanical collector Thomas Drummond (1780-1835).
Anna Murray Vail (January 7, 1863 – December 18, 1955) was an American botanist and first librarian of the New York Botanical Garden. She was a student of the Columbia University botanist and geologist Nathaniel Lord Britton, the force behind the founding of the New York Botanical Garden, and was active in its creation.
Clinanthus elwesii is a species of plant in the family Amaryllidaceae. It is native to Peru. John Gilbert Baker, the English botanist who first formally described the species using the synonymous name Callithauma viridiflorum var. elwesii, named it in after Henry John Elwes, another English botanist who grew the specimen Baker examined.
Turhan Baytop (June 20, 1920 – June 25, 2002) was a Turkish botanist and pharmacist from Istanbul. He was born on June 20, 1920 at Uskudar, Istanbul. His father was a military officer and a keen amateur botanist. He then started studying at the 'University College of Pharmacy' in Istanbul in 1945 he graduated.
Danish botanist Christian Friedrich Ecklon mentions but does not describe the name C. hirsutum in 1836 (now C. villosum) in De Candolle's publication. The Irish botanist William Henry Harvey distinguished in 1865 seven species and three varieties, among which the newly introduced names C. latifolium (C. glabrum subsp. glabrum), C. nervosum var.
Initially working as a clerk, she was eventually obtained a position as a botanist. She presented a paper at the Pacific Science Congress in 1933. In 1937 Sutherland returned to the Forest Service as a botanist. The New Zealand Institute of Foresters (NZIF), established in 1927, lists Sutherland among its founding members.
Helge Ness (November 4, 1861 – December 30, 1928) was a Norwegian botanist. He was born in Rosendal, Norway. In 1889, he became the first international student to graduate from Texas A&M; University, and began to work at that university. Ness was the first botanist in the United States to produce hybrid oaks.
Per Karl Hjalmar Dusén (1855–1926) was a Swedish civil engineer, botanist and explorer. As a botanist his interests included pteridology, bryology, and paleobotany. He made botanical expeditions to Africa, Greenland, and South America. During his expeditions to Greenland, he visited Disko Island to catalogue the variety of flowering plants, horsetails and ferns.
The geographic Hooker items were named by the Canterbury provincial geologist, Julius von Haast, after British botanist William Jackson Hooker.
Herbert Boucher Dobbie (13 February 1852-8 August 1940) was a New Zealand engineering draughtsman, botanist, stationmaster, orchardist and writer.
Count Grigory Kirillovich Razumovsky (, ; November 10, 1759 - June 3, 1837) was a Russian nobleman, political philosopher, botanist, zoologist and geologist.
Suzanne Jovet-Ast (born 1914) was a French botanist, who worked principally at the National Museum of Natural History, France.
Thomas Conrad Porter (1822-1901) was an American botanist and theologian known as an expert on the flora of Pennsylvania.
The species was formally described in 1859 by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in his work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
Carl Ernst Otto Kuntze 1843 - 1907 Carl Ernst Otto Kuntze (23 June 1843 – 27 January 1907) was a German botanist.
First examined in Europe by the French botanist Nicaise Auguste Desvaux, a description of the species was published in 1815.
Henry Beeke (6 January 1751 – 9 March 1837) was an English historian, theologian, writer on taxation and finance, and botanist.
Ed. James Ridgway, London. In 1891, the botanist Carl Kuntze proposed it should be better identified as Sophronia violacea.Kuntze (1891).
An amateur botanist, Comins sent flowers from Norfolk Island and the Solomon Islands to Kew. He died in March 1919.
Jean-Baptiste Édouard Bornet Jean-Baptiste Édouard Bornet (September 2, 1828, Guérigny – December 18, 1911, Paris) was a French botanist.
Joseph Bornmüller Joseph Friedrich Nicolaus Bornmüller (February 6, 1862 – December 19, 1948) was a German botanist born in Hildburghausen, Thuringia.
Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau (20 July 1700, Paris13 August 1782, Paris), was a French physician, naval engineer and botanist.
The other species are native to the Americas. The genus was named after the French botanist Jean Baptiste Antoine Guillemin.
Joanna Jean Putterill is a New Zealand molecular botanist. She is currently a full professor at the University of Auckland.
Friedrich Wettstein, Ritter von Westersheim (24 June 1895 in Prague - 12 February 1945 in Trins, Tirol) was an Austrian botanist.
Chen Hang (Traditional Chinese: 陳杭; Simplified Chinese: 陈杭) was born in 1931. She is a botanist and horticulturist.
Robert Sweet received high praise from his contemporaries at his trial and was described as possibly the first practical botanist.
Christian Ernst Stahl (21 June 1848 – 3 December 1919) was a German botanist who was a native of Schiltigheim, Alsace.
Arthur Bliss Seymour (January 3, 1859 – March 29, 1933) was an American botanist and mycologist who specialized in parasitic fungi.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Jacques Labillardière in 1806 in the work Novae Hollandiae Plantarum Specimen.
George Henry Verrall (7 February 1848 – 16 September 1911) was a British horse racing official, entomologist, botanist and Conservative politician.
Colin Milne, 1803 pastel Colin Milne (c.1743–1815) was a Scottish priest of the Church of England and botanist.
Luigi Anguillara, actually Luigi Squalermo, (born c. 1512 in Anguillara Sabazia, died September 1570 in Ferrara) was an Italian botanist.
José Luis Fernández Alonso (born 1959) is a Spanish born Colombian botanist. He has published over 20 papers since 1987.
Karl (Charles) Andreas Geyer (30 November 1809 – 21 November 1853) was a German botanist who was a native of Dresden.
Ellen Louella (Nellie) Powell Thompson (1840–1911) was an American naturalist and botanist, and an active advocate for women's suffrage.
Euphemia Cowan Barnett (1890–1970) was a Scottish botanist known for her research of the flora of Thailand, particularly Fagaceae.
Jerzy Rzedowski Rotter (born December 27, 1926) is a Mexican botanist. His focus is on Mexican floristics, taxonomy, and ecology.
Carl Friedrich Philipp (Karl Friedrich Philipp) von Martius (17 April 1794 – 13 December 1868) was a German botanist and explorer.
Kalkman (painting by Rodenberg, 1991) Cornelis Kalkman (5 May 1928 in Delft - 19 January 1998, Leiden ) was a Dutch botanist.
Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press Tenorite was named in 1841 after the Italian botanist Michele Tenore (1780–1861).
Katherine Agnes Chandler (May 1865 – June 24, 1930) was a botanist and author, known as "The Wildflower Lady of California".
Christoph Jacob Trew (16 April 1695 in Lauf an der Pegnitz – 18 July 1769) was a German botanist and illustrator.
It was introduced to Victorian Britain around 1847 by Cornish plant hunter and botanist Thomas Lobb via the Veitch Nurseries.
Ren-Chang Ching (; 15 February 1898 – 22 July 1986), courtesy name Zinong, was a Chinese botanist who specialised in ferns.
It opened to visitors on 3 June 2006. Austrian botanist Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin named the genus Bursera after Burser.
Adeline May Cowan (1892–1981) was a Scottish botanist. She was active in India and was mainly interested in Spermatophytes.
Hymenophyllum atrovirens was initially described in 1845 by English botanist William Colenso in his collections from Lake Waikaremoana in 1841.
The original specimen was collected in Sydney, and first published in 1805 by the eminent English botanist, James Edward Smith.
He had married botanist Enid Mary, daughter of John Charles Jesson, in 1913. They had a son and a daughter.
Kate Edgerley in 1911 Kate Violet Edgerley (21 February 1887 – 26 February 1939) was a New Zealand botanist and teacher.
It was reported by the American agronomist and botanist Edward Lewis Sturtevant in 1919 to have edible, juicy, yellow fruit.
Lois Brako (born July 25, 1957) is an American botanist, mycologist and explorer. She has conducted botanical expeditions in Peru.
Adele Gerard Lewis Grant (June 3, 1881 - June 19, 1969) was an American feminist, botanist, teacher, taxonomist, curator, and explorer.
Helena Lefroy (1820–1908) was an Irish botanist known for her discovery of the only Euphorbia peplis specimen in Ireland.
Julie F. Barcelona is a Filipina botanist (plant taxonomist), working as Research Associate at University of Canterbury (Christchurch, New Zealand).
Lithocarpus bennettii is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the English botanist John Joseph Bennett.
Bannister's father was a botanist working at Otago University. Bannister is married to Dribbling Darts/The Weather bandmate Alice Bulmer.
David Henriques Valentine (16 February 1912 in Salford – 10 April 1987 in Manchester) was a British botanist and plant taxonomist.
Botanist David McHattie Forbes served as Foreman Forester for the estate from 1883 until his departure for Hawaii in 1887.
Lithocarpus hallieri is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the German botanist Johannes Gottfried Hallier.
Lithocarpus kalkmanii is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. This species is named for the Dutch botanist Cornelis Kalkman.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1878 in the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
Walter Van Fleet (June 18, 1857 - January 26, 1922) was an American physician, horticulturalist, botanist, ornithologist and all around naturalist.
Alida Olbers Wester (1842-1912) was a Swedish botanist noted for studying plant anatomy, particularly the structure of the pericarp.
The De Candolle system is a system of plant taxonomy by French (Swiss) botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle (1778−1841).
Edmund Gilbert Baker (1864–1949) was a British plant collector and botanist. He was the son of John Gilbert Baker.
Elsie May Kittredge (May 14, 1870 – 1954) was an American botanist, photographer, and curator for the New York Botanical Gardens.
Robert David FitzGerald (or possibly Robert Desmond FitzGerald) (30 November 1830 – 12 August 1892) was an Irish-Australian surveyor, ornithologist, botanist and poet. Whilst working as a public servant FitzGerald's private passion and ability regarding ornithology and botany became so skillful that he communicated directly with Charles Darwin regarding Australian species of plant and was referred to several times in the book The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species of 1877. He also collected orchids for the great German-Australian botanist Ferdinand von Mueller. His extraordinary skills gave rise to a volume of work completed over seven years called Australian Orchids which Joseph Dalton Hooker another botanist, considered would be an honour to any country and to any Botanist.
Benjamin Heyne FLS (1770, Döbra – 6 February 1819, Madras) was a German botanist, naturalist, and surgeon who worked in British India as a Botanist to Samalkot in the Madras Presidency under the British East India Company. He collected and described plants from southern India, many of which were named after him by European botanists.
William Gambel (June 1823 – December 13, 1849) was an American naturalist, ornithologist, and botanist from Philadelphia. As a young man he worked closely with the renowned naturalist Thomas Nuttall. At the age of eighteen he traveled overland to California, becoming the first botanist to collect specimens in Santa Fe, New Mexico and parts of California.
Georg Heinrich Mettenius (1860) Georg Heinrich Mettenius (24 November 1823 – 18 August 1866) was a German botanist born in Frankfurt am Main. He was son- in-law to botanist Alexander Braun (1805–1877). In 1845 he received his medical doctorate from the University of Heidelberg. After graduation, he studied marine algae in Helgoland and Fiume.
Pedanius Dioscorides called this plant silybum. The genus Gundelia is named to honor Andreas von Gundelsheimer (1668–1715), a German botanist, while the species name tournefortii was named after Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, a French botanist, who together undertook a botanical journey to the Levant, during which the species was collected, described and illustrated.
B. lemanniana is killed by bushfire and regenerates from seed. First described by Swiss botanist Carl Meissner in 1856, B. lemanniana was named in honour of English botanist Charles Morgan Lemann. It is one of three or four related species all with pendent inflorescences, which is an unusual feature of banksias. No subspecies are recognised.
Isolepis is a cosmopolitan genus of sedge containing around 70 species. Isolepis is found in cool tropical and temperate climates often in Africa and Australasia. Isolepis was first described by prolific botanist Robert Brown in 1810. In 1870 a botanist Boeckeler disbanded the genus putting most of the names under a different genus, Scirpus.
Aiphanes eggersii was described by Burret in 1932 based on collections made by Danish botanist Henrik Franz Alexander von Eggers in February 1897. The generic epithet, Aiphanes, coined by German botanist Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1801, derives from Greek ai, meaning "always" and phaneros, meaning "evident", "visible" or "conspicuous". The specific epithet, eggersii, honours Eggers.
John Golding Myers (22 October 1897 – 3 February 1942) was a British entomologist and botanist. Born near Rugby, Warwickshire, he worked in New Zealand on biological control, followed by work in the UK, the Caribbean and Latin America before moving to Sudan as Government Botanist. He died in Sudan at the age of 44.
Almut Gitter Jones (8 September 192312 October 2013) was a German-American botanist and plant taxonomist known for her work researching the genus Aster and for her work as Curator of the University of Illinois herbarium. Alut Gitter was born in Oldenburg. She married fellow botanist George Neville Jones. She described over fifty species.
Flórula Vascular da Mata da Bufarda Abílio Fernandes (19 October 1906 Guarda, Portugal - 16 October 1994 Coimbra), was a Portuguese botanist and taxonomist from the Botanical Institute at the University of Coimbra who was married to Rosette Mercedes Saraiva Batarda (1916–2005), another Portuguese botanist and taxonomist. Fernandes was a student of Aurélio Quintanilha (1892–1987), botanist and geneticist. left He is noted for his work on Amaryllidaceae, and compiling floras of Portugal, Macaronesia and Tropical Africa. He was the son of José Fernandes (1880-) and Maria Augusta Fernandes (1880-).
In 1838 German botanist Matthias Jakob Schleiden, published Contributions to Phytogenesis, stating, "the lower plants all consist of one cell, while the higher plants are composed of (many) individual cells" thus confirming and continuing Mirbel's work. A German-Polish botanist, Eduard Strasburger, described the mitotic process in plant cells and further demonstrated that new cell nuclei can only arise from the division of other pre-existing nuclei. His Studien über Protoplasma was published in 1876. Gottlieb Haberlandt, a German botanist, studied plant physiology and classified plant tissue based upon function.
Harriet Anne Hooker was born in 1854 to the botanist and explorer Joseph Dalton Hooker and Frances Harriet Henslow, who was the daughter of botanist and Cambridge University professor John Stevens Henslow. In 1877 she married the botanist William Turner Thiselton-Dyer (later knighted), with whom she had a son and a daughter. Thiselton-Dyer belonged to a generation of English women who transformed their interest in botany into professional careers. She studied with the noted botanical illustrator Walter Hood Fitch, who was the lead artist for Curtis's Botanical Magazine.
Justicia tobagensis is a species of plant in the family Acanthaceae which is endemic to Trinidad and Tobago. The species is only known from two areas in the Main Ridge of Tobago. It was first described as Drejerella tobagensis by German botanist Ignatz Urban in his Symbolae Antillanae, based on a collection made by Danish botanist Henrik von Eggers In 1995 American botanist Dieter C. Wasshausen proposed a new combination, Justicia tobagensis, which reflected the predominant view that the genus Drejerella is actually a part of the genus Justicia.
Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, U.S.A. & Antananarivo, Madagascar Accessed: February, 2018 The rather conspicuous plant was collected for the first time in 1947 by the French botanist Jean-Henri Humbert, but remained unrecognized in the herbarium of the Musée d´Histoire Naturelle in Paris. Later in 1996 Barthlottia was finally described by the German botanist Eberhard Fischer as a new genus and species. It was named in honor of the botanist and biomimetics scientist Wilhelm Barthlott, who had been interested in the Vegetation of the Inselbergs of Madagascar.Fischer, E., Theisen, I. (2000).
Plate from 'The Botanic Garden' Pseudobombax grandiflorum - 'The Botanist' Benjamin Maund (1790–1863) was a British pharmacist, botanist, printer, bookseller, fellow of the Linnean Society (1827) and publisher of the Botanic Garden and The Botanist. He served on the committee of the Worcestershire Natural History Society where he started a monthly botanical publication. Starting in 1825, Maund produced The Botanic Garden from his press at Bromsgrove in Worcestershire. The 13 volumes of this periodical depicted with great delicacy ornamental flowering plants cultivated in the Royal Gardens and was dedicated to the young Queen Victoria.
Shortly after, the mutants resume their assault on the botanist's lab, and the botanist flees, leaving the man behind. After escaping a mutant, the man catches up with the botanist, who's revealed to be a woman. The two are now on an elevator, and during their ascension, the man is suddenly overwhelmed by a sexual urge, that quickly degenerates to the point that he brutally rapes the botanist. She's traumatized, but the man seems to have lost control of himself only temporarily, due to the peculiar sort of mutation he's experiencing.
Jean Nicolas Bréon (27 September 1785, Sierck – 1864, Noyon), often known as Nicolas Bréon, was a noted French plant collector and botanist. From 1809 he worked as a student gardener at the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris, later serving as a botanist/gardener at the botanical garden in Ajaccio (1813). In February 1815 he was named a gardener-botanist of the French Navy.Google Books Jardins de France, Volume 10 Bréon was the first director (1817–1831) of the Jardin du Roy (now the Jardin de l'État) in the Île Bourbon (now Réunion).
Grevillea banksii was first described by the botanist Robert Brown, who gave it its epithet in honour of Sir Joseph Banks.
Chapman in 1962 Valentine Jackson Chapman (14 February 1910 - 5 December 1980) was a New Zealand botanist, university professor and conservationist.
Neelima Roy Sinha (born March 26, 1954) is an American botanist. She is a professor at the University of California Davis.
Renato Pampanini, born in Valdobbiadene, Italy in 1875 and died in Vittorio Veneto in 1949, was an Italian botanist and mycologist.
The geographic Hooker items were named by the Canterbury provincial geologist, Julius von Haast, after the English botanist William Jackson Hooker.
The geographic Hooker items were named by the Canterbury provincial geologist, Julius von Haast, after the English botanist William Jackson Hooker.
Isaac Rand (1674–1743) was an English botanist and apothecary, who was a lecturer and director at the Chelsea Physic Garden.
The first specimens were introduced to England from Asia in the 1840s by the Scottish botanist and plant hunter Robert Fortune.
Joy Thompson (born Joy Gardiner-Garden, 1923, died 2018) was an Australian botanist. Her main research areas were taxonomy and Myrtaceae.
ARNE STRID Arne Strid (born March 7, 1943 in Kristianstad, Sweden) is a Swedish prominent botanist and expert on Greek flora.
Heinrich (Harry) Wilhelm Eduard van Bruggen (December 6, 1927 in Amsterdam – February 8, 2010 in Amersfoort) was a Dutch amateur botanist.
Clavulina decipiens is a species of fungus in the family Clavulinaceae. It was described by British botanist E.J.H. Corner in 1950.
Colubrina beccariana is a tree of tropical Asia in the family Rhamnaceae. It is named for the Italian botanist Odoardo Beccari.
The common name and Latin binomial commemorate the Australian botanist, Leonard J. Brass (1900-1971), who worked for the Queensland Herbarium .
The specific epithet honours Charles Fraser, an early New South Wales colonial botanist. Vernacular names include brush kurrajong and blackfellows hemp.
Rivina is a genus of flowering plants in the family Petiveriaceae. The name honors German botanist Augustus Quirinus Rivinus (1652-1723).
Lewis Caleb Beck (4 October 1798 Schenectady – 20 April 1853 Albany, New York) was an American physician, botanist, chemist, and mineralogist.
Elli Stamatiadou (born 1 April 1933 in Andros, Greece - died 1 May 2015, Athens, Greece) was a successful amateur Greek botanist.
Léia Akcelrad Lerner de Scheinvar is a Brazilian-Mexican botanist. She has dedicated her work to studying and protecting Mexico's cacti.
Anton Schneeberger (1530, Zurich \- 13 March 1581, Cracow) was a Swiss botanist, doctor, and book collectorKoźluk and Sułecki. based in Poland.
Ludwig Jost ForMemRS (born November 13, 1865 in Karlsruhe - February 22, 1947 in Heidelberg) was a German botanist, and university professor.
Sarah Bowdich Lee (née Wallis) (10 September 1791 – 22 September 1856) was an English author, illustrator, traveller, zoologist, botanist, and pteridologist.
Adolphus Vorstius Adolphus Vorstius (born Adolphe Vorst; 18 November 1597, Delft – 9 October 1663, Leiden) was a Dutch physician and botanist.
The origin of the epithet is obscure, but may commemorate Philip Barker Webb, an English botanist of the early 19th century.
Axel Elof Jäderholm (born 24 July 1868 in Söderhamn–deceased 5 March 1927 in Norrköping) was a Swedish zoologist and botanist.
Vikentiy Ferdinandovich Khmelevskiy (; 1860 — 1933, Leningrad) was a Russian botanist and extraordinary professor of the University of Warsaw and Rostov University.
Roy Elwood Clausen (August 21, 1891, Randall, Iowa – August 21, 1956, Berkeley, California) was a biochemist, botanist, plant geneticist, and drosophilist.
His administration hired the Louisiana botanist and naturalist Caroline Dormon of Natchitoches Parish as a consultant for the Louisiana Highway Department.
Shirley Cotter Tucker (born 1927) is an American botanist, lichenologist, and a former Boyd Professor of botany at Louisiana State University.
Corneriella was named after British botanist and mycologist Edred John Henry Corner, who described Cantharellula humicola which is now in Corneriella.
Mary Leebody (1847–1911) was an Irish botanist, known for her work on the flora of County Londonderry and County Donegal.
William Henry Harvey, FRS FLS (5 February 1811 – 15 May 1866) was an Irish botanist and phycologist who specialised in algae.
This laurel is considered rare, with a ROTAP rating of 3RCi. It is named after the eminent rainforest botanist Alexander Floyd.
François Augustin Marie Augier de Favas, also known as Augustin Augier, was a French schoolteacher, a Catholic priest, and a botanist.
Mari Reitalu (born February 10, 1941) is an Estonian botanist. She was a recipient of the Eerik Kumari Award in 1993.
Marcelle Barbey-Gampert (1887-1949) was a Swiss botanist, geologist, and climatologist noted for phytogeographical studies of the Picos de Europa.
Maria Petronella Löhnis (21 January 1888 - 14 April 1964) was a Dutch phytopathologist, microbiologist and botanist noted for studying potato diseases.
Heikens, A.L. (2003). Conservation Assessment for Fraser's Loosestrife. USDA Forest Service. This species is named for the Scottish botanist John Fraser.
Hyoscyamus niger Thrincia hirta British Phaenogamous Botany is figures and descriptions of British flowering plants compiled by the botanist William Baxter.
Arvo Jaakko Juhani Jalas (7 May 1920 – 1 December 1999) was a Finnish botanist. He worked in the University of Helsinki.
Together with Roman Dmowski he founded National League and National-Democratic Party. In 1891 he married Polish botanist Gabriela Balicka-Iwanowska.
Prostanthera phylicifolia was first formally described by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1858 in his book Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
Anisophyllea beccariana is a tree of tropical Asia in the family Anisophylleaceae. It is named for the Italian botanist Odoardo Beccari.
Ernest (or Ernst) Friedrich Gilg (January 12, 1867 in Baden-Württemberg, Germany - October 11, 1933 in Berlin) was a German botanist.
The species epithet torreyana is named for John Torrey, an American botanist, after whom the coniferous genus Torreya is also named.
P. Hans B. Runemark (7 January 1927 – 11 December 2014) was a Swedish botanist and lichenologist, emeritus professor at Lund University.
Georg August Schweinfurth (29 December 1836 - 19 September 1925) was a Baltic German botanist and ethnologist who explored East Central Africa.
A political crisis in 2009 also plunged Madagascar wildlife into a desperate state. It is named after botanist Pierre Edmond Boissier.
Perry Daniel Strausbaugh (March 21, 1886 - May 3, 1965) was an American botanist and expert in the flora of West Virginia.
Elizabeth Ann “Betty” Bartholomew (June 14, 1912 – March 15, 1985) was an American botanist dedicated to the study of plant systematics.
Tabebuia maxonii is a species of Tabebuia native to the Dominican Republic. It is named for the botanist William Ralph Maxon.
Frederick Gugenheim Gregory (22 December 1893 - 27 November 1961) was a British botanist, plant physiologist and winner of the Royal Medal.
Sir George Taylor, FRS FRSE FLS LLD (15 February 1904, in Edinburgh – 13 November 1993, in Dunbar) was a Scottish botanist.
The flower is funnel- or bell-shaped and purple in color. The plant is named for late local botanist Helen Sharsmith.
This seaweed first appeared in scientific literature as Fucus linearifolius in the year 1808. Published by the English botanist Dawson Turner.
Charles Geddes Coull Chesters OBE FRSE FLS (1904–1993) was a British botanist of international acclaim, specialising in fungis and lichens.
Ralph Tate (11 March 1840 – 20 September 1901) was a British-born botanist and geologist, who was later active in Australia.
Lithocarpus corneri is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the English botanist E. J. H. Corner.
Georg Franck von Franckenau (3 May 1643 in Naumburg (Saale) - 17 June 1704 in Copenhagen) was a German physician and botanist.
Abercrombie Anstruther Lawson (13 September 1870 – 26 March 1927) was a botanist, foundation professor of botany at the University of Sydney.
Kenneth Kent Mackenzie (1877–1934) was a lawyer and amateur botanist who wrote extensively on the genus Carex in North America.
Heinrich Freyer (Slovenized:Henrik Freyer; July 8, 1802 – August 21, 1866) was a Slovene botanist, zoologist, paleontologist, pharmacist, cartographer, and natural scientist.
Ysabel Galbán Wright (December 25, 1885 – July 1, 1960) was a Cuban-American botanist and plant collector who specialized in cacti.
Sarcogyne is a genus of lichens in the family Acarosporaceae. It was circumscribed by German botanist Julius von Flotow in 1851.
Actinotus moorei was described by Tasmanian dentist and botanist Leonard Rodway in 1896, based on a name by Ferdinand von Mueller.
Aaron John "Jack" Sharp (July 29, 1904 – November 16, 1997) was an American botanist and bryologist, considered an expert on mosses.
Kåre Bremer (born 17 January 1948) is a Swedish botanist and academic. He has also been Vice-Chancellor of Stockholm University.
Gyrophragmium is a genus of fungi in the family Agaricaceae. The genus was circumscribed by French botanist Camille Montagne in 1843.
Cambridge University Press. (hardback), (paperback). pp 39 The plant is named for American botanist Charles Wright (1811-1885).Gray, Asa. 1852.
Werner Rauh (16 May 1913 in Niemegk – 7 April 2000 in Heidelberg) was an internationally renowned German biologist, botanist and author.
Gilbertsmithia is a genus of green algae in the family Scenedesmaceae. It was named after the American botanist Gilbert Morgan Smith.
James Sinclair (1913–1968) was a Scottish botanist, who worked at the Royal Botanic Garden Endiburgh and the Singapore Botanic Gadens.
Unpublished report. USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region, Vallejo, CA, It is named in honor of its botanist documenter John Jeffrey.
Karl August von Bergen (11 August 1704 in Frankfurt (Oder) - 7 October 1759 in ibid.) was a German anatomist and botanist.
Castanopsis endertii is a tree in the family Fagaceae. It is named for the Dutch botanist and plant collector Frederik Endert.
The specific name newtonii honours Francisco Xavier Oakley de Aguiar Newton, a Portuguese botanist who collected in Africa in the 1880s.
Christian Casimir Brittinger. Christian Casimir Brittinger (30 April 1795, Friedberg - 11 January 1869, Steyr) was a German botanist, entomologist and ornithologist.
Dr. Marie Zdeňka Baborová-Čiháková (17 January 1877, Prague - 29 September 1937, Čelákovice) was the first female Czech botanist and zoologist.
Patrick Blair MD FRS (ca.1670–1728) was a Scottish surgeon, anatomist and botanist, and a Fellow of the Royal Society.
Charles Naudin Charles Victor Naudin (14 August 1815 in Autun - 19 March 1899 in Antibes) was a French naturalist and botanist.
Angela Agostini (1880-?) was an Italian botanist and mycologist who conducted research at the Botanical Institute of the University of Pavia.
Lucy Mary Cavanagh (1871–1936) was an American botanist and plant collector, noted for her identification of several species of bryophytes.
William Brand WS FRSE (5 January 1807, Peterhead, Aberdeenshire – 18 October 1869) was a Scottish solicitor, banker, botanist and plant collector.
Lillian Louisa Britten (1886-1952) was a South African botanist considered the leading expert of Eastern Cape flora in her time.
Robert Stephen Adamson (2 March 1885 – 6 November 1965) was a British botanist. Adamson is commemorated in the specific epithet adamsonii.
Lithocarpus blumeanus is a tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is named for the German-Dutch botanist Carl Ludwig Blume.
Lethariella is a genus of lichens in the family Parmeliaceae. The genus was circumscribed by Norwegian botanist Hildur Krog in 1976.
The common waxflower was originally described in 1828 by the botanist Robert Brown, its specific epithet australis is Latin for "southern".
Marie Dominique Luizet (1851-1930) was a French botanist and chemist. She was the first to identify several species of Saxifraga.
Charlotte Maria King (1864-1937) was a botanist, mycologist and agronomist who worked at the Iowa State College Agricultural Experiment Station.
Forsskaolii commemorates the Swedish botanist Pietr Forsskal. He was the botanist on the ill-fated Danish expedition to Arabia Felix (present day North Yemen) of 1761-1763. The aims of the expedition were wide-ranging and from a botanical point of view the trip was a great success and many Arabian plants were described for the first time.
Members of the New Zealand Research Council with Cockayne standing second from the right, 1936 Alfred Hyde Cockayne (23 May 1880 – 21 October 1966) was a New Zealand botanist, agricultural scientist and administrator. He was born in Dunedin, or Oamaru, New Zealand, on 23 May 1880. He was the son of another noted botanist Leonard Cockayne.
The actor Sir Ben Kingsley was born in Snainton. George Vasey the botanist was also born in the village. He was responsible for the integration of the United States Department of Agriculture. Sydney Cross Harland (19 July 1891 – 8 November 1982), Botanist, was born in the village, and died there in November 1982, after many commissions abroad.
The genus Vernonia is named for the English botanist William Vernon, and the species baldwinii is named for William Baldwin, the American botanist and physician who collected the plant. The common name "western ironweed" is derived from the range of the plant, the western United States, and derived from the toughness of the stem and roots of the plant.
Hermann Wilhelm Rudolf Marloth (28 December 1855 Lübben, Germany – 15 May 1931 Caledon, Cape Province) was a German-born South African botanist, pharmacist and analytical chemist, best known for his Flora of South Africa which appeared in six superbly illustrated volumes between 1913 and 1932. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Marloth when citing a botanical name.
George Samuel Jenman (1845-1902) was a British gardener and botanist. He specialized in growing and studying plants. He was superintendent of Castleton Botanical Garden, Jamaica from 1873 to 1879, and Government Botanist and superintendent of the Botanical Gardens in British Guiana (now Guyana) from 1879 to 1902. Jenman was also a member of the Linnean Society.
The species was first formally described by the botanist D.J.Whibley in 1980 as published in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. It was reclassified as Racosperma symonii by Leslie Pedley in 2003 and then transferred back genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet honours the South Australian botanist D. E. Symon, who collected the type specimen.
Jaques Étienne Gay (1786 in Switzerland – 1864) was a Swiss-French botanist, civil servant, collector and taxonomist. His name is associated with plants in standardised botanical nomenclature, e.g. Crocus sieberi J.Gay. He was the most famous of the students of botanist Jean François Aimée Gaudin with whom he began collecting plants at the age of 14.
Bulbophyllum abbreviatum is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum discovered in Madagascar and originally described by German botanist Rudolf Schlechter,Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. Beih. 33: 198. 1924 from material collected by French botanist H. Perrier de la Bâthie in February 1912, which is now kept in the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris.
Mitrephora winitii is a species of plant in the family Annonaceae. It is native to Thailand. William Grant Craib, the British botanist who first formally described the species, named it after Phya Winit Wanandor, the Thai botanist who collected the specimen that Robinson examined. In the Prachuap Khiri Khan province of Thailand it is commonly referred to as Mahaphrom.
Dewey was an assistant botanist of the United States Department of Agriculture from 1890 to 1902, and thereafter botanist in charge of fiber investigations and fiber plants research at USDA's Arlington Experimental Farm. In 1911, he was the U.S. representative to the International Fibre Congress, held in Surabaya on Java island, in the Dutch East Indies (present day Indonesia).
Allen Hiram Curtiss (1845–1907) was a noted botanist in the United States. He may have been the first professional botanist to reside in Florida. His work included the discovery of fern species at the Pineola Grotto. Journal New York Botanical Gardens pages 35, 36 He collected many specimens and was an author of botanical books.
Rachel Ford Thompson's records Rachel Ford Thompson (31 August 1856 - 9 December 1906) was an English botanist and temperance activist. The daughter of Quaker botanist Silvanus Thompson (1818-1881) and Bridget Tatham, Her father was the headteacher at the Quaker school in York. She was born in York. From 1882 to 1893, she studied flora in Yorkshire.
Giuseppe Monti (27 November 1682 – 29 February 1760) was an Italian chemist and botanist. He was a professor of botany and from 1722-1760 director of the Bologna Botanical Garden. The plant genus Montia is named in his honour. His son Gaetano Lorenzo Monti (1712–1797) was also a botanist who continued work at the same botanical garden.
The species was first formally described as Lyonsia brownii by botanist James Britten in Journal of Botany, British and Foreign in 1907. The species was placed in the genus Parsonsia by French botanist Marcel Pichon in 1950 in Notulae Systematicae. The names Lysonia straminea and Parsonsia straminea have been misapplied to this species in the past.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Leslie Pedley in 2006 as part of the work "Notes on Acacia Mill. (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae), chiefly from Queensland" as published in the journal Austrobaileya. It is often confused with Acacia conferta. The specific epithet honours Mary Tindale who was once a botanist with the National Herbarium of New South Wales.
European science formally named and described this genus in 1879, authored by Bavarian botanist Ludwig A. T. Radlkofer, based on Carl Ludwig Blume's 1849 published Cupania sect. Elattostachys. In 1992–3 Dutch botanist Frits Adema formally published new names and descriptions for numerous species and clarified species named previously, of the Pacific Islands and Malesia regions.
Josip Klasancije Schlosser pl. Klekovski (1801–1882) was a Croatian physician, alpinist and botanist. Together with Ljudevit Farkaš Vukotinović, he was an author of Flora croatica (1869), the main work for the knowledge of plants in Croatia. He was the most prominent 19th century botanist and explorer of Risnjak mountain, and wrote numerous publications about Risnjak's flora.
Frontispiece, The Young Botanist, 1835 Title page, The Young Botanist, 1835 Comstock published more than 20 books, primarily on botany, chemistry, mineralogy, natural history and physiology. Most of his works were directed at school and general audiences. Comstock received an honorary degree from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1822. Comstock's most popular work was Natural Philosophy (1831).
Alexander Caulfield Anderson Alexander Caulfield Anderson (10 March 1814 - 8 May 1884) was a Hudson's Bay Company fur-trader, explorer of British Columbia and civil servant. He was the grandson of the Scottish botanist Dr James Anderson. A.C. Anderson was father to the British Columbia botanist and Deputy Minister of Agriculture James Robert Anderson (1841–1930).
The species was first formally described in 1864 by botanist James Edward Smith in Transactions of the Linnean Society of London . He gave it the name Chorizema sericeum Subsequently, it was placed in the genus Brachysema. Finally, in 1995, botanist Michael Crisp placed the species in the genus Gastrolobium along with a number of other Brachysema species.
Henry Curtis Beardslee Sr. (July 2, 1807 – December 21, 1884) was an American physician, botanist, and state legislator. He was the father of botanist Henry Curtis Beardslee. Beardslee, son of Dr. Gideon and Sarah Ann (Curtiss) Beardslee, was born in that part of Huntington which is since 1823 the town of Monroe, Conn., July 2, 1807.
Mariamné Johnes Mariamne Johnes (30 June 1784 – 4 July 1811) was the only daughter of Thomas Johnes of Hafod Uchtryd in mid Wales. She was a talented botanist and a friend and regular correspondent of the English botanist Sir James Edward Smith. She suffered with health problems for much of her life and died in London aged 27.
Monique Keraudren-Aymonin (8 December 1928– 25 May 1981) was a French botanist. She was researcher and taxonomist in the National Museum of Natural History of France, in Paris. She specialised in the study of the flora of Madagascar and of the Comoros, of the family of the Cucurbitaceae. She married the French botanist Gérard Guy Aymonin.
He sent the specimens he collected to the German botanist Walther Gothan in Berlin in 1924. Gothan named them Araucaria windhauseni in honor of Windhausen in 1925. However, the Italian-Argentinean botanist Carlo Luigi Spegazzini had also acquired specimens from the petrified forest from various sources. He tentatively identified the specimens as Araucarites mirabilis in 1924.
Bill Burtt with Streptocarpus grandis leaf in the Nkandla Forest, South Africa Brian (Bill) Laurence Burtt FRSE FLS (27 August 1913 Claygate, Surrey – 30 May 2008 Edinburgh), was an English botanist and taxonomist who is noted for his contributions to the family Gesneriaceae. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation B.L.Burtt when citing a botanical name.
Neville Marchant, February 2018 Neville Graeme Marchant (born 1939) is a retired Western Australian botanist. He was formerly the Director of the Western Australian Herbarium. Marchant began working for the Western Australian Herbarium at the age of 15, as a laboratory assistant to Government Botanist Charles Gardner. Later he attended the University of Western Australia, graduating in 1962.
C. V. Hartman around 1916. Carl Vilhelm Hartman (19 August 1862 – 19 June 1941), was a Swedish botanist and anthropologist. Trained as a botanist, Hartman joined Norwegian ethnographer Carl Sofus Lumholtz on a three-year expedition to the Sierra Madre Mountains in Mexico. One of Hartman's duties was to conduct studies of plants used by the native population.
He worked with botanist C. C. Parry to botanize plants in southern Utah. He also worked for botanist and archaeologist Edward Palmer by helping excavate Indian burial mounds and collecting various specimens. Charles learned how to speak some Native American languages to talk to local tribe members. He also gained an interest in theater during this time.
Johann Xaver Robert Caspary (29 January 1818 - 18 September 1887) was a German botanist. Caspary was born in Königsberg. He studied theology and philosophy at the University of Königsberg and was educated in sciences at the University of Bonn. Among his influences at Bonn were zoologist Georg August Goldfuss, astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm August Argelander and botanist Ludolph Christian Treviranus.
Dr James Muttlebury FRSE (1775–1832) was a Scottish physician who practised in Jamaica and England. He was a noted amateur botanist.
James Buckman (November 20, 1814 – November 23, 1884) was a British pharmaceutical chemist, professor, museum curator, botanist, geologist, archaeologist, author and farmer.
Otto Degener (May 13, 1899 – January 16, 1988) was a botanist and conservationist who specialized in identifying plants of the Hawaiian Islands.
Egil Morris Baardseth (born 2 May 1912 in Bærum, died on 29 January 1991 in Trondheim) was a Norwegian botanist and phycologist.
Jacob Gijsbert Boerlage (November 18, 1849 – September 25, 1900) was a Dutch botanist, who worked principally at the National Herbarium in Brussels.
Robert Brown (c. 1824 - 13 December 1906) was a New Zealand bootmaker and botanist. He was born in Glasgow, Scotland c. 1824.
Karl August Gustav Fiebrig-Gertz (25 May 1869, Hamburg – 25 October 1951, San Miguel de Tucumán) was a German-born Paraguayan botanist.
Franz Buxbaum (25 February 1900, Liebenau, Graz – 7 February 1979) was an Austrian botanist, specialising in cacti. Neobuxbaumia is named after him.
Ruth Lyttle Satter (March 8, 1923 – August 3, 1989) was an American botanist best known for her work on circadian leaf movement.
He completed sketches for a large portrait of botanist and politician, J. F. Schouw, which would be later realized as a painting.
Hiernia angolensis named in honour of Hiern William Philip Hiern (19 January 1839 - 28 November 1925) was a British mathematician and botanist.
François-Étienne de La Roche (or Delaroche) (9 December 1781 – 23 December 1813) was a Genevan physician, naturalist, chemist, botanist and ichthyologist.
Maupasia is a genus of polychaete worms. The name is a tribute to French librarian, zoologist and botanist Émile Maupas (1842–1916).
In 1928, a Russian Botanist Woronow published and described an Iris called Iris Taochia in Fl. Kavkaza. It was found in Turkey.
John Lyon (1765–1814) was an 18th/19th century Scottish botanist and plant collector in the USA who died during his explorations.
Louisa Lane Clarke (1812 – 8 November 1883) was a British botanist and travel writer, best known for her microscopy work on plants.
Brownea enricii is a tree in the legume family Fabaceae, native to Colombia. It is named for the Colombian botanist Enrique Forero.
Gnomoniaceae is a family of fungi in the order Diaporthales. The family was circumscribed by German botanist Heinrich Georg Winter in 1886.
The genus is named in honor of German botanist August Heinrich Rudolf Grisebach, 1814–1879. ; Species All species are endemic to Cuba.
The species was first formally described in 1863 by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller as published in the work Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae.
It is named in honour of the botanist and horticulturist André Michaux (1746-1803) who worked and published in Quebec and Europe.
John Vaughan Thompson FLS (November 19, 1779 – January 21, 1847) was a British military surgeon, marine biologist, zoologist, botanist, and published naturalist.
Arnold Wall (15 November 1869 - 29 March 1966) was a New Zealand university professor, philologist, poet, mountaineer, botanist, writer and radio broadcaster.
The first European to see the creek near its source was in 1839 and is believed to be Daniel Bunce, a botanist.
Wolfgang Lippert (26 September 1937 in Nördlingen-20 June 2018) was a German botanist. His main areas of interest are the Spermatophytes.
Louis Cutter Wheeler (1910–1980) was an American botanist and professor of botany with an international reputation for his research on Euphorbiaceae.
Alexander William Evans (May 17, 1868 – December 6, 1959) was a botanist, bryologist, and mycologist that specialized in the flora of Connecticut.
Helena Szafran (1888-1969) was a Polish botanist, educator and conservationist known for her botanical research on the flora of Greater Poland.
Bergamot-Fruit. Illustration from Nürnbergische Hesperides Johann Christoph Volkamer (June 7, 1644 – August 26, 1720) was a German merchant, manufacturer and botanist.
Tscharna Rayss (1890-1965) was a Russian-Israeli botanist, phycologist, and mycologist noted for studying species in the Mediterranean and Red Sea.
Ellen Aline Fenner (b. July 1888, Huntington, West Virginia) was an American botanist and mycologist known for first describing the genus Mycotypha.
Hannah Caroline Aase (12 July 1883 - 23 November 1980Hannah Caroline Aase (1883 - 1980) - Find A Grave Memorial) was a botanist and cytologist.
Prof Peter Hadland Davis FLS FRSE (18 June 1918 in Weston-super-Mare - 5 March 1992 in Edinburgh) was a British botanist.
Edith Layard Stephens (1884-1966) was a South African botanist, a leading authority on algae and fungi, particularly edible and poisonous mushrooms.
Anthony R. Bean (born 1957) is an Australian botanist who works at the Queensland Herbarium and Brisbane Botanic Gardens, Mount Coot-tha.
Jacob Christian Schäffer, alternatively Jakob, (31 May 1718 – 5 January 1790) was a German dean, professor, botanist, mycologist, entomologist, ornithologist and inventor.
Eremophila maitlandii was first formally described in 1870 by botanist George Bentham in Flora Australiensis. The specific epithet (maitlandii) honours Maitland Brown.
Mueller gave it the name Aster homolepis. The species was transferred to the genus Olearia by English botanist George Bentham in 1867.
Karl Johann Kiessling (February 6, 1839 – July 22, 1905) was a German physicist, mathematician, and botanist born in Culm; today Chełmno, Poland.
Alvah Augustus Eaton (November 20, 1865 – September 29, 1908) was an American botanist who described many species of pteridophytes, orchids and grass.
Species Plantarum 1:119. Laurentii Salvii. (see External Links below). The name honors the Danish botanist Henrik Bernard Oldenland (c.1663-1699).
Sarah Darwin (born 1964), botanist, daughter of George Erasmus Darwin, see above, and sister of Chris Darwin and Robert Darwin, see above.
Leslie Newton Goodding (1880 – 1967) was an American botanist who was considered an expert in the flora of the Southwestern United States.
Hermann Theodor Geyler (January 15, 1835 at Schwarzbach - 22 March 1889 at Frankfurt-am-Main) was a German botanist, specializing in paleobotany.
Prof David Ellis FRSE (1874–1937) was a Scottish bacteriologist, botanist and baker. He was an academic author in all three fields.
George Elwood Nichols (1882–1939) was a botanist, bryologist, algologist and ecologist, one of the founders of the Ecological Society of America.
Gulielma Lister (28 October 1860 – 18 May 1949) was a British botanist and mycologist, and was considered an international authority on Mycetozoa.
Thistle Yolette Harris (July 29, 1902 - July 5, 1990), also known as Thistle Stead, was an Australian botanist, educator, author and conservationist.
Schizolaena turkii is a plant in the family Sarcolaenaceae. It is endemic to Madagascar. It is named for the botanist Daniel Turk.
Schizolaena raymondii is a tree in the family Sarcolaenaceae. It is endemic to Madagascar. It is named for the botanist Raymond Rabevohitra.
Matthias Jakob Schleiden (; 1804–1881) was a German botanist and co-founder of cell theory, along with Theodor Schwann and Rudolf Virchow.
Michel François-Jacques Kerguélen (1928–1999) was a French botanist. He was the author or co-author of over 250 plant taxa.
He was an instructor at Asheville School for boys. Beardslee's father, also named Henry Curtis Beardslee (1807–1884), was also a botanist.
Reveal, James L. (1997). "Suprageneric names in Fabaceae Published Prior to 1870 ". The Bean Bag (45). after the French botanist Adolphe Brongniart.
Paul Ernst Emil Sintenis (4 April 1847 Seidenberg, Oberlausitz, Prussia – 6 March 1907) was a German botanist, pharmacist and important plant collector.
Clara Ethelinda Larter (27 June 1847 - 13 May 1936) was an English botanist known for her studies of the flora of Devon.
Florence Signaigo Wagner (February 18, 1919 – October 21, 2019) was an American botanist who served as president of the American Fern Society.
Ryszard Ochyra (born 1949) is a Polish bryologist. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Ochyra when citing a botanical name.
Nemesia floribunda was described by the German botanist Johann Georg Christian Lehmann, but was originally discovered and collected by Christian Friedrich Ecklon.
Edward Trusted Bennett (1 July 1831 – 16 November 1908), best known as Edward T. Bennett, was a British botanist and psychical researcher.
Frederic Westcott (died 1861) was an English botanist. He worked in close cooperation with George Beauchamp Knowles on the taxonomy of orchids.
Helen Kirkland Dalrymple ( – 16 April 1943) was a New Zealand botanist, author and school teacher who wrote two books on Otago flora.
Antonina Polozhy (May 12, 1917 - November 20, 2003) was a Russian botanist, geneticist, taxonomist, plant breeder and specialist in Russian cultivated plants.
The Royal Horticultural Society sent the Scottish botanist James Macrae, whose MS diary was edited by William Wilson and published in 1922.
This particular species was discovered by graduate students Catharine Muir and Iddi Rajabu in 1999 and subsequently named after botanist Quentin Luke.
Elizaveta Aleksandrovna (Endaurova) Busch (1886–1960) was a Russian-Soviet botanist known for studying the flora of the North Caucasus and Siberia.
Professor John Stewart Parker is a British botanist and was the fifth Director, Cambridge University Botanic Garden (1996 – 2010), succeeding Donald Pigott.
William Jesse Goad Land (December 7, 1865 – August 1, 1942) was an American botanist, inventor, and professor at the University of Chicago.
Lucien Marcus Underwood (October 26, 1853 – November 16, 1907) was an American botanist and mycologist of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Carl Johan Hartman Carl Johan Hartman (14 April 1790 in Gävle – 28 August 1849 in Stockholm) was a Swedish physician and botanist.
Kunzea preissiana was first formally described by the botanist Johannes Conrad Schauer in 1844 in Johann Georg Christian Lehmann's book Plantae Preissianae.
Louis Blaringhem Louis Florimond Joseph Blaringhem (1 February 1878 in Locon – 1 January 1958 in Paris) was a French agronomist and botanist.
Birgitta Bremer (born 17 January 1950), Swedish botanist and academic, is professor at Stockholm University, and director of the Bergius Botanic Garden.
Jean-Baptiste Lislet Geoffroy (also known as Geoffrey L'Islet) (23 August 1755 – 8 February 1836) was a French astronomer, botanist and cartographer.
E. Katharine Dooris Sharp (1846–1935) was an American botanist, poet, and suffragist. She was the author of Summer in a Bog.
Their son, Humphrey Morrison Burkill, was also a distinguished botanist and also served as Director of the Singapore Botanic Gardens (1957-1969).
Dr Sheffield's OBE Frances Marion Lina Sheffield OBE (3 February 19041939 England and Wales Register – 12 May 1973) was an English botanist.
Norman Lascelles Elder (born Wellington, New Zealand 6 April 1896 - died 10 August 1974) was a New Zealand electrical engineer, teacher, and botanist.
Louis Augustin Guillaume Bosc (or Louis-Augustin Bosc d'Antic) (29 January 1759 – 10 July 1828) was a French botanist, invertebrate zoologist, and entomologist.
Pier Andrea Saccardo Pier Andrea Saccardo (23 April 1845 in Treviso, Treviso – 12 February 1920 in Padua) was an Italian botanist and mycologist.
The Ostropales are an order of fungi in the class Lecanoromycetes. The order was circumscribed by Swedish botanist John Axel Nannfeldt in 1932.
Regelia megacephala was first formally described in 1964 by the Australian botanist, Charles Gardner in Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia.
George Wall (22 December 1821 – 18 December 1894) was a merchant, coffee planter, politician, amateur astronomer, botanist and humanitarian in Ceylon (Sri Lanka).
The Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanic Art Shirley Angela Sherwood (nee Cross, born 1 July 1933) is a British writer, botanist and philanthropist.
Elimar Klebs (15 October 1852 - 16 May 1918) was a German historian of ancient history. He was the brother of botanist Georg Klebs.
Tracy Elliot Hazen (4 July 1874-16 March 1943) was an American botanist and author specializing in the study of fresh water algae.
The plant is named after the Scottish botanist James Niven. It was also previously known by the names Serruria plumosa and Serruria scariosa.
Thomas Garnier (1776–1873) was an English churchman and botanist, Dean of Winchester from 1840 to 1872. The Dean Garnier Garden in Winchester.
This species is named after the French botanist Clovis Thorel and found in southern Vietnam, where it may be called bội tinh Thorel.
Arctic Station is owned by the University of Copenhagen Faculty of Science. It was founded in 1906 by the botanist Morten Pedersen Porsild.
Joseph Christmas Ives (25 December 1829 – 12 November 1868) was an American soldier, botanist, and an explorer of the Colorado River in 1858.
Theophil Joachim Heinrich Bienert (3 May 1833 - 5 April 1873) was a Baltic German botanist who lived and worked mainly in Imperial Russia.
Theodor Friedrich Julius Basiner (3 January 1816-14 October 1862) was a Baltic German botanist who lived and worked mainly in Imperial Russia.
George Caley (10 June 1770 – 23 May 1829) was an English botanist and explorer, active in Australia for the majority of his career.
Valia (Valentine) Selitsky Allorge (1888–1977) was a Russian-French botanist, phycologist, and bryologist known for studying the flora of the Pyrenees region.
Neovossia is a genus of fungi in the Tilletiaceae family. The genus was first described by German botanist Friedrich August Körnicke in 1879.
Sir William Wright Smith FRS FRSE FLS VMH LLD (2 February 1875 Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire – 15 December 1956) was a Scottish botanist and horticulturalist.
It was first described in 1872 by Joseph Dalton Hooker and Thomas Thomson. The specific epithet, maingayi, honours the botanist, Alexander Carroll Maingay.
Anisophyllea corneri is a tree of tropical Asia in the family Anisophylleaceae. It is named for the English botanist Edred John Henry Corner.
Q. prinoides was named and described by the German botanist Karl (Carl) Ludwig Willdenow in 1801, in a German journal article by Muhlenberg.
Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 12: 58 The species is named for American botanist Edward Lee Greene, 1843–1915.
Emil Erwin Alfred Ritter von Janchen-Michel (born 15 May 1882 in Vöcklabruck; died 10 July 1970 in Vienna) was an Austrian botanist.
Eduino Carbonó de la Hoz (born June 4, 1950) is a Colombian botanist. He is Director of the Botanical Gardens of Santa Marta.
Pyracantha is a member of the Rose family, and includes seven species. The genus was defined by 19th century botanist Max Joseph Roemer.
Bulbophyllum roxburghii is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum. The Latin specific epithet roxburghii refers to the Scottish Botanist William Roxburgh.
Ahmad Ghahreman (احمد قهرمان, in Persian) (born 1928, Babol - died November 7, 2008 Tehran) was an Iranian botanist and professor of Tehran university.
Edward Percival Wright Edward Percival (Perceval) Wright (27 December 1834, Donnybrook – 2 March 1910) FRGSI was an Irish ophthalmic surgeon, botanist and zoologist.
Hyphoderma is a genus of crust fungi in the family Meruliaceae. It was circumscribed by German botanist Karl Friedrich Wilhelm Wallroth in 1833.
Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Kenneth Howard-Bury DSO, DL, JP (15 August 188120 September 1963) was a British soldier, explorer, botanist and Conservative politician.
James Drummond (late 1786 or early 1787 - 26 March 1863) was a botanist and naturalist who was an early settler in Western Australia.
Munro died in Taunton, Somerset, on 29 January 1880. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Munro when citing a botanical name.
Ruth Kiew (born 1946) is a British botanist. Kiew was awarded the David Fairchild Medal of the National Tropical Botanical Garden in 2002.
Mary Katharine "Kate" Brandegee (October 28, 1844 – April 3, 1920) was an American botanist known for her comprehensive studies of flora in California.
George Claridge Druce, MA, LLD, JP, FRS, FLS (23 May 1850 – 29 February 1932) was an English botanist and a Mayor of Oxford.
Named after the type genus Dioscorea, which in turn was named by Linnaeus in 1753 to honour the Greek physician and botanist Dioscorides.
The species was first formally described by botanist Robert Brown, his description published in Transactions of the Linnean Society of London in 1810.
Mammillaria baumii is a species of cactus in the subfamily Cactoideae. It is endemic to Mexico. It was named for botanist Hugo Baum.
Cambridge University Press. (hardback), (paperback). pp 39 The species is named for American botanist and forester Joseph Rothrock, 1839–1922.Gray, Asa 1884.
Oscar Brefeld (1839-1925) Julius Oscar Brefeld (19 August 1839 – 12 January 1925), usually just Oscar Brefeld, was a German botanist and mycologist.
Piper hooglandii, commonly known as kava, is a flowering plant in the family Piperaceae. The specific epithet honours Dutch botanist Ruurd Dirk Hoogland.
Wendell Holmes "Red" Camp (February 22, 1904 – February 4, 1963) was an American botanist, explorer, taxonomist, educator, and expert of the genus Vaccinium.
Bengt Michael Schalin (7 January 1889 - 9 November 1982) was a well-known garden architect and botanist in Finland during the 20th century.
Alessandro Trotter (26 July 1874 – 22 July 1967)) was an Italian botanist and entomologist who pioneered in cecidology, the study of plant galls.
Chang's father, Airman, is a pathologist and a native of Hong Kong while his mother, Yolanda, a botanist, is a native of Taiwan.
Prof Claude Wilson Wardlaw FRSE FLS (4 February 1901 – 16 December 1985) was a British botanist, who specialised in diseases of the banana.
Morten Wormskjold Morten Wormskjold (16 January 1783 – 29 November 1845) was a Danish botanist and explorer. He collected plants in Greenland and Kamchatka.
Major William Rich (1800–1864) was an American botanist and explorer who was part of the United States Exploring Expedition of 1838–1842.
John Charles Manning (born 1962) is a South African botanist based in the Compton Herbarium, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Kirstenbosch, South Africa.
He was, at that time, 88 years old. The American botanist, ecologist, and geographer, Hugh M. Raup (1901--1995) was his younger brother.
James Cosmo Melvill (1 July 1845 – 4 November 1929) was a British botanist and malacologist. He collected plants in Europe and North America.
The microbiologist (and botanist) Martinus Beijerinck is credited with developing the first enrichment cultures. Sergei Winogradsky also experimented on bacteria using different cultures.

No results under this filter, show 1000 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.