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Erik Leonard Ekman (1883-1931) is well-known for his extensive collections from Cuba and Hispaniola (he collected some astounding 36000 numbers, of which many are types), and we will come back to him many times. But for the start, a Pedicularis opsiantha collected and described by him in Småland, Sweden, at the young age of 25. Today this name is considered a synonyme under Pedicularis palustris, but still recognised as a distinct subspecies (Swedish: höstspira).
(Join NRM-S at Facebook!) This Aconitum (Swedish: stormhatt) was collected by Harry Smith in the Sichuan Province, China. Aconitum is a large genus with some 100 spp, several cultivated and nearly all poisonous (alkaloids).
(Join NRM-S at Facebook!) One more Babiana, the last for some time now. Collected by the danish collector and apothecary Christian Friedrich Ecklon (1795-1868) who was one of the first systematic collectors in South Africa. This specimen was collected in 1826, and still some of its colour is preserved. The two oldest labels are written in Ecklon’s characteristic handwriting.
(Join NRM-S at Facebook!) Babiana is an African genus of family Iridaceae (Iris family) with some 90 spp. Some are cultivated, don’t know about this one though. Thought it is a nice specimen, with the drawing. The corms of these plants are edible, and were eaten by “settlers, baboons & porcupines”. says Mabberley (citing Goldblatt). By the way, the seeds are black, not brown as in most other Iridaceae…
(Join NRM-S at Facebook!) Canarina is an interesting genus of the bellflower family, with one species on Canary Islands, and two in East Africa. This one is one of the East Africans; it is a neotype, since the collections the original description was based on was stored in the Berlin Herbarium, and was not among the 20 000 types that was rescued from the destruction from the fires that resulted from the bombing of March 1-2, 1943.
(Join NRM-S at Facebook!) This may not look much, but it is the holotype for a new grass species describes late last year by co-workers (et al.) here at the Herbarium, based on material collected in Cuba in 1920 by Erik Leonard Ekman (1883-1931). There are probably many more undescribed species among his rich collections, waiting for discovery…
(Follow NRM-S at Facebook!) Daniel Solander was born in Piteå in 1733, where he collected this plant! He travelled with Joseph Banks on James Cook’s first voyage to the Pacific on Endeavour. And there are pertinacious rumors that his father might have been that famous botanist in Uppsala…
(Follow NRM-S at Facebook!) Sitting at work, going through some 8000 records in our Scanning Database. When I started working with the API-project (no, not API but API or African Plants Initiative, a truely international project that has now expanded to “Latin American Plants (and Global Types) Initiative(s)”, with more than 100 collaborating herbaria and institutions) we already had a Collection Database that was in use and, so I was told, already had all our Type Specimens entered. So all I had to do was to unpack the scanners and start scanning our 4500 African Types. Or so I thought. After my training week at Kew it was obvious that our Collection Database, thought a very good Collection Database, was not up to the task when it had to communicate with the rest of the world, as it had to do now. So I created a separate Scanning Database, where I transfered all relevant information from the Collection Database, and modified and added what was needed before submitting the metadata to the Aluka Production Team. So at the end of the API-project I had a database with detailed information on more than 8000 African Types (yes, we found a few overlooked specimens in the meantime) that only partly matched the information in our Collection Database. Meanwhile the Collection Database had evolved and, with only some minor modifications, it was now also useful for both presenenting our collections on the webb (Krypto-S), but also for the metadata to Aluka. So now we have decided, rightly so, to phase out the Scanning Database. And thus I’m sitting here, going through all the 8000+ records by hand so not to overwrite any unique information in the Collection Database. Outside the window the rain is pouring down. And M is in Austria, right now out trekking. Waiting, don’t know for what. M is in Wien for a job interview, she left today and I already miss her. Not easy to make plans for the summer without nowing how life will be even in a few weeks. I myself have got job though, at my old museum and a continuation on the scanning project. I have also got a rental aparment out in Rinkeby; M had to sell her and she will move in here with me in a few weeks — but don’t know if she will live here, or somewhere else on the European Continent — or even further away. Time will show! Listening right now at ErsatzMusika at YouTube (they are not found on Spotify) and feeling a little sad. …that I’m a lousy blog writer… Right now I’m a lousy researcher too. Trying to come back to my small African plants, after a few weeks without them when I tried to get Krypto-S for FBO up working again. But right now I think I can leave it for a while, and do whatever I’m supposed to do. Try to remember what it was. Biogeography? Or character evolution? Oh well, think I’ll go for biogeography for the time being. Interesting distribution, these small plants, with basal nodes apparently distributed in south-western Africa, and a later dispersal east and north? Must try to understand the distribution so I can code it, and then analyse it. And at the same time try to find somewhere to stay (practically homeless in Stockholm since December). Not until then I will be able to update the layout of my webbpage and the blog. But until then I’ll try to write more! So see you soon, and I’ll might be able to tell more about distributions and dispersals over southern Africa! |
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