Plant Science Bulletin archive


Issue: 2024-v70-2Actions

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SUMMER 2024 VOLUME 70 NUMBER 2

PLANT SCIENCE  

BULLETIN

A PUBLICATION OF THE BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

Using General Interest Science Books to Arouse Student 

Interest and to Substitute for an Introductory Textbook  

by Marsh Sundberg... p. 152

Also In this issue...

See the BSA Award Winners!

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                                    Summer 2024 Volume 70 Number 2

FROM the EDITOR

Sincerely,

Greetings,

You may have noticed that we are publishing our summer issue a bit later than usual 

this year. This is so we can include news and reports from Botany 2024, which was 

held in June due to the occurrence of the XX International Botanical Congress. There 

will be even more post-conference content in our Fall issue! This issue also includes a 

look inside the role of the BSA president, written by Past President Brenda Molano-

Flores and an update from the Public Policy Committee. In our peer-reviewed article 

section, look for an article by Marsh Sundberg with advice for using general interest 

science books in teaching. 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

SOCIETY NEWS

A Retrospect: A Year (or Three) in the Life of a BSA President ...............................................126

Botanical Society of America’s Award Winners .................................................................................129

Updates from the BSA Public Policy Committee ..............................................................................149

ARTICLE

Using General Interest Science Books to Arouse Student Interest and to Substitute  

           for an Introductory Textbook ............................................................................................................152

MEMBERSHIP NEWS

BSA Virtual Symposium on Climate Change: 

Plant Resilience and Conservation  

            for a Changing Climate

 .......................................................................................................................165

Botany360 Update ..............................................................................................................................................166

BSA Spotlight Series .........................................................................................................................................166

Careers in Botany Profiles ..............................................................................................................................167

BSA Sponsorship Opportunities .................................................................................................................167

  SCIENCE EDUCATION

High School Teachers and Early-Career Scientists Prepare to Counter Student  

            Preconceptions about Plant Scientists and Photosynthesis at PlantingScience  

           F2 Professional Learning Workshops .........................................................................................169 

PlantingScience Updates ................................................................................................................................170

BSA Master Plant Science Team Recruitment is Underway! .....................................................171

BSA Education Committee Updating Current Resources by U.S. State/Territory  ........171

New Teaching Resource: Annotated List of Popular Biology Books......................................172

Root and Shoot RCN Travel Awards to Botany and other Plant Science  

           Conferences for Student/Mentor Pairs with SACNAS, AISES, or MANRRS  

           Affiliations ...................................................................................................................................................173

STUDENT SECTION

Getting to Know Your New Student Representative - Benjamin Aderemi Ajayi .............174

Botany 2024 Review ..........................................................................................................................................175

Beyond the Conference  ..................................................................................................................................177

ANNOUNCEMENTS

In Memoriam Donald A. Levin (1939 – 2022) ....................................................................................178

BOOK REVIEWS .......................................................................................................................................181

Start Planning for 

          

www.botanyconference.org

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By 

Brenda Molano-

Flores

BSA Past President

 

E-mail: molano1@il-

linois.edu

 

SOCIETY NEWS

I cannot believe that a year has already passed 

since the Botany 2023 meeting in Boise, ID 

where I became your President.  In actuality, 

though, my presidential commitment did not 

begin at Botany 2023, but rather a year earlier 

at Botany 2022 in Anchorage, AK when I 

became President-Elect.  And while my term 

as President ended at Botany 2024 in Grand 

Rapids, MI, you will not be rid of me yet, as 

I will become Past-President until Botany 

2025 in Tucson, AZ!  Although President for 

just a year, my service to BSA is a three-year 

commitment.

In this retrospective, I would like to share 

my journey and what I have learned as your 

BSA President and President-Elect. During 

my time as President-Elect, I was like a fly on 

the wall listening to everything that President 

(Vivian Negrón-Ortiz), Past-President 

(Michael Donoghue), and BSA Executive 

Director (Heather Cacanindin) said during 

our Board meetings and special sessions. This 

A Retrospect: A Year (or Three) in 

the Life of a BSA President

was my time to get up to speed and learn the 

ins and outs of what would be expected of me 

as President.  As the President Elect, I was 

also the Chair of the best committee ever (-:, 

get this—the Committee on Committees!!!  

This position allowed me to learn more 

about each of the BSA committees and work 

with an excellent group of people to make 

sure that all of our BSA committees had the 

expertise and representation needed for 

them to be successful.  In addition, I was an 

ad-hoc member of two other committees: 

Distinguished Fellow and Emerging Leader 

Award Committee and Charles Edwin Bessey 

Teaching Award Committee.  

One more thing—although not a main role 

of the President-Elect—I became one of two 

BSA steering committee members of the NSF 

Root and Shoot group (https://rootandshoot.

org/). The ROOT & SHOOT program is a 

collaborative effort among seven scientific 

societies (including BSA) to address issues 

associated with DEI within and among the 

participating societies. Being a part of this 

group gave me the opportunity to learn new 

ways to make our society and meetings more 

inclusive and safer.  Lastly, I was a member 

of the ROOT & SHOOT Capstone Project 

Team - BSA Election Processes, Outcomes, 

and Recommendations for Reform with 

Catrina Adams, Min Ya, and Imeña Valdes. 

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For a summary of the project, go to: https://

rootandshoot.org/bsa-capstone-bsa-election-

processes-outcomes-and-recommendations-

for-reform/

At Botany 2023, I officially became your 

President (2023-2024).  Well, I can tell you that 

my presidential speech was the most stressful 

part of this entire presidency!  Thinking about 

what to talk about and how to keep an audience 

engaged after they had already experienced 

three days of amazing talks, posters, and 

dedicated events was nerve-wracking!  I 

figured the last thing anyone would want to 

see after so many days of presentations would 

be more data, charts, and graphs, so I went 

a different route.  I decided to talk about the 

joy I find in botany and to ask the audience 

where they find plant joy.  At the end of my 

presentation, I posed the question, “Where 

do you find plant joy?” and I was so thrilled 

to see how many of you took a turn to share 

your plant joy as we passed the mic around!  I 

was also amazed to see that my talk sparked 

a #plantjoy campaign and that so many of 

you posted your stories and photos of where 

you find plant joy across our social media 

platforms.  That truly brings me #plantjoy!

After my presidential talk was over, my absolute 

favorite part of any Botany Conference began: 

the celebration, and by that, I mean the 

dancing!  After a last-minute cancellation, a 

new band had to be found for the celebration.  

A local band, Jimmy River and the Groovers, 

was found (thanks to Ingrid Jordon-Thaden), 

and boy did we groove!  As Jimmy later said 

on his Facebook post, “These people danced, 

sang, made conga lines, did the limbo, etc.  

I could go on.  Wow!  I am here to tell you 

that botanists are party people!”  I will admit 

that the best part of that night was the joy of 

dancing with so many of you and celebrating 

that night together.  And jumping around 

with those glo-sticks!  Where did those come 

from? What fun!

After the pomp and circumstance of my 

inauguration ball was over, I put on my 

presidential hat and got to work. Every two 

weeks I have looked forward to my Friday 

meetings with Heather.  During these 

meetings we talk about the progress of BSA 

Strategic Plan initiatives, concerns of our 

members, awards, BSA partnerships with 

other societies, and past Botany Conferences 

and those to come. Other duties of my 

presidency included leading the BSA Board 

meetings, conducting the annual evaluation 

of our Executive Director with assistance 

from other board members, and approving 

her monthly timesheets. 

On several occasions during my term, I was 

able to assist with conflict resolution and 

to provide a space for open discussion and 

communication. Also, I was able to interact 

with the leadership and members of other 

scientific societies as part of ROOT & SHOOT. 

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By the time you read this retrospect, I will 

have ended my term as President, and I 

will be your Past-President (2024-2025). 

 

Because of the IBC, my presidency was only 

11 months because our annual meeting 

was moved up one month earlier.  (Sorry to 

soon-to-be President, Jenny Xiang, as your 

presidential gig will be 13 months!)   As Past-

President I will continue my participation 

with the society by serving as the Chair of 

the Election Committee, by doing my best to 

implement the changes recommended as part 

of our ROOT & SHOOT Capstone Project 

(mentioned above), and by continuing to 

engage with our members.  I am here to listen, 

and I hope that you will continue to share your 

thoughts and concerns with me about BSA 

and our conference.  Also, during this period, 

I plan to focus on engaging federal and state 

agencies and developing partnerships with 

them.  Increasing the participation of agency 

botanists in BSA is a special aspiration of 

mine.

As I look back, I am thankful that I was 

nominated, and that you elected me to be 

your President.  It has been a blast!!!  I have 

furthered my leadership skills, met and 

worked with so many thoughtful and hard-

working people, and had an amazing time 

heading up the #plantjoy campaign and seeing 

your responses.  So, remember, it is never too 

early or too late to get involved in BSA, and I 

hope that you will consider doing so. We are 

always looking for good people to serve on or 

chair our committees or become part of the 

Executive Board.  BSA is the premier botanical 

organization of the United States and we strive 

to be the best in the world.  And I am here to 

tell you—botanists are party people! 

These interactions reinforce that BSA as an 

organization continues to seek pathways to 

address all aspects of DEI, and to navigate the 

geopolitical  and  socioeconomic  landscape 

of a changing world—and that we need to 

do more to make sure that we show that we 

value every member of BSA. Lastly, and when 

possible, I provided feedback for our amazing 

and informative BSA newsletter (many thanks 

to Membership & Communications Manager 

Amelia Neely). And I do not know if you 

noticed, but even my photo at the end of the 

newsletter became more presidential—go and 

check earlier issues and the last newsletter and 

you will see what I am talking about. (-: 

As your President I can attest to the 

commitment to service of the Executive 

Board, the members and chairs of the many 

committees, and the BSA staff.  Our student 

representatives are also active and looking 

after the well-being of their fellow students. 

Our DEI committee is making sure that we 

do not lose track of our commitments to 

diversity, equity, and inclusion and that we 

are transparent with the decisions that we are 

making.  Also, it has been impressive to see 

behind the scenes of all that putting together 

a Conference and Conference Program 

entails (many thanks to Johanne Stogran an

Melanie Link-Perez).  All the work that goes 

into this—sometimes years in advance!—is 

amazing to see.  

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Dr. Steven Neil Handel

Rutgers University

Botanical Society of America’s 

Award Winners

Distinguished Fellow of the Botanical Society of America 

The “Distinguished Fellow of the Botanical Society of America” is the highest honor our Society 

bestows. Each year, the award committee solicits nominations, evaluates candidates, and selects 

those to receive an award. Awardees are chosen based on their outstanding contributions to the 

mission of our scientific Society. The committee identifies recipients who have demonstrated 

excellence in basic research, education, public policy, or who have provided exceptional service to 

the professional botanical community, or who may have made contributions to a combination of 

these categories. 

Steven Handel, Distinguished Professor 

of Ecology and Evolution at Rutgers, is an 

internationally recognized botanist who has 

experimentally explored mutualisms, plant 

population growth, ecological genetics, and 

now applies these findings to the ecological 

restoration of urban degraded lands. Dr. 

Handel aims to understand new ecological 

restoration protocols, based on a botanical 

foundation, and use these in the design of 

public lands by collaborating with landscape 

architects. This groundbreaking collaboration 

is a hallmark of his recent work and opens 

new doors for the application of botanical 

knowledge to the public sphere. Dr. Handel’s 

collaborative efforts with landscape architects 

and urban planners have been instrumental in 

transforming degraded urban landscapes into 

thriving ecosystems. As examples, projects 

such as the restoration of Brooklyn Bridge 

Park and the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, 

exemplify his commitment to integrating 

scientific rigor with practical application.

He has been a BSA member for 40 years, the 

Genetics Section chair, served on several BSA 

committees and the advisor of four Young 

Botanist Awardees. Dr. Handel’s dedication to 

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education is evident through his mentorship of numerous graduate students and in the many 

nomination letters we received. Working with Dr. Handel is a pleasure. He teaches his students 

and post-docs how to encourage and to mentor, to be curious and enjoy life, and to remember 

the humanity of the people they are teaching and to use kindness always.

Dr. Handel is leaving a lasting impact on the field of botany and ecological restoration. His 

work continues to inspire and educate, emphasizing the vital intersection of several disciplines. 

Dr. Handel’s actions to improve the botanical components of public landscapes has expanded 

the reach of our field in important new ways and we are pleased to honor him with this 

Distinguished Fellows Award.

Charles Edwin Bessey Teaching Award

 

(BSA in association with the Teaching Section and Education Committee)

Dr. Joan Edwards

Williams College

Dr. Joan Edwards, a professor at Williams College for five decades, has shaped a career 

characterized by an unwavering commitment to nurturing the next generation of botanists and 

environmental stewards. Through her innovative teaching methods, she has instilled a sense 

of curiosity and wonder in countless students. As one of her nominators pointed out, “Very 

few faculty members at any higher education institution have the stamina to remain in their 

position this long, and even fewer do so while not only maintaining their teaching and research 

standards, but continuing to pioneer and adjust to changes in technology, student needs, and 

pedagogical understanding in the way that Dr. Edwards has.” 

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Her courses, such as Field Botany and 

Conservation Biology, have served as 

catalysts for intellectual growth, fostering 

interdisciplinary exploration and hands-

on research experiences. Dr. Edwards has 

remained dedicated to student-centered 

research, teaching the value of observation, 

curiosity, interconnection, integration, and 

that the unexpected is always interesting. She 

has cultivated a collaborative environment 

where students are empowered to make 

meaningful contributions to the field. One 

of her former students stated, “Joan’s ability 

to convey the excitement and wonder of 

biological phenomena and then make the 

underlying concepts (whether physical, 

molecular, developmental, ecological, or 

evolutionary) seem simple and accessible to 

all of her students is the core of her approach 

to teaching.”

Beyond the classroom, Dr. Edwards’s outreach 

efforts transcend boundaries, engaging with 

the broader community to foster conservation 

efforts and a deeper appreciation for the 

natural world. Dr. Edwards epitomizes the 

essence of excellence in botanical teaching, 

embodying a profound passion for plants 

and a steadfast dedication to inspiring future 

generations of botanical enthusiasts.

BSA Emerging Leader Award 

The Emerging Leader Award of the Botanical 

Society of America is given annually in recognition 

of creative and influential scholarship as well as 

impact in any area of botany reflecting the breadth of 

BSA. Awardees have outstanding accomplishments 

and also have demonstrated exceptional promise 

for future accomplishments in basic research, 

education, public policy, exceptional service to the 

professional botanical community, or a combination 

of these categories.

Dr. Aaron S. David

Archbold Biological Station

Dr. Aaron David received his PhD from the 

University of Minnesota in 2016. From his 

early days as a postdoctoral researcher to his 

current role as the Director of the Plant Ecology 

Lab at Archbold Biological Station, Aaron’s 

pioneering research stands as a testament to 

his innovative thinking and commitment to 

addressing pressing ecological challenges.

Dr. David’s expertise spans various disciplines, 

from sequencing and plant biology to modeling 

and computer programming, laying a solid 

foundation for his subsequent contributions 

that bridge the gap between plant population 

demography and microbiology to understand 

the intricate dynamics of threatened and 

endangered plant species. His work with 

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Donald R. Kaplan  

Memorial Lecture 

This award was created to promote research 

in plant comparative morphology, the Kaplan 

family has established an endowed fund, 

administered through the Botanical Society 

of America, to support the Ph.D. research of 

graduate students in this area.

 

Dr. Cynthia Jones

University of Connecticut

endangered plant species like Hypericum 

cumulicola has not only deepened our 

understanding of plant-microbial interactions 

but also shed light on the intricate mechanisms 

driving population dynamics.

His scientific integrity, collaborative ethos, 

and proactive approach to conservation 

underscore his potential to shape the future of 

plant biology and environmental stewardship. 

As he continues to push the boundaries 

of scientific inquiry and inspire the next 

generation of scientists, BSA is proud to honor 

him with the Emerging Leader Award.

Impact Award  

The Botanical Society of America Impact Award 

recognizes a BSA member or group of members 

who have significantly contributed to advancing 

diversity, accessibility, equity, and/or inclusion in 

botanical scholarship, research and education.

 

Dr. Kristine Callis-Duehl

Driemeyer Executive  

Director of Education

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BSA CORRESPONDING MEMBERS AWARD

Corresponding members are distinguished senior scientists who have made outstanding 

contributions to plant science and who live and work outside of the United States of America. 

Corresponding members are nominated by the Council, which reviews recommendations and 

credentials submitted by members, and elected by the membership at the annual BSA business 

meeting. Corresponding members have all the privileges of life-time members.

Dr. Else Marie Friis, Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden

Dr. Mark Olson, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de México, México

THE BSA DEVELOPING NATIONS TRAVEL GRANTS

Elton John de Lírio, University of São Paulo, Brazil

Carina I. Motta, Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho, Rio Claro, Brazil

Boniface Ngarega, Oklahoma State University, USA

Malka Saba, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan

Jackeline Salazar, Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

Anju Batta Sehgal, Retd. Principal Govt. College Hamirpur Himachal Pradesh, India

Prabha Sharma, University of Delhi, India

THE BSA PROFESSIONAL MEMBER TRAVEL GRANTS

Kelsey J.R.P. Byers, John Innes Centre

Elton John de Lírio, University of São Paulo

Lekeah Durden, Central Michigan University

Elizabeth McCarthy, SUNY Cortland

Pedro Henrique Pezzi, University of Arkansas

Prabha Sharma, University of Delhi

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BSA MEMBER TRAVEL GRANTS TO ATTEND THE IBC

Erin G. Bentley, University of Wyoming

Patricia W. Chan, University of Wisconsin-Madison

David Hoyos, Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal (IMBIV-CONICET)

Masoumeh Khodaverdi, University of Vermont

Andrew E. McDougall, The University of Adelaide

Juan Pablo Ortiz Brunel, Universidad de Guadalajara

Resmi Sekarathil, Botanical Survey of India

Aleena Xavier, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Bhopal

AWARDS FOR ESTABLISHED SCIENTISTS  

GIVEN BY THE SECTIONS

Hermann Becker Student Field Work Grant

(Paleobotanical Section)

Niall Whalen – Florida State University

Remy, Remy, and Winslow Award 

(Paleobotanical Section)

Eva Maria Silva Bandeira – University of Kansas  

For the paper: The oldest record of reproductive structure of Nothofagaceae and Proteaceae from 

the Campanian of Antarctica. Co-Authors: Ari Iglesias, Brian Atkinson, Mauro Passalia, Pablo 

Picca and Selena Smith

Emma Casselman – California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt 

For the paper: Characterizing and distinguishing early euphyllophytes with woody growth based 

on secondary xylem anatomy: method development and applications. Co-Author: Alexandru 

M.F. Tomescu

Ellie Frazier – California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt 

For the paper: Early steps in pith evolution: euphyllophytes of the Lower Devonian Battery Point 

Formation of Gaspé (Quebec, Canada). Co-Author: Alexandru M.F. Tomescu

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Madison Lalica – California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt 

For the paper: Plant periderm as a continuum in structural organization: a tracheophyte-wide 

survey and hypotheses on evolution. Co-Author: Alexandru M.F. Tomescu

Meg Nibblelink – University of Kansas 

For the paper: A rare lycopod macrofossil from the Triassic of Antarctica. Co-Author: Kelly 

Matsunaga

Caroline Siegert – Cornell University 

For the paper: Earliest record of Malpighiaceae: four-winged fruits from the early Eocene of 

Patagonia, Argentina. Co-Author: Maria A. Gandolfo

Keana Tang – University of Kansas 

For the paper: Fossil flowers support a Cretaceous diversification of crown-group Laurales. Co-

Authors: Kelly K.S. Matsunaga, Brian A. Atkinson

Zane Walker – Oregon State University 

For the paper: Late Cretaceous (Campanian) bryophyte flora: A permineralized moss from 

James Ross Island, Antarctica. Co-Authors: Ruth A. Stockey, Gar W. Rothwell, Brian A. 

Atkinson, Selena Y. Smith, and Ari Iglesias

Tengxiang Wang – Pennsylvania State University 

For the paper: The Pliocene Kon Tum flora from central Vietnam — ancient analog of Mainland 

Southeast Asia’s endangered tropical seasonal forests. Co-Authors: Jia Liu, Peter Wilf, Jian 

Huang, Shi-Tao Zhang, Truong Van Do, Hung Ba Nguyen, Tao Su

EDGAR T. WHERRY AWARD 

(Pteridological Section and the American Fern Society) 

The Edgar T. Wherry Award is given for the best paper presented during the contributed papers 

session of the Pteridological Section. This award is in honor of Dr. Wherry’s many contributions to 

the floristics and patterns of evolution in ferns.

Blake Fauske, Duke University 

For the Presentation: Comparative analysis of RNA editing in Pteridaceae reveals a potential 

regulatory function.

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MARGARET MENZEL AWARD 

(Genetics Section) 

The Margaret Menzel Award is presented by the Genetics Section for the outstanding paper 

presented in the contributed papers sessions of the annual meetings.

May Yeo, University of Cambridge 

For the Presentation: Genetic basis of bullseye patterning in Hibiscus trionum

MICHAEL CICHAN PALEOBOTANICAL  

RESEARCH GRANT 

(Paleobotanical Section) 

The Award is to provide funds for those who have completed a PhD and are currently in a post-

doctoral position or non-tenure track position.

Facundo De Benedetti, Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio, Argentina.  

For the Paper: Patagonia: refuge to evaluate mass extinction events and diversity recovery – a 

palynological approach.

AWARDS FOR EARLY CAREER SCIENTISTS

AJB Synthesis Papers and Prize

The AJB Synthesis Prize is intended to showcase early-career scientists and to highlight their unique 

perspectives on a research area or question, summarizing recent work and providing new insights 

that advance the field. The Prize comes with a $2000 award and recognition at the BSA Awards 

Ceremony at the Botany Conference. 

Dr. Meghan Blumstein, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

For her article “The drivers of intraspecific trait variation and their implications for future 

plant productivity and survival,” (American Journal of Botany 111(4): e16312).

Botanical Advocacy and Service Grant

This award organized by the Environmental and Public Policy Committees of BSA and ASPT aims 

to support local efforts that contribute to shaping public policy on issues relevant to plant sciences.

Susana M. Wadgymar, Davidson College 

For the proposal: Companion ethnobotanical gardens at Davidson College and Catawba 

Indian Nation

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BSA Public Policy Award

The Public Policy Award was established in 2012 to support the development of tomorrow’s leaders 

and a better understanding of this critical area.

Cael Dant, Northwestern University and the Chicago Botanic Garden

Jenna Miladin, University of Arkansas

AWARDS FOR STUDENTS

AJ Harris Graduate Student Research Award

This award is named in honor of the late Dr. AJ Harris whose research spanned traditional 

specimen-based science, paleobotany, phylogenomics, biogeography, and computational biology. 

This award is given in conjunction with the Graduate Student Research Awards and is given to a 

graduate student whose research is representative of one of the areas above.

Malith Viduranga Weerapperuma achchi athukoralage don, Texas A & M university 

For the Proposal: Phylogenetics and biogeography of Family Balsaminaceae: Special emphasis 

on South and southeastern Asia

Donald R. Kaplan Dissertation Award in  

Comparative Morphology

This award was created to promote research in plant comparative morphology, the Kaplan family 

has established an endowed fund, administered through the Botanical Society of America, to 

support the Ph.D. research of graduate students in this area.

Andrea Appleton, Harvard University

 

For the Proposal: Diversity and development of the intricate staminodes across Loasaceae (Cornales)

GRADUATE STUDENT DISSERTATION AWARD IN 

PHYLOGENETIC COMPARATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY

This award supports the Ph.D. research of graduate students in the area of comparative plant 

biology, broadly speaking, from genome to whole organism. To learn more about this award go to 

https://botany.org/home/awards/awards-for-students/cpd-award.html.

David M. Kunkel, Oklahoma State University

 

For the Proposal: Linking Functional Traits and Niches to Lineage Diversification in Asclepias

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THE BSA GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH AWARD 

INCLUDING THE J. S. KARLING AWARD

The BSA Graduate Student Research Awards support graduate student research and are made 

on the basis of research proposals and letters of recommendations. Withing the award group is 

the Karling Graduate Student Research Award. This award was instituted by the Society in 1997 

with funds derived through a generous gift from the estate of the eminent mycologist, John Sidney 

Karling (1897-1994), and supports and promotes graduate student research in the botanical 

sciences.

The J. S. Karling Graduate Student Research Award

Chinedum Anajemba, Utah State University 

For the Proposal: Unraveling the Macroevolutionary Fate of Polyploids: A Comprehensive 

Study of the Cystopteridaceae Fern Family

The BSA Graduate Student Research Awards

Richard Baker-Strader, San Francisco State University 

For the Proposal: The genome, origins, and evolution of the Hawaiian tetraploid 

Chenopodium oahuense

Martín Batalla, Old Dominion University 

For the Proposal: Biogeography of Nototriche (Malvaceae), one of the most diverse plant 

genera endemic to the high-Andes

Bridget Bickner, Harvard University 

For the Proposal: Genetic architecture of the flower size/number and seed size/number 

tradeoffs in Phlox

Thomas Buchloh, Clemson University 

For the Proposal: Investigating the Role of Diploid Gamete Formation on Polyploid 

Abundance in a Widespread Fern

Emma K. Chandler, University of Georgia 

For the Proposal: Impacts of climate change on the maintenance of gynodioecy: the pattern, 

mechanism, and demographic processes underlying population level sex ratio

Nikhil R. Chari, Harvard University 

For the Proposal: How will plant root exudation respond to climate change in situ?

Kaitlyn Dawson, Queen’s University 

For the Proposal: Fitness consequences of divergent selection on clonal reproduction in a 

perennial plant

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Aidan Harrington, University of Minnesota Twin Cities 

For the Proposal: The establishment and persistence of neopolyploid plants and consequences 

for geographic range

Rachel Hopkins, State University of New York: College of Environmental Science and 

Forestry (SUNY ESF) 

For the Proposal: Plants on the move: Tracking 60 years of climate-induced vegetation shifts 

on a northeastern mountain

Sierra Jaeger, University of South Carolina 

For the Proposal: Do pollinators or herbivores select on floral betalain pigmentation in sand 

verbenas?: A multiple-year field experiment

José Esteban Jiménez, University of Florida 

For the Proposal: Phylogenomics of two poorly known terrestrial subgenera in Peperomia

Daniel Mok, Michigan State University 

For the Proposal: Investigating the carnivorous genus Pinguicula (Lentibulariaceae) as a 

candidate novel model system of plant resilience research

Lydia Morley, Texas A&M University 

For the Proposal: Using spatially explicit phylogenetic networks to uncover variation in gene 

flow across Spiranthes lineages

Aislinn Mumford, Louisiana State University 

For the Proposal: Evolution of Fruit Color and Nutritional Signaling in Palicourea, a Genus of 

Neotropical Flowering Plants

Austin T. Nguyen, University of Kansas 

For the Proposal: Investigating Homology, Heterochrony, and Trait Evolution in the Cypress 

Family

Carlos J. Pardo De la Hoz, Duke University 

For the Proposal: Opening the black box of horizontal transmission of symbionts: do 

environmental aposymbiotic communities shape the communities within symbiotic systems?

Kyle Simpson, Texas A&M University 

For the Proposal: On the origin of (rare) species: Combining phylogenetic biogeography and 

niche modeling to understand the diversification of rare plant species

Cameron So, McGill University 

For the Proposal: Testing gene flow effects on range-edge population fitness and range 

expansion success

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Edward Sun, University of British Columbia

 

For the Proposal: Revealing plant adaptations to mycoheterotrophy using a high-quality 

chromosome-scale genome assembly

Ryan Thummel, Cornell University

 

For the Proposal: Using Convolutional Neural Networks to Predict the Phylogenetic and/or 

Ecological Affinities of Moss Spores

April Wallace, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

 

For the Proposal: Exploring shikimate pathway disruption as a possible intrinsic isolating 

barrier in trees

Elizabeth White, University of Florida

 

For the Proposal: Comparative phylogeography along a seepage slope gradient: a case study 

in the genus Xyris with implications for patterns of speciation and endemism in the North 

American Coastal Plain

Ziqi Xie, Portland State University

 

For the Proposal: Fitness Effects of Adaptive SNPs in a Recent Ranunculus Hybrid Zone

Matthew Yamamoto, Claremont Graduate University

 

For the Proposal: A Flora of the McGee Creek Watershed, Mono County, California

 The BSA Undergraduate Student Research Awards

The BSA Undergraduate Student Research Awards support undergraduate student research 

and are made on the basis of research proposals and letters of recommendation.

Bridget Badali, Queen’s University

 

For the Proposal: Genetic variation and population differentiation in vegetative pigmentation 

across the range of invasive New Zealand Mimulus guttatus. Co-author: Dr. Jannice 

Friedman

Sasha Carrasco, Eastern Kentucky University

 

For the Proposal: Investigating the bioactive properties of the genus Lygodium through 

phytochemical composition analysis. Co-author: Dr. Sally Chambers

Luis Hurtado, Texas A&M University

 

For the Proposal: Environmental DNA detection of an endangered moss. Co-authors: Katie 

K. Sanbonmatsu, Dale Kruse, Daniel Spalink

Isabel Smalley, University of Minnesota Duluth

 

For the Proposal: Resolving Phylogeny Through Deep Time: An Exploration of Myriopteris 

covillei (Pteridaceae).

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The Botany and Beyond: PLANTS Grants Recipients

The PLANTS (Preparing Leaders and Nurturing Tomorrow’s Scientists: Increasing the 

diversity of plant scientists) program recognizes outstanding undergraduates from diverse 

backgrounds and provides travel grant.

Mariana Acevedo Garcia, Pomona College, Advisor: Carrie Kiel

Giorgio Casini, University of Colorado Boulder, Advisor: Jonathan Henn

Kendall Cross, St Cloud State University, Advisor: Angela McDonnell

Carmen Curry, Virginia Tech, Advisor: Jordan Metzgar

Kylie Gieser, Old Dominion University, Advisor: Lisa Wallace

Hannah Herrick, California Polytechnic University - Pomona, Advisor: Edward Bobich

Riley Jackson, Utah Valley University, Advisor: Michael Rotter

Asma Jamil, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Advisor: David Susko

Danielle Keysaw, Utah Valley University, Advisor: Erin Riggs

Mellifera Letterman, California State University, Fullerton, Advisor: Joshua Der

Elizabeth Mandala, Idaho State University, Advisor: Kathryn Turner

Austin Melancon, University of Michigan, Advisor: Charles Davis

Alison Munaylla-Bohorquez, Marymount University, Advisor: Megan Romberg

Giovanna Munoz-Gonzalez, California State University, Fresno, Advisor: Katherine Waselkov

Amaya-Jean Roberts, Utah Valley University, Advisor: Erin Riggs

Rose Roberts, Oregon State University, Advisor: Juan Navarro

Sydney Sauls, Howard University, Advisor: Janelle Burke

Reynalda Vazquez, University of South Carolina Upstate, Advisor: Benjamin Montgomery

Sydney Ward, Hope College, Advisor: Jennifer Blake-Mahmud

Amiya Whitson, Auburn University at Montgomery, Advisor: Vanessa Koelling

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THE BSA YOUNG BOTANIST AWARDS

The purpose of these awards is to offer individual recognition to outstanding graduating seniors 

in the plant sciences and to encourage their participation in the Botanical Society of America.

Certificate of Special Achievement

Nadia Alhassani, Barnard College, Advisor: Hilary Callahan

Megan O. Callahan, University of Cincinnati, Advisor: Theresa Culley

Addison G. Darby, Oklahoma State University, Advisor: Sierra Jaeger

Cari DeCoursey, Weber State University, Advisor: Jim Cohen

Olivia C. Degreenia, Louisiana State University, Advisor: Laura Lagomarsino

Sophie Demaisy, Connecticut College, Advisor: T. Page Owen

Aubanie Dubacher, Fort Lewis College, Advisor: Ross McCauley

Elanor Fuller, Louisiana State University, Advisor: Laura Lagomarsino

Cecelia “Ginkgo” Hemmerle, Miami University, Advisor: Richard Moore

David Klump, Miami University, Advisor: Richard Moore

Elizabeth Lay Mandala, Idaho State University, Advisor: Kathryn Turner

Brais Marchena Fernández, Weber State University, Advisor: Sue Harley

Valerie McCauley, Miami University, Advisor: Richard Moore

Shannen McIntyre-Quinn, Miami University, Advisor: Richard Moore

Sumayya Mokit, Barnard College, Advisor: Hilary Callahan

David M. Neelappa, Connecticut College, Advisor: T. Page Owen

Riley Rees, Ohio University, Advisor: John Schenk

Andrew Ruegsegger, University of Arkansas, Advisor: Maribeth Latvis

Emily Scott, University of Virginia, Advisor: Hanna Makowski

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Renee Smith, Connecticut College, Advisor: T. Page Owen

Zach H. Smith, University of Wisconsin, Advisor: Christopher Krieg

Luke Sparreo, Connecticut College, Advisor: T. Page Owen

Sarah Ellen Strickland, Oberlin College, Advisor: Michael Moore

Owen E. Tapia Daly, University of Guelph, Advisor: Hafiz Maherali

Emma Terry, Plymouth State University, Advisor: Diana Jolles

My N. Trinh, Oberlin College, Advisor: Michael Moore

Certificate of Recognition

McKenna M. Oyer, Miami University, Advisor: Richard Moore

Will Payton, Miami University, Advisor: Richard Moore

Vernon I. Cheadle Student Travel Awards

(BSA in association with the Developmental and Structural Section)

This award was named in honor of the memory and work of Dr. Vernon I. Cheadle.

Haylee Nedblake, University of Kansas; Advisor: Lena Hileman; 

 

For the Presentation: Parallel evolution of corolla tube width shifts in Penstemon. Co-

authors: Carolyn Wessinger, Lena Hileman

Austin T. Nguyen, University of Kansas; Advisor: Kelly Matsunaga; 

 

For the Presentation: Intercalary Growth and Seed Cone Development in Taxodium distichum 

and Juniperus virginiana (Cupressaceae). Co-authors: Ana Andruchow-Colombo, Kelly 

Matsunaga

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The BSA Student and PostDoc Travel Awards

(Winners were selected by lottery)

Ioana Anghel

Madeline Bednar

Shiran Ben Zeev

Matthew Finzel

Megan Gauger

JianJun Jin

Ishveen Kaur

Masoumeh Khodaverdi

Mason McNair

Wesley Radford

AWARDS FOR STUDENTS - GIVEN BY THE SECTIONS

Developmental & Structural Poster Award

Best Student Poster

Caitlin Cooler, Ohio University 

For the Poster: Structural Developmental Evolution of Aquatic Legumes. Co-authors: Caitlin 

Cooler, L. Ellie Becklund, and John J. Schenk

Emanuel D. Rudolph Award

(Historical Section)

Madison Bullock, Texas Tech University 

For the Presentation: The Botanical Time Capsule: Using herbaria to study the effects of 

global change on Guadalupe Mountains flora

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ECOLOGICAL SECTION  

STUDENT PRESENTATION AWARDS

Best Undergraduate Presentation Award

Grace R. Gutiérrez, Ohio State University 

For the Presentation: Moss-lichen layers increase mycorrhizae in juvenile grasses yet nullify 

plant performance benefits of warming. Co-authors: Sidonie Loïez, Martijn Vandegehuchte

Best Graduate Student Presentation Award (Tied)

Rosemary Glos, University of Michigan 

For the Presentation: Eco-Evolutionary Insights in the Function and Diversification of 

Complex Trichomes in Loasaceae. Co-author: Marjorie Weber

Devani Jolman, Old Dominion University 

For the Presentation: Hybridization as an Ecological Mechanism: The Environmental 

Influence on Functional Traits in Hybrid Highbush Blueberries. Co-author: Lisa Wallace

Ecological Section Poster Award

Boniface Ngarega, Oklahoma State University 

For the Poster: Assessing niche divergence across bulbous geophytes. Co-Author: Cody 

Coyotee Howard

KATHERINE ESAU AWARD

 (Developmental and Structural Section)

This award was established in 1985 with a gift from Dr. Esau and is augmented by ongoing 

contributions from Section members. It is given to the graduate student who presents the 

outstanding paper in developmental and structural botany at the annual meeting.

Hannah McConnell, University of Washington

 

For the Presentation: Reconstructing the origin of reproductive function for the flower 

development gene LEAFY. Co-authors: Jancee Lanclos, Nicholas Gjording, Genevieve 

Stockman, Julin Maloof, Andrew Plackett, and Veronica Di Stilio

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LI-COR PRIZE

(Physiological and Ecophysiological Section)

Each year, the Physiological Section presents the Li-COR prize to acknowledge the best 

presentation made by any student, regardless of subdiscipline, at the annual meeting. The Li-

COR prize is presented annually at the 

BSA Banquet.

Best Student Oral Presentation

Cierra Sullivan, Clemson University

 

For the Presentation: Variegated Hexastylis leaf morphs express greater tolerance to 

environmental stress than uniformly colored morphs. Co-authors: Matthew Koski

Best Student Poster

Lena Berry, University of Wisconsin-Madison 

For the Poster: Unraveling the Physiological Function of Leaf Anatomical Traits in Cycads. 

Co-authors: Christopher Krieg, Katherin McCulloh, Duncan Smith, Zachary Smith

PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ECOPHYSIOLOGICAL  

SECTION STUDENT PRESENTATION AND POSTER 

AWARDS

Best Student Oral Presentation

Dominique Pham, Donald Danforth Plant Science Center 

For the Presentation: Quantification of Reactive Oxygen Species to Understand High Light 

Adaptation in C4 Setaria viridis. Co-authors: Boominathan Mohanasundaram, Kirk Czym-

mek, Tessa Burch-Smith, Sona Pandey, Ru Zhang 

Best Student Poster

Shannen McIntyre-Quinn, Miami University 

For the Poster: Step one: Breaking dormancy of the novel aerial bulbil in Mimulus 

gemmiparus. Co-authors: Deannah Neupert, Evan Gallagher, David Klump, Richard Moore

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PHYTOCHEMICAL SECTION  

PRESENTATION AWARDS

Best Presentation

Jaynee Hart, Michigan State University 

For the Presentation: Making plant specialized metabolism enzymes more efficient: a BAHD 

test case. Co-authors: Rhiannon Stevens, Rachel E. Kerwin, and Robert L. Last

Amanda Agosto Ramos, University of California, Davis 

For the Presentation: Convergence and constraint in glucosinolate evolution across the 

Brassicaceae.

Best Poster

Sarah Barr, University of North Carolina Wilmington 

For the Poster: Evaluation of Fasted and Fed Gastrointestinal Transformation of Withania 

somnifera (Ashwagandha) Plant Extracts and Bioactive Compounds via UPLC-MS and 

Untargeted Metabolomicsidal activity. Co-authors: Melissa Bollen, Amala Soumyanath, 

Robert Thomas Williamson, and Wendy Strangman

SOUTHEASTERN SECTION STUDENT  

PRESENTATION AWARDS

The following winners were selected from the Association of Southeastern Biologists meeting 

that took place at the end of March 2024.

Southeastern Section Paper Presentation Award

Meredith Woodward, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga

Southeastern Section Poster Presentation Award

Kaya Rosselle, NC State University

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STUDENT TRAVEL AWARDS

Developmental & Structural Section Student Travel Awards

Sanam Parajuli, South Dakota State University; Advisor: Dr. Madhav Nepal

 

For the Presentation: Predicted Genetics of Floral Patterning in Amborella trichopoda Baill 

Revealed by Genome-wide Survey and Expression Analysis of MADS-Box Transcription 

Factors. Co-authors: Madhav Nepal, Bibek Adhikari

Pei-Jun Xie, National Tsing Hua University; Advisor: Li-Yaung Kuo

 

For the Presentation: Comparative anatomical study in Tectaria species with different leaf 

dimorphism levels in a world of diverse reproductive strategies. Co-authors: You-Wun 

Hwang, Li-Yaung Kuo

Ecological Section Student Travel Awards

Elton John de Lirio, University of São Paulo; Advisor: Dr. Jenn Yost

 

For the Presentation: Phylogenetic position and sex expression of the first known Neotropical 

Monimiaceae paradioecious species. Co-authors: Heloisa Alves de Lima, Ariane Luna 

Peixoto, Marc Pignal, Vitor dos Santos Gomes Maia, Gabriel Silva Santos, Cassia Sakuragui

Ethan E. Grant, Miami University; Advisor: Dr. Richard Moore

 

For the Presentation: Floral scent and intersexual mimicry in dioecious highland papaya 

Vasconcellea parviflora. Co-author: Richard Moore

Genetics Section Student Travel Awards

Bibek Adhikari, South Dakota State University; Advisor: Dr. Madhav Nepal

 

For the Presentation: Chloroplast Phylogenomics Supports Monophyly of Genus Morus. Co-

authors: Sanam Parajuli, Madhav Nepal

Pteridological Section & American Fern Society  

Student Travel Awards

Qiao-Yi Xie, National Taiwan University; Advisor: Ko-Hsuan Chen 

For the Presentation: Fungal Community Dynamics Across Generations and Compartments 

in the Epiphytic Fern Ophioderma pendulum. Co-authors: Li-Yaung Kuo, Chiung‐Chih 

Chang, Chien-Jung Lin, Wen-Hong Wang, Ko-Hsuan Chen

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Updates from the BSA Public  

Policy Committee

As the committee chair of the Public Policy 

Committee for the Botanical Society of 

America (BSA), which is also jointly affiliated 

with the Environment and Public Policy 

Committee of the American Society of Plant 

Taxonomists (ASPT), I would like to update 

our readership on the committees’ activities 

for this year. The committee held an online 

meeting in the Fall of 2023 and most recently 

at the beginning of July 2024. Between the 

two meetings, the committee has fulfilled two 

items of its core mission: getting the word 

out, and evaluating and reviewing applicants 

and proposals for the Public Policy Award 

and Botanical Advocacy and Service Grant. I 

am pleased to provide updates on this year’s 

round of funded awardees/grants and exciting 

new business recently discussed within the 

committee.

PUBLIC POLICY AWARD

For those who may not know, the BSA 

Public Policy Award provides two recipients 

with funding to participate in the Biological 

Sciences Congressional Visits Day (CVD), 

which typically takes place in March or 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By 

Andrew Pais

BSA Public Policy Chair

Email: paisa@vgcc.edu

April annually in Washington, DC. CVD is 

a two-day event hosted by the Biological and 

Ecological Sciences Coalition. The first day 

includes training provided by the American 

Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) on 

science funding and how to effectively 

communicate with policymakers. Participants 

meet with their Congressional policymakers 

on the second day to advocate for federal 

support of scientific research.

The Committee received two proposals and 

provided the BSA Public Policy Award to 

Cael Dant (Graduate Student, Northwestern 

University and the Chicago Botanic Garden) 

and  Jenna Miladin (Graduate Student, 

University of Arkansas), who both participated 

in the 2024 Congressional Visits Day and 

AIBS Boot Camp training. We look forward 

to learning more about their experience in the 

Fall issue of the PSB!

BOTANICAL ADVOCACY 

AND SERVICE GRANT

The Botanical Advocacy and Service Grant 

is co-sponsored by both BSA and ASPT 

(with both societies contributing $500 for 

a total grant of $1000). The aim of the grant 

is to support local efforts that contribute to 

shaping public policy on issues relevant to 

plant sciences. The joint committee received 

half a dozen proposals for the grant, which 

were evaluated by members of the joint 

committee. We are excited to have selected 

Susanna Wadgymar for her proposal titled 

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“Companion ethnobotanical gardens at 

Davidson College and Catawba Indian 

Nation.” More details on the mission and 

impacts of this proposal will be shared in a 

future article.

PLANT SCIENCE  

BULLETIN

Beyond this update, we are eager to share the 

most recent testimonials of this year’s Public 

Policy Award recipients in the fall issue of the 

PSB, followed by a report in the spring issue 

from awardees of the Botanical Advocacy and 

Service Grant within the past two years. Based 

on discussions at our most recent meeting, the 

committee would also like to update readers 

on the status of the Duke Herbarium and its 

planned closure. We are soliciting those with 

unique perspectives on the issue to reach out 

and contact our committee so we can continue 

publishing pieces to keep this important item 

front and center.

PLANNING A BOTANY 

360 EVENT WITH THE 

PUBLIC POLICY  

COMMITTEE

In addition to following up through the PSB

the Public Policy Committee is in talks to 

plan and deliver an online event to continue 

engaging plant scientists beyond the Botany 

conference. We would like to invite readers 

to join us in an event that seeks to highlight 

an ongoing topic of interest related to policy 

and the botanical sciences as well as activate 

new members who would like to get involved 

in the committee. Please stay tuned for future 

Botany 360 events being posted!

NEW LEADERSHIP FOR 

THE 2024-2025 YEAR

I am pleased to announce that Naomi Fraga 

will be stepping onboard to chair the Public 

Policy Committee. Naomi has long served on 

the joint committee, both as a member of the 

BSA as well as chair for the Environment and 

Public Policy Committee of the ASPT. We are 

excited to have a leader with strong ties to both 

societies and a strong working knowledge of 

the committee business as well as policy issues 

more broadly. Please reach out to either the 

current or upcoming committee chair if you 

would like to know more about the Public 

Policy Committee or get more involved!

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International Journal of 

Plant Sciences

IJPS 

is seeking contributions for a 

series of occasional papers, Primers 

in the Plant Sciences. “Primers” are 

short, peer-reviewed, accessible 

introductions to well-defined topics 

in the plant sciences.

Each Primer is both an introduction 

to a topic in plant science and a 

narrow-in-scope review that serves 

as a useful first-stop reference to 

scientists at all career stages. 

Primers are intended to provide the 

reader with a foundation in the topic 

and introduce them to leading 

research questions and 

methodologies in the field. 

Call for Proposals: Primers in the Plant Sciences

For more information, visit

journals.uchicago.edu/journals/ijps/primers

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152

SPECIAL FEATURE

INTRODUCTION

As a student in 1967, I used Cronquist’s 

(1961)  Introductory Botany as the textbook 

in the introductory Vascular Plants and Non-

vascular Plants courses at Carleton College.  

At the end of every chapter was a “Suggested 

Readings” section and my instructor, Bill 

Muir, placed all of these on reserve in the 

college library and suggested that we take a 

look at some, especially in areas that we found 

interesting. These were often the “jumping 

off point” for term papers and reports.  Fuller 

and Tippo’s College Botany (1949) was the 

first botany textbook I am aware of to include 

this learning aid, and by the 1960s it became 

a common feature.  With rapidly expanding 

enrollments and programs, many college 

faculty, especially from two- and four-year 

Using General Interest Science 

Books to Arouse Student Interest 

and to Substitute for an  

Introductory Textbook

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Marshall D. Sundberg 

Roe R. Cross Distinguished 

Professor of Biology – 

Emeritus 

Emporia State University, 

Emporia, KS

colleges, were interested in having access 

to a “library list” of essential books to guide 

purchase recommendations. The Panel on 

Biological Facilities of the Commission on 

Undergraduate Education in the Biological 

Sciences (CUEBS) took up this challenge and 

produced two such lists.  The first, containing 

about 430 books listed alphabetically by 

author, was based on the holdings of six 

selective liberal arts colleges and became the 

Basic Library List (CUEBS, 1969). To produce 

a more expansive guide, the Panel requested 

input from notable scholars who represented 

a number of professional societies, including 

Irving Knoblock, from the Botanical Society 

of America, who chaired the BSA Teaching 

Section in 1969–1970.  The updated booklet 

appeared in 1971 (CUEBS, 1971).  Its 823 

books are subdivided into subject categories 

according to the Library of Congress 

system and then arranged alphabetically 

by author. Each entry includes additional 

information such as number of pages, cost, 

and recommendation percentages (out of 

306 reviewers like Knoblock).  The section 

for general botany, plant anatomy, plant 

physiology, and plant ecology contained 

82 entries. As Knoblock pointed out, these 

resources should be available not only to 

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provide additional background in a particular 

area, but also because of their general interest, 

which could attract students to major in 

botany (Knoblock, 1968).  

MY READING LIST  

FOR STUDENTS

Another of Muir’s many influences on me was 

to promote critical reading by annotating the 

text, in pencil, while reading (see Appendix 

1).  Today, educational psychology suggests 

the act of handwriting itself promotes 

learning and retention (Van der Weel and 

Van der Meer, 2024). Muir encouraged us 

to do this in all his classes, and my marginal 

notes included many of his comments as we 

discussed the material during class.  Many of 

my undergraduate textbooks—Alexopoulos’ 

(1962)  Introductory Mycology; Esau’s (1960) 

Anatomy of Seed Plants; Foster and Gifford’s 

(1959)  Comparative Morphology of Vascular 

Plants; Sinnott’s (1963) The Problem of Organic 

Form; and Stebbins’ (1966) Processes of Organic 

Evolution—are now considered classics.  My 

annotated copies were even more useful when 

I later used many of them in graduate classes.  

Also, thanks to Muir, I began frequenting used 

bookstores where I could purchase additional 

“classics” as well as more popular works like 

Anderson’s (1952) Plants, Man and Life, 

Kreig’s (1964) Green Medicine, Large’s (1940) 

Advance of the Fungi, or Abbey’s (1968) Desert 

Solitaire to add to my growing collection.  In 

graduate school I began to make my own list 

of suggested readings in anticipation of using 

them in my classes when I began teaching. 

When I began my career at the University 

of Wisconsin-Eau Claire (UWEC), in 1978, 

I lectured in a traditional fashion and made 

the readings optional.  However, after moving 

to Louisiana State University (LSU) in 1986, 

I began to shift to student-active pedagogies 

and typically required every student to read 

and critique two or three books from the list 

during a semester. Each critique was due at 

the beginning of the exam for that portion of 

the course.  I included a short page on “How 

to write a critique” as a syllabus supplement 

(Appendix 2).  The point value of the critique 

was 50% of the value of an exam.  

The purposes of this assignment were three-

fold: first, supplemental readings could 

stimulate student interest in different aspects 

of botany not covered in the course and 

thus attract students to botany as suggested 

by Knoblock. Second, critique-writing 

encouraged students to not only read the text, 

but to read it critically. Third, these assignments 

provided relatively easy points for students to 

earn that would balance critically challenging 

exams (comparable to AP biology questions 

and those in the CUEBS [1967] Testing and 

Evaluation booklet) that most students were 

not used to.  Not all students took advantage 

of these opportunities. 

My current reading list has 13 subcategories: 

Biomedicine; Botany/Plant Biology; 

Ecology/Natural History; Economic Botany; 

Evolution; Forensic Botany; History of 

Biology/Biography; Mycology (Fungi); 

Microbiology/Molecular Biology; General 

Science/Philosophy of Science; Phycology 

(Algae); Women in Science; and Zoological.  

It is available at https://docs.google.com/

document/d/1USkGueM93AmqnsFpTN

zaEWDGcrlgXZvL3mtQfJXDrXY/edit.  

Within each category, books are arranged 

alphabetically by author and each entry 

includes a brief annotation describing the 

book to assist students in choosing between 

options.  Some books are included in more 

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than one category. In this case, only one entry 

is annotated with the others cross-referenced 

to it.  For honors biology, and introductory 

biology and botany courses, I would make the 

entire list available to students.  Most upper 

division courses, such as Evolution or Plant 

Anatomy and Physiology, would include titles 

from only that subsection.  

GENERAL INTEREST 

BOOKS AS A  

SUBSTITUTE FOR A  

TRADITIONAL TEXTBOOK

At both LSU and Emporia State University 

(ESU), majors’ and non-majors’ biology 

courses were taught by multiple faculty, 

and textbook decisions were a committee 

decision.  In 1988 I became the founding 

Biology Coordinator at LSU, responsible 

for developing a new core of Introductory 

Biology integrating the introductory curricula 

of the Botany, Microbiology, and Zoology 

Departments.  As part of our curriculum 

design, we identified 11 Key Concepts areas, 

focusing on common misconceptions related 

to Process of Science; Characteristics of Life; 

Biological Chemistry; Carbon Cycle; Growth; 

Sexual Reproduction; Inheritance; Variation; 

Natural Selection; Population Growth; 

and Community Ecology.  We designed 

and validated an assessment instrument to 

evaluate changes in student understanding of 

these concepts. 

We also identified five attitudinal categories 

and designed and validated an assessment 

instrument to measure how different teaching 

approaches affected student attitudes toward 

biology.  The Categories were: Science in 

Everyday life; Personal Comfort with Science; 

the Power and Limits of Science; Science and 

Religion; and Satisfaction with University 

Science Requirements. We administered 

these instruments as pre- and post-tests in 

every section of introductory biology for both 

majors and non-majors  through 1994, and I 

have used them as pre-course benchmarks in 

every introductory course, including honors 

courses, I have taught for the rest of my career 

both at LSU and ESU.  

In 1992, LSU founded its Honors College, 

and I designed honors biology lecture and 

laboratory courses with a more student-active 

approach than in the regular majors’ biology 

program.  The lecture was a Socratic discussion 

format based on Raven and Johnson’s majors’ 

Biology textbook (1989) supplemented by two 

general interest books: Gould’s (1977) Ever 

Since Darwin and Thomas’s (1974) The Lives 

of a Cell.  I required that students annotate 

both their textbook and the supplementary 

readings, and I spot-checked and evaluated 

their annotations during exams.  I also 

required students to read and critique two 

additional books from the reading list.  

For the laboratory component, I developed 

a series of inquiry-based activities similar 

to those we were using in the non-majors’ 

laboratories (Sundberg, 1994; Sundberg and 

Dini, 1993; Sundberg and Moncada, 1994; 

Sundberg et al., 1994; see also Sundberg (2002) 

and Sundberg et al. (2000)). In addition, lab 

teams from both the honors and non-majors’ 

courses were responsible for designing and 

carrying out an independent research project 

at the end of the semester. As a result, we 

were able to use standardized assessments 

to compare the effectiveness of different 

permutations of lecture and laboratory 

approaches on student learning and student 

attitudes toward science.  The unanticipated 

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consequence was that honors students and 

non-majors showed greater learning gains 

and more positive attitudes than majors, 

using the same assessment instruments. (A 

dean’s comment, when we first reported the 

preliminary resuIts at a college meeting, was 

that this can’t be right and that there must be 

something wrong with the data or analysis.) 

I also realized that the honors students really 

engaged with the trade books and the depth 

of our discussions of these books covered as 

much, or more, content than the topics where 

only the textbook was used.  

When I moved to ESU in 1997, I had the 

opportunity to re-institute an honors biology 

course, but this time as a general education 

alternative combining majors and non-

majors.  I used the same format as LSU 

except that rather than separate lecture and 

lab sessions, I scheduled a 2- and 3-hour 

block weekly in the botany laboratory that 

allowed flexible scheduling of integrated 

lecture/discussions and inquiry-based lab 

activities.  Also, instead of a textbook, each 

year I chose four trade books focusing 

respectively on ecology, evolution, genetics, 

organismal biology, and/or critical thinking 

(Box 1).  Majors were particularly anxious 

that this non-traditional format would not 

be as successful as the traditional lecture and 

majors text.  However, I could assure them, 

based on previous classes and testing, that 

their preparation would be as good as, and 

probably better than, their peers taking the 

traditional majors course.  To further address 

this anxiety, I provided a variety of majors’ 

textbooks that students could check out to 

use as supplemental reading for particular 

topics.  Students were still required to read 

and critique two or three additional books 

from the reading list.  I required all students in 

all of my courses to annotate their “texts,” and, 

like at LSU, I scored their annotations during 

exams.  Several upper division and graduate 

students subsequently told me they began 

annotating all their reading assignments, 

including journal articles, for all their classes 

because they found it an effective way to study.

How effective can trade books be for teaching 

an introductory college course?  More effective 

than college professors imagine!  Our earlier 

work at LSU, comparing majors’ with non-

majors’ outcomes, cited above, suggested that 

this might be the case.  We had constructed 

and validated a content assessment instrument 

and an attitude assessment instrument that 

we used as common pre-test/post-test tools to 

evaluate student learning and attitude change 

in the two tracks.  For the 7 years I chaired 

the department at Emporia, I used these 

same instruments to assess the majors, non-

majors, and honors courses every semester—

and as an end-of-program “exit survey” prior 

to graduation.  Pre-test scores of majors 

were slightly higher than non-majors, and 

honors students were intermediate.  Both 

majors and non-majors were taught with a 

traditional lecture/lab format using majors’ 

or non-majors’ texts and manuals.  Honors 

students used a discussion format of trade 

books and inquiry-based lab activities.  Post-

test gains were not significantly greater for 

majors than for non-majors, but honors 

scores were frequently significant (Figure 1). 

Data in the first four categories, relating to 

evolution, were published previously with 

further differentiation between majors and 

non-majors and different combinations 

of inquiry and traditional labs (Sundberg, 

2003). These are pooled data from 3 years 

of the honors section and the three highest-

scoring sections of the majors’ classes.  Data 

on the other concepts have not been reported 

previously. The trends between the honors 

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• 

Armstrong, J. 2014.  How the Earth Turned Green: A Brief 3.8 Billion Year History 

of Plants. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. 

• 

Carroll, S. B.  2005.  Endless Forms Most Beautiful: The New Science of Evo Devo.  

Norton, New York.

• 

Carroll, S. B.  2006.  The Making of the Fittest: DNA and the Ultimate Forensic 

Record of Evolution.  Norton, New York.

• 

Gould, S. J.  1977.  Ever Since Darwin: Reflections in Natural History.  W.W. Nor-

ton, New York.

• 

Kolbert, E.  2014.  The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History. Henry Holt and 

Co., New York.  

• 

Mann, C.  2018.  The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and 

their Dueling Visions to Shape Tomorrow’s World.  Alfred Knopf, New York.  

• 

Miller, J., and B. Van Loon. 1982. Darwin for Beginners. Pantheon Books, New 

York.

• 

Montgomery, B. L.  2021.  Lessons from Plants.  Harvard University Press, Cam-

bridge, MA.

• 

Odum, E. 1998. Ecological Vignettes: Ecological Approaches to Dealing with Hu-

man Predicaments. Harwood Academic Publishers, Amsterdam.

• 

Pimm, S. L. 2001. The World According to Pimm: A Scientist Audits the Earth. 

McGraw Hill. 

• 

Ridley, M. 1999.  Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters.  Harp-

er Collins, New York.

• 

Seethaler, S. 2009.  Lies, Damned Lies, and Science:  How to Sort through the Noise 

around Global Warming, the Latest Health Claims, and other Scientific Contro-

versies. F.T Press Science, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.  

• 

Thomas, L. 1974. The Lives of a Cell: Notes of a Biology Watcher. Viking Press, 

New York. 

• 

Zimmer, C.  2018.  

She Has Her Mother’s Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Po-

tential of Heredity.

  Dutton, New York.

• 

Zimmer, C.  2021.  Life’s Edge: The Search for What it Means to Be Alive. Dutton, 

New York

Box 1.  Trade Books Used as a “Text” over 25 Years in Honors Biology (2–4 per year) at 

LSU and ESU.

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Figure 1.  Post-test scores in honors and biology majors courses using the same content assessment.  

The first four categories are an abbreviation of previously reported data comparing a variety of 

teaching approaches (Sundberg, 2003); the final seven categories are newly reported data.  The 

honors course described in the text and a traditionally taught majors’ course, with textbook and 

accompanying laboratory, were the two highest-scoring approaches for all concept categories.    

on the other concepts have not been reported 

previously. The trends between the honors 

course and majors’ courses were similar for 

all of the concepts assessed.  Post-test scores 

in the honors course exceeded majors scores 

for every concept tested.  In some cases the 

differences were not significant, but the 

trend remained clear.  For instance, one of 

the concepts related to carbon cycle is that 

plants both photosynthesize and respire.  Yet, 

most students have internalized that plants 

are autotrophs and photosynthesize whereas 

animals are heterotrophs and respire, as 

usually taught in textbooks, and this remained 

resistant to change regardless of pedagogy.   

Perhaps surprisingly, while biology majors 

in the honors course had the highest pre-test 

scores, classmates majoring in economics or 

English frequently showed the greatest gain 

and earned the highest grades!

RECOMMENDATIONS

My first recommendation is to encourage 

(require) your students to read some 

relevant botanical/biological trade books 

for general interest outside of class. This is 

quite possible even in team-taught courses or 

courses with multiple sections.  For instance, 

2 years ago, ESU dropped a decades-old 

biology core curriculum that required a one-

semester introductory course followed by 

one semester each of Botany, Microbiology, 

and Zoology and replaced it with a two-

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semester introductory biology sequence: Cell/

Molecular followed by Organismal/Ecology/

Evolution.  It was an easy sell in the organismal 

course to encourage the team of instructors to 

require students to critique two trade books 

from the reading list for course curricula. A 

selection of partial quotations from recent 

student critiques was a convincing argument 

(Appendix 3). Indeed, most of the new 

instructors recommended several additional 

favorite books from their discipline to add to 

the reading list.  

If you are the sole instructor in an introductory 

course, I encourage you to consider selecting 

appropriate trade books as an alternative 

to a traditional textbook.  There are other 

precedents. It is not novel to find a college 

professor who doesn’t use a textbook in 

undergraduate courses and instead uses 

primary literature (Goudsouzian and Hsu, 

2023). This is considered to be especially 

effective in developing students’ science 

process skills.  At the K-12 level, the National 

Science Teachers Association has promoted 

using trade books to teach science for years, 

primarily to improve student attitudes toward 

science (Royce, 2012).  Improving content 

understanding, science process skills, and 

student attitude can be combined with the 

trade book approach.  

However, in departments with team-taught 

introductory courses, it may be difficult 

to convince colleagues to do something 

as drastic as substituting trade books for a 

textbook, especially in the majors course. 

Like my former dean would say, it just doesn’t 

“make sense” that this could work.  Of course, 

the results of data are not always what we 

expect or what make sense.  When we were 

discussing our new courses, I did not even try 

the trade book route.  Instead, I argued that 

how you use a textbook is more important 

than the textbook you choose and that we 

should simply go with one of the Online 

Educational Resource (OER) Biology books 

freely available to students.  However, the vote 

came down to either Campbell’s Biology or 

Raven and Johnson’s Biology.  My argument 

was that the English, business, history, and 

science majors who took Honors Biology did 

not even use a textbook, and yet consistently 

outperformed our students in majors biology 

(Sundberg, 2003; Figure 1).  Nevertheless, 

the faculty committee firmly believed that a 

comprehensive textbook (adequately covering 

each of their specialties) was necessary for 

students to learn the required material.  It just 

“doesn’t make sense” that you can do without a 

textbook.  This is a strongly engrained faculty 

belief, especially when talking about majors’ 

courses.  However, in my experience, faculty 

are less concerned with such experimentation 

in the non-majors’ courses, so that is where I 

always started.  

REFERENCES 

Abbey, E. 1968.  Desert Solitaire: A Season in the 

Wilderness.  McGraw-Hill, New York.
Alexopoulos, Constantine John. 1962. 

Introductory Mycology, 2nd ed. John Wiley & 

Sons, New York. 
Anderson, E. 1952. Plants, Man, and Life.  Little, 

Brown and Company, Boston.
Commission on Undergraduate Education in the 

Biological Sciences (CUEBS). 1967. Testing and 

Evaluation in the Biological Sciences, Publication 

No. 20.  The George Washington University, 

Washington, D.C. 

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Commission on Undergraduate Education in the 

Biological Sciences (CUEBS).  1969.  Basic Library 

List for the Biological Sciences.  Publication 

no. 22.  The George Washington University, 

Washington, D.C. 
Commission on Undergraduate Education in the 

Biological Sciences (CUEBS). J. G. Creager (Ed.), 

1971.  Guidelines and Suggested Titles for Library 

Holdings in Undergraduate Biology, Publication 

no. 32.  American Institute of Biological Sciences, 

Washington, D.C. 
Cronquist, A. 1961.  Introductory Botany. Harper 

and Roe, New York. 
Esau, K. 1960. Anatomy of Seed Plants. John Wiley 

& Sons, New York.
Foster, A. S., and E. M. Gifford, Jr. 1959. 

Comparative Morphology of Vascular Plants. W. 

H. Freeman and Company, San Francisco.
Fuller, H. J., and O. Tippo. 1949. College Botany. 

Henry Holt and Company, New York.
Goudsouzian, L. K., and J. L. Hsu. 2023.  Reading 

primary scientific literature: approaches for 

teaching students in the undergraduate STEM 

classroom.  CBE Life Sciences Education 22(3). 

6 June 2023.
Gould, S. Jay.  1977.  Ever Since Darwin: 

Reflections  in  Natural  History.  W.W. Norton, 

New York.
Knobloch, I. W. 1968. Interest-Arousing Books 

and Articles in Botany. Plant Science Bulletin 

14:4-6.
Kreig, M. 1964. Green Medicine: The Search for 

Plants that Heal. Rand McNally & Company, 

Chicago.

Large, E. C. 1940. 

The Advance of the Fungi. 

Henry Holt, New York.
Raven, P. H., and G. B. Johnson. 1989.  Biology, 

2nd ed.  Times Mirror/Mosby College Publishing.  

St. Louis.

Royce, C. A. 2012.  Teaching Science through 

Trade Books.  Richmond, VA. National Science 

Teaching Association. 
Sinnott, E. W. 1963. The Problem of Organic 

Form. Yale University Press, New Haven.
Stebbins, G. L. 1966.  Processes of Organic 

Evolution. Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
Sundberg, M. D.  1994.  Student Guide and 

Resource Manual, Biology 1005.  McGraw-Hill, 

New York.  (a non-majors’ investigative laboratory 

to confront common misconceptions).
Sundberg, M. D. 2002.  Assessing Student 

Learning.  Cell Biology Education 1: 11-15.
Sundberg, M. D. 2003.  Strategies to help students 

change naive alternative conceptions about 

evolution and natural selection.  Reports of the 

National Center for Science Education 23: 23-26.
Sundberg, M. D., and M. L. Dini.  1993.  Majors 

vs Nonmajors:  Is there a Difference? Journal of 

College Science Teaching 22: 299-304.
Sundberg, M. D., and G. J. Moncada. 1994.  Creating 

Effective Investigative Biology Laboratories for 

Undergraduates.  BioScience 44: 698-704.
Sundberg, M. D., M. L. Dini, and E. Li. 1994. 

Improving student comprehension and attitudes 

in freshman biology by decreasing course content.  

Journal of Research in Science Teaching 31: 679-

693.
Sundberg, M. D., J. Armstrong, M. Dini, and 

B. Wischusen.  2000.  Tips for Designing and 

Implementing Investigative Laboratories.  Journal 

of College Science Teaching 29: 353-360.
Thomas, L. 1974. The Lives of a Cell: Notes of a 

Biology Watcher. Viking Press, New York. 
Van der Weel, F. R.(Rudd) and A. L. H. Van der 

Meer. 2024.  Handwriting but not Typewriting 

Leads to Widespread Brain Connectivity: a High-

density EEG Study with Implications for the 

Classroom. Frontiers in Psychology 14: 1219945. 

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Appendix 1. Textbook Annotation

Taken from “The Polymath System”™ by James H. Wandersee, 1996.  

Textbooks will be collected and annotations examined during each examination. 

1. Use a mechanical pencil that lets you write CRISPLY and PRECISELY. Pencil 

lasts longer than ink and is easily erased. 
2. Annotation is NOT highlighting!. You are not just emphasizing important ideas 

from the text. Instead, you are holding a running conversation with the author—

“talking back” to him as you read. 
3. As you read, REACT to what you read by writing down your thoughts and 

connections along the margin of the page. 
4. Write down AT LEAST ONE legible annotation PER PAGE of assigned reading. 
5. Print if your handwriting is not easily legible. 
6. Connect your annotations to particular statements or sentences if appropriate. 
7. Include emotions (+/-) in some or all of your annotations if you wish. Research 

shows that learning tied to emotion is more readily recalled. 
8. Annotation makes a book your own. It records what you were thinking when 

you read the book, and it saves your good ideas for you. 
9. Annotations should take the form of CONNECTIONS you see between the 

book’s content and your own work, ideas you see in the text for innovations that 

you want to make, links between what this author is saying and what other authors 

you have read say, examples you thought of that illustrate the author’s point, 

contrary positions you wish to take, names of people who would agree or disagree 

with what the author said, historical connections—noting something entirely new 

and intriguing to you, something that contradicts what the author just said, things 

that make you angry or sad or happy, your own definition of what has just been 

described in the text, connections to geography and places, connections to other 

cultures and sciences, origins of ideas you see being expressed in the text, things 

you see as ideal but not practical in your situation, ideas that remind you of a work 

of art, things you can use to prepare for your own career, things you consider 

humorous, ironic, or paradoxical, and so forth. Annotation makes your copy of 

the book valuable because it captures your otherwise elusive thought and makes 

finding key ideas easy for you later. It is an heirloom, a historical document, and an 

archive of your cognition—should you become famous someday!

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Appendix 2. Writing Summaries and Critiques

For assignments in writing summaries and critiques, you are asked to read either a book 

or a paper from the original scientific literature and then summarize or assess what you 

read in fewer than two double-spaced, typewritten pages. Brief does not, in this case, 

mean easy. In fact, producing that one- or two-page summary or critique will probably 

require as much mental effort as that involved in preparing an essay or term paper of five 

to ten pages in length. To do well in these short assignments, you must fully understand 

what you have read, which usually means that you must annotate or take notes on your 

book or read the paper many times, slowly and thoughtfully.
Follow the same procedures whether you are asked to write a summary or a critique; 

indeed, a critique begins as a summary, to which you then add your own evaluation of 

the paper.
When reading a book, look over the table of contents and read the preface to give you a feel 

for what will be discussed and some perspective on the authors’ intentions.  Then annotate 

while you read following the same guidelines presented in the syllabus for annotating 

your textbook. 
For a paper, begin by reading the paper once or twice without taking notes. Fight 

the temptation to underline, highlight, or otherwise create the illusion that you are 

accomplishing something.  It is often difficult to distinguish the significant from the not-

so-significant points during the first reading of a scientific paper; skim the paper once 

for general orientation and overview. Don't try for detailed understanding in the first 

reading, but do jot down any unfamiliar terms or the names of unfamiliar techniques 

so that you can look these up in a textbook before you reread the paper.  It often helps 

to consult a textbook about the general biology of the organisms being studied before 

returning to the paper.
During the next, more careful, reading of the paper, pay special attention of the Materials 

and Methods and the Results sections. The essence of any scientific paper is contained 

here.  The results obtained in a study depend on the way the study was conducted.  Were 

samples taken only at one particular time of year?  Was the study replicated?  How 

many individuals were examined?  What techniques were used?  In an experiment, what 

variables (for example, photoperiod, temperature, salinity, or food supply) were held 

constant? Were proper controls provided for each experiment? Which factors might affect 

the outcome of the study?
As you begin to study the Results section, scrutinize every graph, table, and illustration, 

developing your own interpretations of the data before rereading the author's verbal 

presentation. We are readily influenced by the opinions of others, especially when those 

opinions are well-written. Keep an open mind when reading the author's words, but try 

to form your own opinions about the data first; you may see something that the author 

did not.

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Appendix 2. Writing Summaries and Critiques, con't.

WRITING THE FIRST DRAFT

You will know that you are ready to write your first draft of the critique when you can 

distill the essence of the paper into a single (or at most two) summary sentence.  This 

sentence should include all of the points, present an accurate summary of the study, and 

be fully comprehensible to someone who has never read the original. As a general rule, 

do not begin to write your review until you can write such an abbreviated summary; 

this exercise will help you discriminate between the essential points of the paper and 

the extra, complementary details. 

1.

 If you cannot write a satisfactory one- or two-sentence summary, reread the  

   article;  you’ll get it eventually. Once your summary sentence is committed to  

  paper, ask yourself these questions:

2.

Why was the study undertaken or the book written? What purpose did the au 

  thor have in mind?

3.

What specific questions were addressed or important points made? 

4.

How were these questions addressed? What approach did the author take to ad 

  dress each question? 

5.

What were the major findings of the study or conclusions reached?

6.

What questions remain unanswered by the study? These may be questions ad 

  dressed by the study but not answered conclusively, or they may be new questions  

  arising from the findings of the study under consideration.

7.

For books that are a collection of essays, choose two or three that you found most  

  interesting and write on them. Don’t try to summarize the whole book.

WRITING THE SUMMARY

When you can answer these questions without referring to the paper you have read, 

you can begin to write. Your introductory sentences must lead up to a statement of the 

specific questions the authors set out to address. Next, tell (1) what approaches were 

used to investigate each question and (2) what major results were obtained. Be sure to 

state, as succinctly as possible, exactly what was learned from the study.

A critique is much like a summary, except that you get to add your own assessment of 

the paper you have read. What were the good points; what were the bad points? Was 

there something you thought the author did particularly well or were you hoping the 

author would have included more of? Would you recommend this work to a friend? 

Why or why not? 

Pechenik, J. A.  1993.  A Short Guide to Writing About Biology, 2

nd

 ed.  New York, 

Harper Collins.

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Appendix 3.  Some Selected Excerpts from Student Critiques of Trade “Textbooks”

 

Carroll, S. B.: Making of the Fittest

Overall, I believe the book is thought-provoking and insightful. Carroll writes in 

a way that is easy to read, with the complicated aspects of DNA sequencing and 

genome expressions explained in a clear and concise way. An aspect of his writing 

that I liked was the use of humor. In a few places he made jokes such as adding 

comedy to the story of the man who ate a poison newt and by treating one scientific 

name as a tongue twister. Although the rest of the book’s tone is more serious and 

argumentative, these brief moments of humor helped lighten the mood and made 

the content feel more personal. I also enjoyed the use of multiple examples for ev-

ery topic he discussed.

Montgomery, B.: Lessons from Plants

While plants do not have eyes, ears, or a sense of touch, they are aware of their 

environment just as much as we are with those senses. They distinguish kin, friend, 

and foe, and they are able to respond to ecological competition despite lacking the 

capacity of fight or flight. Plants are even capable of transformative behaviors that 

allow them to maximize their chances of survival in a dynamic and sometimes un-

friendly environment.

The way Brenda writes this book, you can tell she is passionate about plants and 

what she studies. She explains the behaviors and strategies of plants in a way that 

is easy to understand, even if someone is not very knowledgeable about plants. She 

transitions from personal experiences to how the plant deals with a certain problem 

and survives, and what lessons to learn from them extremely smoothly. She uses 

words that some people would associate with humans to explain the way plants 

work, which makes it easier for the reader to connect the lessons. The book is very 

organized and builds on what is already stated and refers to what she has talked 

about already. She provides a different point of view of the world and of plants that 

people, and especially me, never thought of before. I would recommend this book 

to a friend because there are many lessons that can be learned, and it never fails to 

keep your attention.

Zimmer, C.: She Has Her Mother’s Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of 

Heredity

The more questions that arise, the more we are able to discover about our own 

genome and the unique ways it functions. The book demonstrated that over time, 

numerous profound discoveries have occurred, but there are still many unanswered 

questions.

This book was interesting because it showed the historical development of genetics 

and modern evolutionary theory since the days of Mendel and also touched on the 

topic of eugenics, which is a dark part of the history of genetics. My biggest com-

plaint with the book is that there was no clear concise timeline of events as chapters 

jumped back and forth throughout history with little discretion. I would have en-

joyed the book more if it had been ordered more chronologically.

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Thomas, L.: The Lives of a Cell: Notes of a Biology Watcher

"The Lives of a Cell," the collection’s title essay, challenges the notion of the human 

as an individual organism. Rather than belonging entirely to us, Thomas explains, 

our bodies are produced by trillions of cells that work tirelessly and in harmony. In 

addition, he suggests we may be able to perceive the planet as a single cell if we 

apply this metaphor to a planetary scale.

Mann, C.: The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and their Dueling 

Visions to Shape Tomorrow’s World

Prophets, as Mann describes, are mostly concerned about the carrying capacity of 

planet Earth and believe that human consumption should be limited to prevent di-

saster. Wizards, on the other hand, think that human ingenuity and science can be 

used to reap more resources for humanity. Mann examines the challenges facing 

humanity as the world population approaches 10 billion by 2050, and questions 

how someone like Vogt or Borlaug would respond. These issues include producing 

food, obtaining freshwater, providing energy, and addressing man-made climate 

change. Throughout the book, Mann remains even-handed in his depiction of the 

wizard and prophet ideologies. He makes no attempt to choose which idea about 

how humans should interact with the world is correct.

 

My favorite thing about this book was the back and forth between the wizard and 

the prophet. Looking at one idea and then looking at another view right after really 

made me think. My least favorite thing about this book was the sadness it brought 

me. No one wants to hear that planet Earth is struggling and the only one who can 

save it is YOU. This is quite a daunting task.

This book is my favorite book out of the four. It was incredibly engaging read into 

the lives of Vogt and Borlaug as they developed such massive societal forces as 

the green revolution and modern environmentalism. Learning about the process of 

artificial breeding for specific traits under Borlaug was incredibly fascinating and 

the political activism of Vogt, while sometimes misled, is rather inspiring. I disliked 

how the book constantly switched between the two men rather than focusing on one 

over three or four chapters.

Appendix 3.  Some Selected Excerpts from Student Critiques of Trade “Textbooks”, Con't.

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165

By 

Amelia Neely

BSA Membership & 

Communications  

Manager

 

E-mail: ANeely@</i>

botany.org

 MEMBERSHIP NEWS

SAVE THE DATE!  You are invited to the 

BSA Virtual Symposium on Climate Change 

November 14-15, 2024, from 11 a.m. to 3:30 

p.m. ET. Each day of the symposium will 

focus on its own theme, with a networking 

session to foster discussion and build 

new connections and collaborations. 

 

This  free  global event is open to 

the public and includes 6 featured 

BSA Virtual Symposium on Climate Change: 

Plant Resilience and Conservation for a 

Changing Climate

speakers, as well as 12 contributed talks.   

Featured speakers include:

• Dr. Sally Aitken, University of British  

Columbia

• Dr. Jill Anderson, University of Geor-

gia

• Dr. David W. Inouye  (Professor 

Emeritus), University of Maryland

• Dr. Nicholas J. Kooyers, University of 

Louisiana,   Lafayette

• Dr. Holly R. Prendeville,  U.S. De-

partment of  Agriculture (USDA)

• Dr. Tanisha M. Williams, University 

of Georgia

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To register, or find more information, visit: 

https://climatesymposium.botany.org/plant-

resilience-and-conservation-for-a-changing-

climate.

BOTANY360 UPDATES

Botany360 is a series of programming 

that connects our botanical community 

during the 360 days outside of Botany 

Conferences. The Botany360 event calendar 

is a tool to highlight those events. The goal 

of this program is to connect the plant 

science community throughout the year 

with professional development, discussion 

sessions, and networking and social 

opportunities. To see the calendar, visit www.

botany.org/calendar. If you want to coordinate 

a Botany360 event, email aneely@botany.org.  

 

Recent Botany360 event recordings:

• Now You’re a New PI, What’s 

Next? (May 28, 2024) 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-

HjLVHv9JHA

• Longwood Gardens Fellows Pro-

gram Informational Webinar* (May 

8, 2024) 

https://www.youtube.com/

watch?v=fYNMHCV4v_Y

• Fulbright US Scholar Program: In-

sights from an Alumni Ambassador 

(April 29, 2024) 

https://www.youtube.com/

watch?v=D-dPEvKBlY8

• Getting Involved in Service to BSA 

and Beyond (January 8, 2024) 

https://www.youtube.com/

watch?v=kh-btx0L9c4

*Sponsored Event

BSA SPOTLIGHT SERIES

The BSA Spotlight Series highlights

 

early-

career and professional scientists 

in the

 

BSA 

community 

and shares both scientific goals and 

achievements, as well as personal interests of the 

botanical scientists, so you can get to know your 

BSA community better.

Here are the latest Spotlights:

• Lucy Adhiambo, Research Associate, 

Center for Ecosystem Restoration – 

Kenya 

https://botany.org/home/careers-jobs/

careers-in-botany/bsa-spotlight-se-

ries/lucy-adhiambo.html

• Elton John de Lírio, Postdoctoral 

Fellow, University of São Paulo 

https://botany.org/home/careers-jobs/

careers-in-botany/bsa-spotlight-se-

ries/elton-john-de-lirio.html

• Funmilola Mabel OJO, Postdoctoral 

Visitor, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, 

Richmond Surrey, 

TW9 3AE, London, United Kingdom 

https://botany.org/home/careers-jobs/

careers-in-botany/bsa-spotlight-se-

ries/funmilola-mabel-ojo.html

 

Would you like to nominate yourself 

or another BSA member to be in the 

Spotlight Series? Fill out this form: 

https://forms.gle/vivajCaCaqQrDL648. 

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CAREERS IN BOTANY 

PROFILES

The 

2024-25 Careers in Botany Profiles

 

are now available at https://botany.org/

home/careers-jobs/careers-in-botany/

careers-in-botany-profiles-2024.html! These 

professionals in the field of the botanical 

sciences were part of the Careers in Botany 

Luncheon at Botany 2024 on June 17, 2024. 

Learn more about the variety of careers 

that are represented by these nine talented 

individuals from academia, industry, 

government, and more! This link provides 

these and past Careers in Botany Profiles. 

BSA SPONSORSHIP  

OPPORTUNITIES

Do you know a business or organization that 

would benefit from being in front of over 3000 

botanical scientists from over 70 countries, 

and over 60,000 followers on social media? The 

BSA Business Office has many opportunities 

for sponsorship including:

• Sponsored Membership Matters news-

letter articles and footer ads

• BSA website banner ads
• Hosting Botany360 events
• Botany360 event logo advertisement 

during event, a slide before/after event, 

or time to discuss product at begin-

ning or end of event

• Sponsored social media ads
• Advertisement space in the Plant Science 

Bulletin

Because we value our community, the above 

opportunities are limited with the hope of 

being informative without being intrusive. 

Sponsorships will allow BSA to fulfill our 

strategic plan goal of being financially 

responsible during this time of economic 

shifts.

To find out more about sponsorship 

opportunities,  email : bsa-manager@botany.

org. 

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FROM THE 

PSB

 ARCHIVES

60 years ago

“Dr. Constantine J. Alexopoulos, President (1963) of the Society, suggested to the Council that 

the category of Sustaining Member be created. Dr. Alexopoulos pointed out that the Mycological 

Society has such a membership category, and it is an attractive one. The Council appointed Dr. 

Lawrence Crockett, Business Manager, to make preliminary investigations of the idea as chairman 

of a committee.
For $250 a company or organization will be given sustaining membership, a subscription to the 

Journal, and a 10 per cent discount on advertising in the Journal. Initial investigations have resulted 

in acceptance by three companies: Stechert-Hafner, Publishers; The Johnson Reprint Corporation; 

and Triarch, George Conant, Ripon, Wisconsin.”
Sustaining Membership. PSB 10(1): 7

50 years ago

Wm. Bridge Cooke responds to recent discussions in implementing certification for botanists. 
“I assume that a certified horticulturalist is one who will have earned his credentials in an accredited 

college totally through graduate programs or through apprenticeships with reputable firms. There 

will probably be a variety of ways of attaining the prized certificate. The company composed of 

certificated personnel or having such personnel on the payroll, will have a superior advantage over a 

company without such personnel. Of course, the possession of a certificate will restrict the activity of 

the holder to the province of the certificate. Have you ever met a situation in which your neighbors, 

casual acquaintances, or even trades people, because you are known to be a botanist, thought that 

you had the key to any and all problems of botany, horticulture, biology, local and national politics, 

and even moon-exploration? This will hopefully get you “off the hook”, but you will not have time 

to produce the documentation necessary to prove it before your interrogator’s face falls to the floor 

incredulous of this communication gap. Also, what IBY questionnaire even hinted that a certificate 

would be required? With the horticulturalists I can see some reason to have such a program of 

certification since professionals who got that way “legitimately” through schooling and labor are in 

a position to be pushed out by others who in their own way “legitimately” by labor and an innate 

uncanny ability to handle plants have risen to relatively high positions in the profession.
I cannot see any reason for botanists to be concerned with such a certification program. Of course, 

I have not been in any position to discuss the matter with anyone or hear anyone discuss it. I would 

think that a prospective employer would want to see transcripts and recommendations and other 

vitae in addition to any certificate which should only indicate adeptness in one or more administrative 

manipulation which could or could not be regarded as demonstrating a technique for killing time!
I hope botanists have more productive matters to discuss than any proposed “certification 

requirements” for being called a botanist!”
Cooke, Wm. Bridge. 1974. Opinion/Commentary. PSB 20(2): 28

40 years ago 

“The American Liberty elm the first true, totally American elm to be remarkably Dutch elm disease 

resistant and to closely resemble its disease-prone relatives is soon to become available. The Elm 

Research Institute is so confident of its new species’ disease resistance that it warranties all its trees 

for ten years. The Institute has initiated its “Johnny Elmseed” program to find and computerize the 

exact locations of all mature elms in the entire nation. In return for finding and reporting such a live 

American elm, The Elm Research Institute will send one free American Liberty elm seedling to the 

persons reporting its exact street location and owner identification." 
Disease Resistant American Elm 1984. PSB 30(3): 18.

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169

  SCIENCE EDUCATION

 

By Dr. Catrina Adams,  

Education Director

Jennifer Hartley, 

Education Programs 

Supervisor

Twenty-five high school teachers from 20 

different states nationwide are preparing 

to participate this fall with their students 

in PlantingScience’s Power of Sunlight 

photosynthesis and respiration Investigation 

Theme. Online and in-person professional 

learning workshops took place in June and July 

and featured close collaboration with 17 early-

career scientists selected as “PlantingScience 

Fellows.” The workshops are part of the BSA-

led PlantingScience Digging Deeper F2 grant 

(NSF DRL#2010556), which is in its fourth 

year. 

Core components of the workshop included: 

(1) teachers and scientists experiencing the 

Power of Sunlight activities as students will, 

HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS AND EARLY-

CAREER SCIENTISTS PREPARE TO COUN-

TER STUDENT PRECONCEPTIONS ABOUT 

PLANT SCIENTISTS AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS 

AT PLANTINGSCIENCE F2 PROFESSIONAL 

LEARNING WORKSHOPS

(2) analyzing video clips of teachers using 

BSCS Science Learning’s evidence-based 

STeLLA pedagogical strategies (bscs.org/

stella/), (3) discussing strategies teachers and 

scientist mentors can use to address common 

student preconceptions about photosynthesis 

and cellular respiration and about who 

scientists are and what they do, (4) analyzing 

transcripts and other artifacts of past student-

scientist interactions from the website, and (5) 

discussing how teachers, Master Plant Science 

Team (MPST) Liaisons, and scientist mentors 

work together to reach our goals for student 

outcomes. 

The workshops were led by a team from 

BSCS Science Learning (Anne Westbrook, 

Jenine Cotton-Proby) and by BSA Education 

staff (Jennifer Hartley and Catrina Adams). 

This year’s workshops were greatly enhanced 

through co-facilitation by three scientist 

leaders with prior experience serving in the 

mentor and liaison roles. We so appreciate the 

help of Cari Ritzenthaler, Phillipa Stone, and 

Edi Wipf in this role. Three teacher leaders 

also participated, drawn from teachers who 

participated in last year’s workshops. Next 

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year’s workshops will be primarily facilitated 

by these teacher and scientist leaders as part 

of our sustainability plan. 

We would also like to recognize the 17 scientists 

recruited from the BSA and partnering 

scientific societies who participated in these 

summer workshops and who will be working 

closely with the participating teachers and their 

students this fall: Gina Errico, Sanbon Gosa, 

Betsy Justus Briju, Stephanie Kate, Micayla 

Lamb, Joanna Lumbsden-Pinto, Stephen 

Mills, Emma Parker Miller, Santiago Pérez 

Ospina, David Riera, Bela Starinchak, Evan 

Stark-Dykema, Stephen Stresow, Joshua 

Toran III, Lakshmi Benkat Sai Ram Nagalla, 

and Balasaheb Vitthal Sonawane.

WANT TO LEARN MORE?  

PlantingScience was featured in a recent 

Spotlight on Collaborative Teacher 

Learning (https://cadrek12.org/spotlight/

collaborative-teacher-learning#adams) from 

NSF’s CADRE (Community for Advancing 

Discovery Research in Education). The article 

provides a lot more information about the 

PlantingScience Digging Deeper F2 research 

project and how these collaborative teacher/

scientist workshops fit into the research plan 

as well as some preliminary results. 

PLANTINGSCIENCE  

UPDATES

Spring 2024 Session Recap

After a hectic session of juggling our usual 

PlantingScience participants with our F2 

research participants last fall, we enjoyed 

taking a breath with a smaller session this past 

spring. The Spring 2024 session served over 

560 students from 18 different schools. The 

teams tackled various themes, with Wonder 

of Seeds and Agronomy Feeds the World 

comprising most of the projects.  We also 

had student teams studying celery tissues, 

Brassica genetics, and C-Fern development.  

Take a moment when you can to enjoy our 

This summer, the BSA’s Education booth at 

the Botany conference featured a lollipop pull 

game and fun botanically themed prizes for 

PlantingScience mentors and those suggest-

ing resources for our State-by-State Resources 

website update. Jeremie Morel (right) shows 

off the soybean toy he won after signing up 

to mentor, while 2023 PlantingScience Fellow 

Josh Felton points to the “Ask me about Plant-

ingScience” ribbon he was using to recruit new 

mentors to join the program. 

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Star Projects from this session: https://

plantingscience.org/about/sampleprojects

As always, we extend our sincere thanks to 

the BSA members who assisted these student 

teams as mentors and liaisons—your support 

is what makes our program so special and 

successful!  If you have never mentored 

for us, please check out our website at 

Plantingscience.org and consider signing up.  

You’ll be making a difference in the lives of 

students all over the U.S. and helping to grow 

the next generation of plant scientists!

BSA MASTER PLANT  

SCIENCE TEAM  

RECRUITMENT  

IS UNDERWAY!

As we look ahead to the coming academic 

year, we seek early career scientists interested 

in supporting PlantingScience as liaisons! 

Members of the Master Plant Science Team 

support PlantingScience by helping teachers 

line up mentors for their students and then 

moderating the team conversations as they 

unfold.  This is a great way to contribute to 

the PlantingScience program, and selected 

applicants will receive a free BSA membership, 

discounts on Botany 2025 registration, and 

other perks!  For more information, visit: 

https://plantingscience.org/getinvolved/

joinmpst

BSA EDUCATION  

COMMITTEE UPDATING 

CURRENT RESOURCES 

BY U.S. STATE/TERRITORY 

The Education Committee would like to share 

links to up-to-date floras and field guides, 

academic programs (where in your state can 

people pursue a botany-related degree?), as 

well as organizations and quality, durable web 

resources focused on the botany of the state 

or region. 

The first goal is to create the most 

comprehensive undergraduate student-

appropriate state flora/field guides listed 

for each state. This will be useful resource 

for faculty who want to refer students to their 

local flora, or for botanists moving from one 

region to another. We would like to finalize 

this resource to promote at the Botany 2025 

meeting in Tucson, AZ next summer. 

After a push for attendees to submit their local 

resources during the Botany conference this 

summer, we now have 34 resources submitted 

representing 21 U.S. states. Thanks so much to 

everyone who has contributed to creating this 

useful resource!

We are still seeking more resources to 

complete the update, so please take a moment 

to share resources from your state or region. 

It should take less than 5 minutes to submit 

your resource(s), which will be vetted by the 

Education Committee and then added to the 

botany.org website. To submit a resource, 

please use this link: https://forms.gle/

VjpHPYM9pVKJ4dmh9

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Suggested books are categorized into the 

following topics: Biomedicine, Botany/

Plant Biology, Ecology and Natural History, 

Economic Botany, Evolution, Forensic 

Botany, History of Biology/Biography, 

Mycology (Fungi), Microbiology/Molecular 

Biology, Philosophy of Science/ General 

Science, Phycology (algae), Women in 

Science, Zoological.

If you are teaching or planning to teach courses 

involving these topics (or if you are just 

looking for a new book for your nightstand), 

please check out his curated list—and check 

out Marsh’s article in this issue of the Plant 

Science Bulletin!

Help us fill the map! Submit a resource for your state. We are marking each state as resources are 

submitted. We’re almost halfway to getting all states represented. 

NEW TEACHING  

RESOURCE: ANNOTATED 

LIST OF POPULAR  

BIOLOGY BOOKS

Marsh Sundberg has compiled an extensive 

list of popular biology (mostly botany) 

books with an eye to their use in teaching 

contexts and would like to share these with 

the BSA community. The list (which Marsh 

will occasionally update) is available as a 

Google Doc here: https://docs.google.com/

document/d/1USkGueM93AmqnsFpTNzaE

WDGcrlgXZvL3mtQfJXDrXY/edit

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ROOT AND SHOOT RCN 

TRAVEL AWARDS TO  

BOTANY AND OTHER PLANT 

SCIENCE CONFERENCES 

FOR STUDENT/MENTOR 

PAIRS WITH SACNAS, AISES, 

OR MANRRS AFFILIATIONS

Travel awards for the Botany 2025 conference 

are available for student/mentor pairs through 

the ROOT & SHOOT RCN. The group 

will launch recruitment for these awards in 

September, and applications are due December 

2, 2024. Check out the rootandshoot.org 

website and join the mailing list to be notified 

of upcoming awards and other opportunities 

to participate. 

A panel discussion will be held to kick off the 

recruitment for this award, featuring some of 

the 2024 travel awardees who will talk about 

their experiences and answer questions about 

the program. More details are available on this 

page:  https://rootandshoot.org/plan-ahead-

for-2025-root-shoot-travel-awards/.

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174

STUDENT SECTION

By Josh Felton and  

Benjamin Aderemi Ajayi 

BSA Student Representatives

We are excited to welcome our incoming 

BSA Student Rep, Benjamin Ajayi! Ben’s term 

began the day after the Botany Conference 

and will last for two years from 2024 to 2026. 

Get to know them in the interview below. 

BENJAMIN ADEREMI AJAYI

Ph.D. Student at Florida State University

Getting to Know Your New  

Student Representative

When did you join BSA and what motivated 

you to do so? Will you encourage other 

students to become members and participate 

in the society as well?

In 2020, I joined the BSA because I was de-

termined to expand my research network and 

improve my skills as a botanical researcher. 

My membership in BSA has given me access 

to information and opportunities that have 

helped me grow academically. I can’t wait to 

take advantage of these advantages in order 

to advance my career and significantly ad-

vance the field of botanical study. In addition, 

I am excited to see more people join BSA 

and become involved so that we can all work 

together to create a lively and cooperative 

community inside the Society.

What motivated you to run for the position 

of Student Representative to the Board of 

Directors and what do you plan to do as the 

student representative of BSA?

I joined the BSA back in 2020, which 

became a nurturing ground for my passion 

in plant biodiversity. As time passed, my 

professional journey and BSA’s mission have 

aligned perfectly. The Society has been more 

than just a professional association—it has 

provided a strong network, fostered research 

collaborations, and facilitated career growth. 

Now, at this thrilling point in time, I see a path 

forward where the BSA can expand its impact, 

particularly in enriching the experiences of 

the more student community. As a student 

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PSB 70 (2) 2024

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representative elect, I am committed to 

ongoing efforts to enhance diversity, equity, 

and inclusivity in our Society. It would be a 

privilege to represent and work alongside my 

present and future colleagues in the BSA.

What have you gained from being a 

student member of BSA and why would 

you encourage other students to become 

members and participate in the society? 

During my attendance at a Botany Cconference 

held in Alaska in 2022, I discovered captivating 

new research findings in the fields of ecology 

and evolution. Additionally, I formed valuable 

professional connections, one of which 

ultimately led me to find a PhD advisor. The 

experiences gained during the conference 

had greatly impacted my ongoing doctoral 

research at Florida State University.

What’s your research about and how did you 

discover your research interest?

I am interested in exploring the quantitative 

genetic variation in Florida endemic 

Panhandle lily (Lilium iridollae) for Enhanced 

Management and Conservation Strategies.

What sorts of hobbies do you have?

Reading and traveling.

BOTANY 2024 REVIEW

It was so great seeing so many of your faces 

again in person at Botany 2024 in Grand 

Rapids! Students made up 47% of the total 

conference attendees with 409 total students! 

The student reps worked to encourage 

more interactions between students and the 

botanical community at a variety of events. 

Our first event of the week was the Data 

Analysis and Visualization in R on Sunday, 

where students got the chance to learn the 

basics of R while also analyzing their own 

datasets. The next day, we held the widely 

popular Careers in Botany Luncheon where we 

had 10 panelists for students to connect with. 

We then helped host a very well-attended 

Student Social at the B.O.B.’s House of Music 

and E where we chatted late into the night. 

For those of you who have not filled out the 

Conference Survey, please visit https://www.

surveymonkey.com/r/Botany2024 to help us 

make the conference a better experience for 

you in the future.

Reach us by email or X: Josh (feltonjosh@</a>

icloud.com; @JoshFelton12) or Ben (baa23a@</a>

fsu.edu; @ajayibenmi).

Careers in Botany Luncheon

At the Careers in Botany Luncheon, we had 

nine panelists who represented the spectrum 

of career stages and jobs, with panelists 

working in academia, government, non-

governmental organizations, herbaria, and 

botanical stations. A total of 88 students 

attended! Read more about the panelists at 

the Careers in Botany Profileshttps://botany.

org/home/careers-jobs/careers-in-botany/

careers-in-botany-profiles-2024.html.

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Student Social

Thank you to everyone who attended the 

Student Social! We had a great time getting 

to know each other at the B.O.B. Building in 

Grand Rapids. We look forward to seeing all 

of you again, or getting to know you for the 

first time, at Botany 2025 in Tucson, Arizona! 

Data Analysis and  

Visualization in R

Our first CV writing/website building 

workshop was a great success with 4 

panelists and 20 attendees. This workshop 

introduced basic concepts, syntax, and usage 

in R programming, statistical analysis, and 

visualization techniques for botanical data. In 

the first half of this workshop, we provided an 

overview of R and its basic usage. We covered 

basic information about R syntax and the 

RStudio interface, and we moved through 

how to import CSV files, the structure of data 

frames, how to manipulate data frames, how 

to calculate summary statistics from a data 

frame, and a brief introduction to plotting. In 

the second half of this workshop, we discussed 

and performed statistical analyses and 

visualizations best suited to student datasets. 

We also discussed different data visualizations 

to illustrate both good and bad applications 

of design and visualization principles. By 

the end of the course, students had the 

essential skills of processing, manipulating, 

and analyzing data of various types, creating 

advanced visualizations, generating reports, 

and documenting codes. 

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BEYOND THE  

CONFERENCE 

This year, we continue to work with the BSA 

Early Career Professional Development 

Committee to support students and early 

career professionals. This group is working 

hard to help students and junior botanists 

meet other professionals, find mentors, and 

take advantage of various opportunities. Their 

GRFP workshop and mentorship opportunity 

is aimed at helping students apply for the 

NSF award this year. Their Fulbright Webinar 

discussed the process of applying for Fulbright 

grants, particularly for those beyond the 

student level. The committee also hosted a 

new PI webinar aimed at new PIs, who just 

accepted offers, negotiated terms, and are 

now trying to start a lab and get things going; 

this webinar aims to discuss the logistics, 

challenges, and surprises of setting up a new 

research group and how to navigate through 

one’s first year as a new PI.

They are also putting together another GRFP 

workshop this fall. Keep your eyes out for more 

updates from BSA’s social media accounts and 

newsletters.

Learn more about the committee at: https://

cms.botany.org/home/governance/early-

career-committee.html.

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178

ANNOUNCEMENTS

IN MEMORIAM

DONALD A. LEVIN  

(1939 – 2022)

An Ecogeographic Perspective

Don, a lifelong Cubs fan, was born and raised 

in Chicago. He was the preeminent plant 

evolutionary biologist from the mid-1960s 

to the early 1990s with 170 publications from 

1963 to 1990. In the days when one browsed 

journals in the stacks, Don seemed to have 

a paper in every issue of Evolution and the 

American Naturalist: from 1966 to 1975 he 

published 34 papers in these two journals. 

In addition to 230+ journal articles, Don 

wrote two books: 

The Origin, Expansion, and 

Demise of Plant Species (2000) and The Role 

of Chromosomal Change in Plant Evolution 

(2002). His publications have garnered over 

25,000 citations (h-index=74; https://scholar.

google.com/citations?user=1jE4flwAAAAJ

&hl=en&oi=ao).

Don received his PhD from the University 

of Illinois with Dale Smith, a Charles Heiser 

student. Following his PhD, he took his first 

job at the Chicago campus of the University of 

Illinois (UIC). After 5 years he moved to Yale, 

and two undergrads from UIC, Morris Levy 

and Barbara Schaal, became his first graduate 

students there. After three years at Yale, he 

moved in 1972 to the University of Texas in 

Austin. 

Don’s work has brought about sweeping 

changes in the analysis and understanding 

of plant population biology. Trained as a 

biosystematist, Don’s earliest work lay mostly 

in investigating the frequency and limits 

to interspecific hybridization in the genus 

Phlox, with studies on reproductive isolation 

between species. Gene flow in plants was to 

become his primary interest: in particular, the 

movement of alleles via pollen transfer.

While at UIC, Don had the good fortune to 

hook up with Harold Kerster, a herpetologist 

who was familiar with the population genetic 

methods of Sewall Wright. In a series of 

publications, they forged a new direction 

for plant studies with investigations on 

evolutionary aspects of gene movement both 

between and within species. These set the 

stage for a major shift from studies focused on 

pollination ecology and pollinator syndromes 

to an evolutionary approach via plant 

population genetics. 

Their first study on intraspecific allele 

movements,  Local gene dispersal in Phlox, 

estimated both seed and pollen dispersal and 

estimated neighborhood sizes in the perennial 

Phlox pilosa. They followed this with empirical 

studies in other species, examined effects of 

density and plant height on pollen flow, and 

estimated theoretical neighborhoods and 

effective population sizes under different plant 

breeding systems. They topped this all off with 

their monumental 80-page review, Gene flow 

in seed plants, now with over 1300 citations. 

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Don maintained his interest in the effects 

of gene flow on the evolution of plant 

populations with many studies on the genus 

Phlox but began to branch out with conceptual 

investigations and reviews. His curiosity 

about plant defenses against herbivores 

led to a series of reviews of plant phenolics, 

trichomes, and alkaloids. He was interested in 

the consequences and impacts of polyploidy, 

including how polyploidy could induce novel 

phenotypes (1983), and a series of 11 papers 

between 2006 and 2021 on the importance of 

polyploidy for plant diversity.

His interest in gene flow and the potentials 

for hybridization/reproductive isolation led 

him to further general investigations on the 

nature of plant species and plant speciation. 

Again, not only did he perform empirical 

investigations, but also produced extensive 

reviews and keen syntheses. For example, 

Phlox drummondii occurs in both pink and 

red flower color morphs; the red-flowered 

variety occurs only in the eastern portion of 

its range, notably in areas where it is sympatric 

with the pink-flowered species P. cuspidata

Setting out an array of pink- and red-

flowered drummondii plants in a P. cuspidata 

population, he determined that red-flowered 

plants had significantly lower levels of 

interspecific pollen exchange, suggesting that 

the evolution of the red-flowered morph was 

an example of character displacement (1985). 

Robin Hopkins followed up on this work, 

finding molecular signatures of selection on 

Three generations of the Levin academic lineage at the 2018 Evolution meeting in Austin, TX. 

(Left to right): Carl Schlichting

1

 (F

1

), Don Levin (P), James Mickley

2

 (F

2

), Courtney Murren

3

 (F

2

), 

Nora Mitchell

4

, Stacy Krueger-Hadfield

5

, Tim Moore

6

 (F

2

), and Ben Flanagan.

7

Current affiliations: 1-Prof Emeritus, UConn; 2-Herbarium Director, Oregon State University; 

3-Professor, College of Charleston; 4-Assistant Professor, Univ. of Wisconsin – Eau Claire; 5-Asso-

ciate Professor, Virginia Institute of Marine Science; 6-Director of Statistical Consulting, UConn; 

7-PostDoctoral researcher, D. Bolnick Lab, UConn.

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an allele that intensifies pigmentation in the 

red-flowered morph (2011, 2012).

Don’s was an insatiable quest for new insights. 

Back when it was actually possible, Don read 

all the literature and was very quick to identify 

and deploy useful new techniques, often from 

the zoological literature. In his early career he 

employed analysis of hybridization in plants 

via paper chromatography and was a very 

early plant adopter of allozyme techniques 

(1970). But it was not only techniques that 

he was interested in—he kept an eye on new 

conceptual ideas and applied them to plants, 

e.g., he wrote two papers on developmental 

instability in plants in 1970. He used a 

dominant allele as a means of distinguishing 

effective gene flow from pollen dispersal in 

progeny of Phlox, and he made use of the 

broad range of cultivars of Phlox to understand 

patterns of evolution in annual species. His 

interest in pollen movement led him to be 

among the early investigators of the fate of 

microgametophytes (1975).

Perhaps the best example of his eye for 

innovation was his 1975 paper, Pest pressure 

and recombination systems in plants. At the 

time, there was widespread interest in the 

paradox of sex: what features of sex could 

provide the necessary advantage to individuals 

required to overcome its disadvantages? 

Don proposed that selection pressure to 

avoid parasites, e.g., herbivorous insects, 

would provide significant advantages to the 

production of novel recombinant phenotypes, 

e.g., new phytochemical profiles. In essence, 

this was an application of the Red Queen 

hypothesis, offered by van Valen in 1973 to 

explain patterns of extinction in the fossil 

record. Levin’s formulation was proposed 

several years in advance of similar ideas by 

John Jaenike, WD Hamilton, and Graham 

Bell. 

Don collaborated widely on ‘idea’ papers, most 

notably with an array of animal population 

geneticists (Wyatt Anderson: competition 

for pollinators; Alan Templeton: seed pools; 

Phil Hedrick: population bottlenecks; Alan 

Wilson: evolutionary rates), but also with 

plant population biologist Janis Antonovics 

(density-dependence) and epidemiologist 

Lauren Meyers.

Don had a dozen or so PhD students whose 

research spanned many topics; almost all 

went on to successful academic careers. 

His innovative studies in natural plant 

populations and extensive reviews provided 

the groundwork for the careers of many 

graduate students.

—Carl D. Schlichting, Professor Emeritus, De-

partment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 

University of Connecticut

 

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181

BOOK REVIEWS

Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany  

 

of the Grand Canyon

Date Palm  

Enchanted Forests: The Poetic Construction of a World Before Time

From Despair to Discovery: The Botanical Odyssey of Matthias Jakob Schleiden  

 

and the Dawn of Cell Theory

The Lichen Museum

The Lives of Seaweeds: A Natural History of our Planet’s Seaweeds & other Algae

Brave the Wild River: The 

Untold Story of Two Wom-

en Who Mapped the Bota-

ny of the Grand Canyon 

Melissa L. Sevigny

 2023. ISBN 978-0-393-86823-4 

US$30.00 (cloth); 290 pp. 

Norton, New York

The Hoover Dam was 

completed in 1936, and by 1938 Lake Mead 

was beginning to drown the former riverbank 

of the Colorado River. Elzada Clover, a 

42-year-old recent PhD (1935) and instructor 

in botany at the University of Michigan, 

received a $300 grant to document the plant 

life along the Colorado River. No one had 

ever collected along the famous route of 

John Wesley Powell, and only a few men had 

matched Powell’s feat of floating through the 

Canyon. Clover was undeterred and focused 

on finding new species before they were lost 

forever.
Clover’s dissertation was on cacti of the Rio 

Grande Valley, and her goal was to study all 

the cacti of the southwest. On a collecting trip 

to southern Utah in 1937, Clover met Norman 

Nevills, a lodge owner and river guide who led 

river trips down the San Juan and Colorado 

Rivers as far as Lee’s Ferry. Clover wanted a 

guide for a mule trip into the Grand Canyon 

to collect cacti; Nevills wanted to run the river 

through the Grand Canyon, document the 

experience, and drum up publicity. “In a few 

minutes they laid out the entire harebrained 

scheme.” 
Clover recruited two grad students to the team. 

Eugene Atkinson, skilled in taxidermy and 

studying paleobotany, could collect specimens 

of birds and mammals to sell to help subsidize 

the trip. Lois Jotter, with a master’s in botany 

and working on a PhD in cytogenetics of 

Oenothera, was a friend and former roommate 

with back-country experience.  Nevills built 

three flat-bottom boats and recruited LaPhene 

Harris, a USGS river gauger, and Phil Gibson, 

an amateur photographer from San Francisco. 

The six met on June 12 at Green River—along 

with a reporter from Salt Lake City.  The AP 

was already producing national reports about 

the trip, which was “a mighty poor place for 

women,” even if they were archeologists. 

The public caught the novelty of women 

going down the river, but the press never did 

recognize that they were botanists and they 

were going on a scientific expedition to collect 

plants. Clover made her first collection of 

the trip that day, personal collection number 

1912, a specimen of Opuntia polyantha var. 

hystricina.

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On June 20 they started down river. Both 

Clover and Jotter kept journals and wrote 

letters focusing on the plants they found, the 

river they experienced, and personal dynamics 

within the group. Even before reaching the 

Colorado River four days later, they noted 

the spread of invasive Tamarisk along the 

riverbank.  The group had already established 

a routine.  The women cooked and collected, 

the men steered the boats and rowed. 
Early the next day the brownish Green River 

joined the raging, red Colorado River at 

flood stage, only 4 miles ahead of their first 

rapids in Cataract Canyon. The adventure 

had truly begun, yet that first evening Clover 

recorded collection number 2104, Forestiera 

Neomexicana—nearly 200 collections in 

the first 5 days. They experienced rising 

river, loose boats, raging rapids, capsizing, 

thunderstorms, and landslides while 

collecting plants. The days became a blur and 

personalities began to clash. On July 4, they 

reached the confluence of the San Juan River 

and decided to take a detour to visit Rainbow 

Arch. However, according to their schedule, 

they were due to be at Lees Ferry and the 

Press (and resupply) was waiting anxiously. 

For three days TWA rerouted flights from Los 

Angeles to allow pilots to search Glen Canyon. 

On July 7, a U.S. Coast Guard plane spotted 

them and dropped a message asking them to 

signal if they were the “party of geologists from 

the University of Michigan who are overdue at 

Lees Ferry.” The next day they landed at Lees 

Ferry and journalists had a field day of (mis)

information. Clover arranged for more than 

100 cataloged specimens to be shipped back 

to Michigan, and two of the men left and were 

replaced.
Finally, resupplied and rested, the expedition 

resumed on the 13th with the river still at 

flood stage but dropping fast. Five days later 

they were at the base of Bright Angel Trail 

and again the press was ready. There was no 

mention of botany; Jotter notes in her journal 

that the press has always been interested in 

her as a woman with no mention of botany. 

Clover arranged to have additional collections 

brought up from the river and sent to 

Michigan from Park Headquarters, but they 

were left at the river. (In October, another 

river guide who had met the group at Lees 

Ferry found the presses at the base of Bright 

Angel Trail and sent them back to Michigan.) 

From this point on, Clover continued her 

journal writing but Joiner stopped. At the end 

of the Grand Canyon and coming into the 

filling Lake Mead, Clover comments on barrel 

cacti drowning as the reservoir rises.  
Forty-three days (36 on the water) after 

beginning their expedition, Clover and Joiner 

reach the end and returned to Michigan. 

More than 400 species are in their published 

collection list in the American Midland 

Naturalist, including two type specimens, 

Echinocereus canyonensis and Sclerocactus 

parviflorus, deposited in the U.S. National 

Herbarium. They also co-published on Grand 

Canyon Cacti in the Bulletin of the Torrey 

Botanical Club. Clover retired from Michigan 

as Professor Emeritus of Botany in 1967.  
The importance of this work is significant. 

Sevigny explains “There was simply no other 

comprehensive plant list published prior to the 

closure of Glen Canyon Dam…. Anyone who 

wanted to understand how the vegetation had 

changed…had to refer to Clover and Joiner’s 

work.” (p. 343).
Joiner married mycologist Victor Cutter, Jr. in 

1942, and upon completing her degree joined 

the faculty of the Woman’s College of the 

University of North Carolina. In 1994, at the 

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age of 80, she was invited to join a 12-day raft 

trip to reassess the effect of the Glen Canyon 

Dam on the river.  She accepted the invitation 

because it was about science, according to the 

author, not because she was a woman who 

ran the daunting Colorado River through the 

Grand Canyon.
The author does an excellent job of constructing 

an engaging account of the expedition from the 

botanists’ journals and letters, while putting it 

into both historical and ecological perspective. 

Sevigny’s story adds the names of Clover and 

Joiner to a long list of women, many botanists, 

who have provided information vital to the 

conservation movement (Riley, 1999). It 

should be in every school library and on every 

teaching botanist’s reading list. It would be a 

great gift for budding botanists. 

REFERENCES

Riley, G. 1999.  Women and Nature: Saving the 

Wild West.  University of Nebraska Press, Lin-

coln, NE. 
—Marshall D. Sundberg, Kansas University 

Affiliate and Roe R. Cross Distinguished Pro-

fessor - Emeritus, Emporia State University; 

and Sara B. Sundberg, Professor of History - 

Emeritus, University of Central Missouri

Date Palm

By Al-Khayri, Jameel M., S. Mohan 

Jain, Dennis V. Johnson, and 

Robert R. Krueger (eds)

2023. ISBN 13-9781800620186 

US$100.00 (paper); 638 pp. 

CABI, Boston

This book, part of the Crop 

Production Science in Horticulture series, 

consists of 18 chapters divided between basic 

botany, diversity, and genetic improvement—

all aspects of production from plantation 

establishment through post-harvest 

processing, and future opportunities. Each 

chapter is a stand-alone essay that leads to 

some repetition, particularly of the history 

of date palm cultivation, but this does help 

put every focused chapter into the general 

perspective of date cultivation.  
General botanical interests are covered in the 

first five chapters.  The first chapter provides 

the history of date palm cultivation—arguably 

the first cultivated fruit crop, domesticated in 

the Middle East (Mesopotamia) approximately 

5000 years ago, although exploited prior to 

domestication for perhaps 2000 years before 

that. Archaeobotanical evidence supports 

production expansion to Egypt by 3500 

BP and to West Africa and India by 2000 

BP.  Many current cultural practices were 

developed in antiquity and documented in art, 

writing (code of Hammurabi), and cultural 

artifacts.  The date palm is referred to in the 

sacred texts of all three Abrahamic religions 

and may have been “the tree of life” (Tree of 

Knowledge of Good and Evil in the Garden 

of Eden).  Its ancestry is unclear and many 

traditional varieties still exist. Date is the 

keystone species of desert oases. Today date 

palm production is primarily in developing 

countries where dates remain a primary food 

crop. Traditional oasis production dominates 

North African countries, and plantation 

production dominates in Arabia and Pakistan.

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Botany and physiology are the focus of 

Chapter Two. Some interesting features are 

highlighted.  Although typically a single-

stemmed palm, many western varieties have 

branched individuals.  While notably tolerant 

to heat (and even requiring it), the roots 

require accessible water and include short, 

thick ‘root tubers’, containing mycorrhizae, as 

well as aerating pneumatophores.  Stems are 

protected and strengthened by ensheathing 

leaf bases. The sclerified leaves are persistent 

and contain phytoliths. Surprisingly, stomata 

were not mentioned in the leaf anatomy 

section; only in the chapter on plantation 

establishment and management are the 

occurrence of sunken stomata mentioned. 

The plants are dioecious with inter-foliar 

branched inflorescences.  Pollen affects not 

only embryo and endosperm development, 

but also development of seed and fruit 

(metaxenia).  
With more than 5000 cultivars worldwide, it 

would seem that there is adequate diversity 

for breeding, but there are many limitations.  

While adapted to high temperatures, plants 

are not drought tolerant, and climate 

change is exacerbating even heat stress in 

most production areas.  For decades, tissue 

culture has been used for propagation and to 

assess germplasm, but its success is cultivar-

dependent, and countries tend to have their 

own unique set of favored cultivars along 

with political barriers to protect and prevent 

sharing of genetic resources.  Because different 

varieties tend to dominate production 

in individual countries, it is difficult for 

researchers to focus selection on particular 

desirable fruit characteristics, environmental 

tolerances, and disease and pest resistances 

that will have widespread application.  There 

is a recent shift to using various genetic 

engineering techniques, but they are small in 

scale and typically country-specific.  

As expected, most of the book focuses on 

topics of specific interest to producers, 

elaborating on best practices and case studies 

from different production areas, but three 

of the last chapters are again of general 

interest. Whereas 90% of dates are eaten 

fresh, 10% are processed in various ways. 

At harvest, about 25% of the mass of a fruit 

consists of glucose and another 25% consists 

of fructose. Date paste is a natural sweetener 

used as an alternative to sugar in baking and 

confectionaries. Date syrup is used as a base 

for carbonated beverages and fermented dairy 

products. Byproducts of processing are used 

in alcohol fermentation and animal feed. 
Since antiquity, health benefits have been 

claimed for dates. For instance, the Indian 

Ayurveda system considers date “a wonder 

fruit” (p. 528) used to remedy diseases ranging 

from teeth and gums to a number of dermal 

and respiratory tract problems, infertility, 

and nervous conditions.  This is the basis for 

a variety of modern nutraceutical products 

with anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, 

antitumor, antidiabetic, antioxidant, 

antimicrobial, and cardio-protective 

properties.
Finally, there are a number of nonfood 

products and uses of date palm. Since 

antiquity, the trunk has been used as wood for 

construction. Today, panels are produced to 

provide thermal and sound insulation and as 

a substitute for cork in stylish women’s shoes. 

Leaves are used to manufacture furniture, 

handicrafts, art, and decorations. Of course, 

dates have religious significance: the palms 

used in Christian observance of Palm Sunday, 

breaking the fast on the days of Muslim, 

Ramadan, and lulav used in the Jewish holiday 

Sukkot.    

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This book will be the “bible” for commercial 

date producers around the world. Each 

chapter, written by one or more experts on 

the topic, is a compendium of information. 

Many useful tables and graphs summarize key 

data, and every chapter has an extensive and 

current bibliography.  For this alone it should 

be in every agricultural school library. But 

it also has information of general interest to 

plant anatomists, physiologists, and ecologists; 

ethnobotanists; and agricultural economists. 

It’s pretty expensive, though, so you’ll probably 

want to borrow it from a library.

–Marshall D. Sundberg.  Kansas University 

Affiliate and Roe R. Cross Distinguished Pro-

fessor – Emeritus, Emporia State University, 

Kansas

Enchanted Forests: The 

Poetic Construction of a 

World Before Time

Boria Sax

2023. ISBN: 978-1-78914-790-2

US$35 (Hardcover); 286 pp.

Reaktion Books, London, U.K.

According to Earth.org, 

10,000 years ago forests covered 71% (10.6 

billion hectares) of the Earth’s surface, an 

area that has now decreased to 31% (4.1 

billion hectares). Today, forests the size of 

27 soccer fields are lost every minute. In 

Enchanted Forests: The Poetic Construction 

of a World Before Time, Boria Sax describes 

how humans for the centuries prior to our 

current understanding of forests as biological 

entities “poetically constructed” them as 

“enchanted” places, populated according to 

their fears, and invented mythologies “before 

time” that would explain forests as primeval, 

a condition necessary to conquer in order to 

build civilization. 

A poet and social activist with a background 

in intellectual history, literature, and folklore, 

Sax found his niche in writing about human-

animal interactions. He has written more than 

20 books, among them Avian Illuminations: 

A Cultural History of Birds,  Crow (Animal)

and  Imaginary Animals: The Monstrous, The 

Wondrous, and the Human, all for Reaktion 

Books. He also teaches in the college program 

of the Sing Sing Correctional Facility and the 

online graduate literature program of Mercy 

College. 
Sax describes in his introduction, “Forests 

and Memory,” how he inherited a tract of 

forest in upstate New York in 1985 that had 

been originally purchased by his Russian 

Jewish Communist grandparents who sought 

a safe haven from strife in Europe. Ownership 

prompted him to take a course from the New 

York State Department of Environmental 

Conservation, which earned him a Master 

Forest Owner (MFO) designation.  As such, 

the DEC refers other forest owners to him 

for advice about managing a forest. While 

acknowledging that he does not feel “master 

of anything” or is in any way a professional 

forester, taking on the responsibility of owning 

a forest inspired him to take a deep dive into 

the complex history of human interaction 

with forests.
Sax writes in his Epilogue that “epic problems 

require  us  to  think  on  epic  scales.”  He  has 

done  just  that  to  illuminate  our  ambivalent 

relationships with forests over the centuries. 

The 15 chapters in his book cover every aspect 

of forests in human culture. Like a veritable 

Scheherazade, he tells stories that many of us 

have forgotten in order to document his tour 

of forests, from “The Primeval Forest to the 

“Classical, Rococo, and Gothic Woods” to the 

“Postmodern Forest,” with additional subjects 

like the “The Royal Hunt” and “The Politics 

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of Trees” and “The Man with the Big Axe” 

(Paul Bunyan). Enchanted Forests is as much 

about us as it is about forests. He convincingly 

argues that “the forest is a monstrous double 

of humankind, completely alien in some 

respects and profoundly human in others” (

p. 

15). 

In “Conquest of the Woods,” he tells the story 

of Gilgamesh, the world’s first epic hero and 

a deeply flawed human. In the Sumerian 

version, c. 2100 BCE, Gilgamesh and his 

comrade Enkidu, the world’s first “wild man,” 

trick Hambaba (Hawawa), the guardian spirit 

of the Cedar Forest of Lebanon, to gain access 

to the cedar trees for timber to build their 

city. They rob him of his seven powers for 

protecting nature with worldly gifts and kill 

his seven daughters. In this version Enkidu 

regrets that the forest becomes a wasteland. 

Gilgamesh and Enkidu do not prosper after 

this “transgression.” Sax writes, “This is an 

environmental parable that is as relevant 

today as when it was written” (p. 74).  Their 

deed “is done with all of the fear, hesitation, 

ambivalence, frenzy and remorse that have 

accompanied the conquest of nature, real or 

imagined, up to the present” (p. 74). Finally, 

after hundreds of years of exploitation of 

cedar of Lebanon timber by many countries, 

in 1985 the Committee of the Friends of 

the Cedar Forest planted 200,000 trees to 

begin reforestation. The area is now a World 

Heritage Site with restricted access. 
At the beginning of the chapter “Mythic Beings 

of the Forest,” Sax quotes John Burroughs’ fear 

that his exuberant writing might cause readers 

to be disappointed in their own encounters 

with nature. He asked, “Do such books as mine 

give a wrong impression of nature, and leave 

readers to expect more from a walk or a camp 

in the woods than they usually get?” (p. 49). 

This is an interesting question. After reading 

Sax’s book, readers will carry more insight 

about the human condition into the woods—

with profound regret for how much our fears 

and lifestyles have led to so much loss of forest 

diversity. Sax is an optimist. He believes that 

if we “reject the concept of a primeval past—

we will cease to be dominated by an imagined 

past and more open to the beauty of the 

forest” and recognize their biological value. 

Reaktion Books has beautifully produced 

this wonderful book with a treasure trove 

of illustrations, each one telling a story that 

complements the text.

Elizabeth Lawson (email: www.elizabeth-

winpennylawson.com

)

From Despair to Discovery: 

The Botanical Odyssey of 

Matthias Jakob Schleiden 

and the Dawn of Cell 

Theory

Wallace B. Mendelson, MD

2024.  ISBN: 9781735334394 

US$13.00 (paperback), 104 pp. 

Pythagoras Press

Matthias Schleiden, as in Schleiden and 

Schwann’s Cell Theory, is little known or 

appreciated today other than as the botanical 

co-author of this foundational theory.  In 

part this is because his only biographies are 

in German—the most recent 20 years ago 

and two others more than a century old. 

This is also because his botanical significance 

was “erased” by the broad stroke of two 

other “overthrown” theories.  The author, a 

distinguished retired professor of Psychiatry 

and Clinical Pharmacology at the University 

of Chicago, explains this in his concise, yet 

extensively researched, volume that focuses 

on Schleiden’s upbringing and training, the 

role of mentors and “the context of science 

and culture of his era.” The book is organized 

around eight chronological chapters, each of 

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which focuses on a critical time in Schleiden’s 

life.  The end of the book has separate chapters 

on Schleiden’s personality, Theodore Schwann, 

Schleiden and Schwann, and Schleiden’s 

legacy.  An addendum explains the Cell 

Theory, as developed by Schleiden, Schwann, 

and Virchow (three contemporary students of 

Johannes Peter Müller) and the two discredited 

theories that diminished his stature in botany: 

the Theory of Cell Formation and the Theory 

of Creation of the Plant Embryo. 
The author relies heavily on a diary and family 

letters, various archive collections, and the 

German biographies to sketch the life of a 

well-to-do young German at the end of the 

Romantic age, the early 1800s, struggling to 

find direction for his life. He met, and was 

influenced by, Goethe and Humboldt; he 

studied and practiced law; he studied medicine; 

he attempted suicide (twice ultimately); and 

he found a calling in botany, under Friedrich 

Bartling at the University of Göttingen where 

he was introduced to microscopy. Mendelson 

spends some time trying to understand the 

suicide attempts and put them into perspective 

because while the first is mentioned in several 

accounts and “part of legend,” there is only 

a single published footnote mentioning the 

second.  Schleiden’s correspondence with his 

brother is the primary documentation for the 

latter.  
In hopes of finishing quicker, he moved from 

Göttingen to Berlin where his uncle, Johann 

Horkel, was professor of plant physiology at 

the University.  There he met visiting scientist 

Robert Brown, who encouraged Schleiden 

in his microscopic work, and began work 

under Johannes Peter Müller’s tutelage, along 

with Theodor Schwann who arrived the year 

before.  Schleiden finished in 1837 and began 

looking for a job, but the following October 

he returned to Berlin and had dinner with 

Schwann.  Schleiden had just published his 

paper on phytogenesis where he introduced 

the cell theory for plants, which was certainly 

the topic of conversation.  The author describes 

several second-hand accounts of this famous 

dinner, which ultimately led to publication 

of the Cell Theory in Schwann’s book on the 

similarities in structure and growth of animals 

and plants the following year.  
Schleiden’s search for a suitable position 

eventually brought him to the University of Jena 

where he obtained a Doctorate in Philosophy 

and was hired as Associate Professor of Botany 

in 1840. Here he built his botanical reputation, 

and saw it erased as he refused to acknowledge 

errors in his findings as new research was 

published by others. In 1842 he published 

the first edition of his textbook on Principles 

of Scientific Botany. Mendelson notes that 

Schleiden’s approach vigorously rejected both 

Goethe’s Natural Philosophy and Linnaeus’ 

rigid taxonomic approach.  Instead, he 

emphasized observation and experimentation 

over the course of a plant’s development, and 

this was instrumental in transforming botany 

to a scientific field. Although frequently not 

recognized today, the importance Mendelson 

gives to this contribution is not hyperbole. 

“Schleiden’s textbook was the first of its kind 

that supplied the student with really good 

figures based on careful observations …its 

appearance at once put botany on the footing 

of a natural science in the modern sense of 

the word…Botany appeared all at once as a 

science rich in subject matter….” (Sachs, 1906, 

pp. 191-192).  Nevertheless, current dogma 

recognizes Hoffmeister, not Schleiden, as 

the founder of modern morphological study 

(Kaplan, 2001). Yet Hoffmeister believed that 

Schleiden’s text “is one of the most remarkable 

and characteristic books that ever appeared 

in botany ….” Goebel (1926) said, “It had 

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a profoundly penetrating influence … on 

Hoffmeister and many of his contemporaries.” 

Schleiden tells the reader, “Anyone who has an 

idea of learning botany from the present book, 

may just as well put it at once aside unread: 

for from books botany is not learnt.”  This is 

Schleiden: the first botanical proponent of 

experiential learning and the microscope as a 

research tool that should be used by students. 

Note that Schleiden predates Charles E. 

Bessey, in the United States, by more than 

three decades (Sundberg, 2012).    
Schleiden’s lectures, both in class and in 

public, were popular and four years later he 

published a popular book titled Die Pflanze 

und ihr Leben (The Plant and Its Life). This 

is his only book to have been translated into 

English (Schleiden, 1848, 1853).
By 1846, with evidence accumulating against 

both his theory that the plant embryo forms in 

the pollen tube and his theory that the initial 

plant cell formed by a kind of spontaneous 

generation, along with personal difficulties 

in his family life, he abandoned botanical 

research. In 1862 he left his position at Jena 

and for the rest of his life became a private 

scholar, mostly under the patronage of the 

Grand Dutchess Helene Paulowna in Dresden, 

Dorpat (Russia), Frankfurt, Darmstadt, and 

Wiesbaden. He remained a lively and engaging 

speaker and enthusiastic spokesperson for 

botany.  
Unlike many biographies, this is not simply a 

story about a historical hero and his exploits 

and accomplishments. Rather, it is an inciteful 

perspective on a complex individual who 

had both personal strengths and debilitating 

weaknesses throughout his life, but who 

nevertheless made a profound impact on 

biology and botany.  It is not a simple story 

that would engage most undergraduates, but it 

is filled with insightful details that will satisfy 

a discerning reader interested in the history 

of botany.

REFERENCES

Kaplan, D. R. 2001.  The science of plant mor-

phology: Definition, history, and role in mod-

ern biology. American Journal of Botany 88: 

1711-1741.
Sachs, Julius von.  (Authorized translation by 

Henry E. F. Garnsey, revised by Isaac  Bay-

ley Balfour). 1906.  History of Botany (1530-

1860).  Oxford, Clarendon Press.  
Schleiden, M. J. (translated by Arthur Hen-

frey) 1848. The Plant: A Biography in a Series 

of Popular Lectures.  London, Hippolyte Bail-

liere.
Schleiden, M. J. (edited by Alphonso Wood, 

[First American, from London Edition of 

Henfrey]) 1853. Poetry of the Vegetable 

World; A Popular Exposition of the Science of 

Botany, and its Relations to Man. Cincinnati, 

Moore, Anderson & Company. 
Sundberg, M. D. 2012.  Botanical education in 

the United States: Part 2, The nineteenth cen-

tury – botany for the masses vs. the profes-

sionalization of botany. Plant Science Bulletin 

58: 101-131.
von Goebel, K. (translated by F. O. Bower) 

1926.  Wilhelm Hofmeister: The Work and 

Life of a Nineteenth Century Botanist.  Lon-

don, The Ray Society.
–Marshall D. Sundberg.  Kansas University 

Affiliate and Roe R. Cross Distinguished Pro-

fessor of Biology – Emeritus, Emporia State 

University.

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The Lichen Museum

A. Laurie Palmer

2023. ISBN: 978-1-5179-0867

US$24.95 (paperback); 175 pp.

University of Minnesota Press

Lichens invite speculation. 

In The Lichen Museum A. 

Laurie Palmer writes that 

lichens blur the boundary 

between life and not-life, and she in turn 

attempts to blur the boundary between 

human culture and lichen “culture.” Palmer 

is a professor at the University of California, 

Santa Cruz, who has been described as an 

environmentally engaged artist whose work is 

heavily research based. Her interest in mineral 

extraction resulted in the book In the Aura of 

a Hole: Exploring Sites of Mineral Extraction. 

Palmer has artwork in museums worldwide. 

Extending the museum concept to lichens 

(artwork) in our environment (museum), she 

writes, “The Lichen Museum surrounds you 

as soon you step outside” (p. 63). 
Readers will find this a sophisticated 

nontechnical introduction to lichens in 

general because Palmer has thoroughly 

researched and closely observed lichens. She 

reports having followed their generally slow 

growth with a video camera for years and 

includes color photographs from her travels 

and drawings made with lichen ink. She takes 

readers on a trip to Svalbard in the High Arctic 

to look for sightings of lichen groupings called 

strandflats that appear during periods of melt, 

which leads to a digression on the Global 

Seed Vault in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. She 

generously shares her sources, which includes 

the work of a diverse group of biologists, social 

critics, and philosophers, providing detailed 

endnotes. One example is Rosa Margesin 

et al.’s Psychrophiles: From Biodiversity 

to Biotechnology (2008). We learn that 

cryptoendolithic (rock-inhabiting) lichens 

that live in extremely cold environments are 

called psychrophiles and may live for 10,000 

years or more. In this context she cites the 

work of “the visionary Russian geochemist V. 

I. Vernadsky,” author of The Biosphere (1998), 

“who proposed that mineral and biological 

forces—life and nonlife—together created the 

planet from the start” (p. 73). Some scientists 

have proposed that lichens carried within 

rocks might take life to other planets. She also 

includes thought-provoking passages from 

Kinji Imanishi’s The Japanese View of Nature 

(2002), which offers non-Western perspectives 

about how to best study nature.
In her effort to understand the nature of the 

lichen symbiosis, Palmer includes transcripts 

of Q & A conversations she has had with 

lichenologists like Alan Orange, Paul Whelan, 

Rebecca Yahr, and others, who sometimes 

critique her comments as anthropomorphic, a 

stance that scientists avoid. In her defense, she 

notes that physicists and astronomers have 

often used analogy and metaphor to explain 

scientific phenomena to lay audiences, and 

anthropomorphism is just one lens. There is 

so much diversity in lichens that “the impulse 

to describe by analogy is compelling” (p. 89). 

She includes an entire page listing lichen 

“descriptive species names,” e.g., lipstick 

powderhorn, whiskered jelly, fog fingers, 

earth wrinkles, sunken bloodspot … (p. 82). 

Lichen scientific binomials are named after 

the fungus only, which means that in a sense 

their only names are these metaphorical ones. 

Lichenologist Trevor Goward writes, “Only in 

common names is the human mind actually 

permitted unequivocally to touch the lichen 

thallus” (Goward 2008).
Palmer seems to hope that the open-ended 

nature of lichen lifestyles will temper our 

assumptions about human relationships. 

She notes that Simon Schwendener, who 

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first described the lichen as a dual organism 

composed of a fungus and an alga, assumed 

that one was dominant, even characterizing 

the relationship as one of master-and-slave. In 

fact, current research suggests that neither can 

be called dominant. Palmer believes that the 

lichen is better seen as “making queer alliances 

through cross-kingdom affiliations that do 

not follow ‘normal’ interrelations, sexual or 

otherwise” (p. 32). In her perspective, lichens 

are more like “events—queer and polyamorous, 

or ongoing performances of complex intra-

activity” (p. 84). “Event” actually approximates 

how some lichenologists describe symbionts 

joining to make a lichen. In 2015 she queried 

various Scottish and Irish lichenologists 

about whether “they could consider the algae 

as giving its energies ‘willingly’ rather than 

having them ‘stolen’ by the fungus” (p. 36). 

This wording was rejected as a “narrative.” 

Michael Sims points out that whether talking 

about symbionts or predators, we should 

think in terms of ecological connectivity (p. 

36). The lichen symbiosis may be neither 

mutualistic nor competitive—rather a series 

of chemical reactions between molecules from 

both partners that proceed circumstantially 

and serendipitously. The discussion of how 

biologists and nonbiologists talk about lichens 

is interesting, and her willingness to dialogue 

across the boundary between professional and 

amateur is helpful. Palmer wants to explore 

“how we collectively interpret and describe 

relationality” (pp. 35–36).
Palmer writes that “The Lichen Museum aims 

to lichenize humans, not to anthropomorphize 

lichens” (p. 91). Her significant gifts in 

observation, research, questioning, and 

writing encourage readers to consider lichens 

and humans through a number of lenses. The 

Lichen Museum is a fine book, delivering a 

solid account of lichen biology embedded in 

a framework of cross-disciplinary intellectual 

inquiry.

REFERENCES

Goward, T. 2008. Twelve Readings on the Li-

chen Thallus. I. Face in the Mirror. Evansia 25: 

23–25.
—Elizabeth Lawson (email: www.elizabeth-

winpennylawson.com)

The Lives of Seaweeds: 

A Natural History of our 

Planet’s Seaweeds & 

other Algae 

Julie A. Phillips

2023. ISBN 978-0-691-22855-6 

US$35.00 (hardcover); 288 pp. 

Princeton University Press, 

Princeton, NJ.

This very attractive book, meant as a popular 

general introduction to the algae, will be very 

successful in meeting this goal. Most topics 

are covered in a twin-facing page format 

with a succinct discussion of the concept or 

taxon of interest on the left, facing a stunning 

image (macro/micro, or both) or clear 

diagram illustrative of the text on the right. 

Each essay begins with a bold face abstract 

of the information that will be presented. 

This is followed by three or four paragraphs 

with specific details about main points and 

interesting anecdotes or common applications 

to stimulate the reader. 
In addition to a brief introduction, Phillips 

divides the book into five sections: Evolution, 

Morphology, Life Histories, Ecology, and Algae 

and Humans. The introduction begins with a 

description of the algal world in art, literature, 

and cultural usage in various countries. The 

author then defines seaweeds and algae, 

emphasizing that they are not a natural group 

and in fact are classified in four of the six 

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kingdoms used by the author (see Cavalier-

Smith, 1998).  The sixth kingdom, Chromista, 

was new to me, as a non-phycologist, and is 

the only exclusively algal kingdom. 
Because of its significance, the author devotes 

five units to the symbiotic theory in the 

Evolution section. The first focuses on the work 

of two individuals of whom I was unaware. In 

1883, A. F. W. Schimper suggested chloroplasts 

and their host cells were symbionts; in 1905, 

Constantin Mereschkowski proposed that 

photosynthetic bacteria, engulfed by animal 

cells, gave rise to red, green, and brown algae. 

By 1920 this idea was dismissed as “wild 

speculation.” A second unit is devoted to Lynn 

Margulis’ (Sagan’s) resurrection of this idea 

that we now know as the Symbiotic Theory of 

the Origin of Eukaryotic Cells. (I did not know 

that her manuscript was initially rejected by 15 

journals, but I do remember her being jeered 

by many in the audience when she presented 

her plenary talk at the 1972 AIBS meeting at 

Minnesota—my first national meeting as a 

graduate student.) Variations on this theme, 

responsible for each of the algal divisions, 

including secondary endosymbiosis in red 

algal lineages, are the focus of three additional 

units. Case study examples are given for 

the phyla Cyanobacteria, Rhodophyta, 

Chlorophyta, Euglenozoa, Cryptophyta, 

Bacillariophyta, and classes Dinophyceae, 

Phaeophyceae, and Chrysophyceae.
The section on morphology illustrates 

the megadiversity within each of five 

different algal body plans: unicellular, 

colonial, multicellular, siphonocladous, and 

siphonous. Of special interest are cell wall 

composition and coverings, specialized cells, 

and flagellar types. The distinction between 

siphonocladous and siphonous is unclear, 

both having multinucleate cells resulting 

from repeated mitoses without cytokinesis. 

This problem is exacerbated on p. 80 where 

in the first column the author states “the 

siphon is not a cell” (because the protoplast 

is not compartmentalized) yet in the second 

column “the plant consists of a giant, highly 

differentiated single cell….”  The section ends 

with nine case study examples.
Life History is the shortest section, but Phillips 

does a good job of explaining the salient 

features of the characteristic life cycles of 

various groups. Ecology is the largest section, 

befitting a group that grows in nearly every 

habitat on earth. Unlike typical zoocentric 

textbooks, Phillips emphasizes the importance 

of algae to the ecology of coralgal reefs, giving 

recognition to the fact that algae can make 

up to 85% of the biomass of so-called coral 

reefs, 20% of which are the dinoflagellate algal 

zooanthellae, symbiotic in the bodies of corals 

and many other reef animals.  Of course, kelp 

forests and floating sargassum are well-known 

ecosystems to most of the general public, 

and we hear more and more about toxic algal 

blooms in both fresh and marine waters. I was 

not aware of the number of algal predators to 

be found among the dinoflagellates and even 

some terrestrial green algae.  
The final section, Algae & Humans, links back 

to many of the examples used earlier in the 

book, but now focusing on human impacts, 

such as the increasing occurrence of toxic 

algal blooms with climate change. One of the 

stories I found most interesting was the role of 

English botanist, Dr. Kathleen Drew, who, in 

1949, discovered how to mass-propagate nori 

from spores. This enabled development of 

the commercial Japanese nori industry, today 

worth US$850 million annually.  Less well 

known is the use of algae in production of a 

variety of pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals.  

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The major strength of the book are the quality 

and quantity of photos and photomicrographs 

with informative figure legends.  Unfortunately, 

there was no scale indication on any of the 

images. Another strength was the up-to-date 

nomenclature (along with common names) 

and systematics. A summary table of key 

characteristics used to define major algal 

phyla and groups is at the back of the book, 

along with a useful glossary and index. I was 

disappointed that instead of even a minimal 

bibliography of references mentioned in the 

text, only a list of nine “further readings” is 

addended to the last glossary page. This book 

would be a good “further reading” for the 

diversity section of an introductory biology 

course or an undergraduate plant kingdom 

course.  

REFERENCES

Cavalier-Smith, T. 1998.  A revised six-king-

dom system of life.  Biological Reviews 73: 

203-266. 
–Marshall D. Sundberg, Kansas University 

Affiliate and Roe R. Cross Distinguished Pro-

fessor – Emeritus, Emporia State University, 

Kansas

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