Chris Muir was in town to fill a gaping hole in our understanding of stomate evolution (ok, I’m not very good at this — clearly Chris himself, the author of such papers as “Making pore choices: repeated regime shifts in stomatal ratio“, should be writing this post) with fieldwork at the Tilden Regional Parks Botanical Garden. It wasn’t quite all Arctostaphylos all the time — we were lucky enough to snag him for some hang-out times, and for a seminar on his very exciting upcoming work on local adaption under climate change, and on factors controlling plant investment in stomata. Coming out in fancy journals near you soon. Thanks for visiting, Chris!
We’ve got these vascular cambial variants COVERED!
Joyce strikes again, this time with her article on the evolution of development of the bizarre vascular cambial variants of climbing wood vines (lianas) in the Sapindaceae. Not only is her paper published in fancy-pantsy Current Biology, but she got the cover! Congratulations Joyce!
And she brought some of her spectacular amber fossils of ferns. They are gorgeous, and the detail preserved is amazing–it’s hard to believe that they are 100 million years old! Dr. Li is a renowned paleo- and neo-botanist from the Chinese National Academy of Sciences in Nanjing. Inordinately dedicated and observant readers may also recognize her as one of my gracious and generous hosts in Sichuan.
It is with great sadness that I write to inform you of the passing of Dr. Vicki Funk, who was a friend and collaborator to many of us at UC and a pioneer in the field of plant systematics.
Vicki worked as a curator at the Smithsonian institution in Washington D.C. for 38 years and hosted hundreds of students, post-docs, visitors, and researchers. Her battle with a cancer of unknown primary lasted less than a year and she passed away in her sleep last night.
Here are a few facts about Vicki:
She pioneered phylogenetic systematic thinking in botany. Her Ph.D. thesis on the arborescent sunflower genus Montanoa was the first botany study to explicitly use a cladistic approach.
As a grad student, she drove by herself in a beat-up old pickup truck to Panama and back twice collecting sunflowers.
Her embrace of cladistic thinking drew heat from stalwart pheneticists, but she stood her ground and was vindicated by history, becoming one of the most prominent researchers plant systematists in the US.
As an early career scientist, she switched to driving a VW beetle with a vanity license plate that read CLADIST.
She dedicated her career to the study of Compositae, the sunflowers and daisies and was at the peak of her accomplishments when she received her diagnosis.
The results of decades of hard work by Vicki and colleagues to resolve relationships among Compositae, one of the most diverse plant families, were published in PNAS earlier this year.
She was an important advocate for the importance of natural history collections to biodiversity research and conservation.
She was a hard working, extremely generous, and light hearted person who was admired around the world.
She could make a room full of people roll over laughing.
In one of her last text messages to me, she asked if I would bring her some Montanoa from the field. She may have wanted to revisit study of the genus that was the subject of her PH.D. with new molecular methods. Or she might have just wanted to see and smell the flowers one more time. Knowing Vicki, it was probably both.
The culmination of the now nine-year-long One Thousand Plant Transcriptomes (1KP) project was published today in Nature, and apparently will be on the cover of the print edition next week. The 1KP project has revolutionized the availability of molecular data for ferns (among many other things), and facilitated dozens if not hundreds of other research projects so far. It’s been a pleasure and an honor to have been able to participate in this project, and it’s very exciting to have the capstone completed and available.
The illustrious Michael Sundue came to visit! Much research was done (TED, TED, and TED), and we co-enabled our co-dependency with fieldwork for a day in Marin County (thanks John for the itinerary!). We managed a total of 17 fern species, one lycophyte, and 12 mussels. Not bad! Oh, and Sol Food. Fantastic.
Addendum–fieldwork isn’t without its risks…. Damn you Toxicodendron!!!
The Google doodle today celebrates the famous Berkeley botanist Ynes Mexía, who collected ~150,000 specimens and did much of her fieldwork alone, which is all the more impressive given that she didn’t start her botanical careers until she was in her 50s!
See more about her here, and here, and if that piques your interest, we are lucky enough to have her archives here at UC/JEPS.
Dr. Dori, Curator. Of paleobotany, at the Perot Museum!
This has been a summer of good news for senior Rlabites, and I’ve been belated in sharing. First, congratulations to Dori for landing the position of Paleobotanist at the Perot Museum! Not only is this an amazing position in a super cool museum, but it’s back in Dori’s native Texas, close to family. She couldn’t be happier, and we couldn’t be prouder!
Sraavya, superstar, spent her summer at an internship at Stanford working on cell signalling in the immune response to viral infection. Of course she did!! The Rothfels lab is very proud!