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History of botany

The history of botany examines the human effort to understand life on Earth by tracing the historical development of the discipline of botany—that part of natural science dealing with organisms traditionally treated as plants.

Some traditional tools of botanical science

Rudimentary botanical science began with empirically based plant lore passed from generation to generation in the oral traditions of paleolithic hunter-gatherers. The first writings that show human curiosity about plants themselves, rather than the uses that could be made of them, appear in ancient Greece and ancient India. In Ancient Greece, the teachings of Aristotle's student Theophrastus at the Lyceum in ancient Athens in about 350 BC are considered the starting point for Western botany. In ancient India, the Vṛkṣāyurveda, attributed to Parashara, is also considered one of the earliest texts to describe various branches of botany.[1]

In Europe, botanical science was soon overshadowed by a medieval preoccupation with the medicinal properties of plants that lasted more than 1000 years. During this time, the medicinal works of classical antiquity were reproduced in manuscripts and books called herbals. In China and the Arab world, the Greco-Roman work on medicinal plants was preserved and extended.

In Europe, the Renaissance of the 14th–17th centuries heralded a scientific revival during which botany gradually emerged from natural history as an independent science, distinct from medicine and agriculture. Herbals were replaced by floras: books that described the native plants of local regions. The invention of the microscope stimulated the study of plant anatomy, and the first carefully designed experiments in plant physiology were performed. With the expansion of trade and exploration beyond Europe, the many new plants being discovered were subjected to an increasingly rigorous process of naming, description, and classification.

Progressively more sophisticated scientific technology has aided the development of contemporary botanical offshoots in the plant sciences, ranging from the applied fields of economic botany (notably agriculture, horticulture and forestry), to the detailed examination of the structure and function of plants and their interaction with the environment over many scales from the large-scale global significance of vegetation and plant communities (biogeography and ecology) through to the small scale of subjects like cell theory, molecular biology and plant biochemistry.

Introduction edit

Botany (Greek Βοτάνη - grass, fodder; Medieval Latin botanicus – herb, plant)[2] and zoology are, historically, the core disciplines of biology whose history is closely associated with the natural sciences chemistry, physics and geology. A distinction can be made between botanical science in a pure sense, as the study of plants themselves, and botany as applied science, which studies the human use of plants. Early natural history divided pure botany into three main streams morphology-classification, anatomy and physiology – that is, external form, internal structure, and functional operation.[3] The most obvious topics in applied botany are horticulture, forestry and agriculture although there are many others like weed science, plant pathology, floristry, pharmacognosy, economic botany and ethnobotany which lie outside modern courses in botany. Since the origin of botanical science there has been a progressive increase in the scope of the subject as technology has opened up new techniques and areas of study. Modern molecular systematics, for example, entails the principles and techniques of taxonomy, molecular biology, computer science and more.

Within botany, there are a number of sub-disciplines that focus on particular plant groups, each with their own range of related studies (anatomy, morphology etc.). Included here are: phycology (algae), pteridology (ferns), bryology (mosses and liverworts) and palaeobotany (fossil plants) and their histories are treated elsewhere (see side bar). To this list can be added mycology, the study of fungi, which were once treated as plants, but are now ranked as a unique kingdom.

Ancient knowledge edit

Nomadic hunter-gatherer societies passed on, by oral tradition, what they knew (their empirical observations) about the different kinds of plants that they used for food, shelter, poisons, medicines, for ceremonies and rituals etc. The uses of plants by these pre-literate societies influenced the way the plants were named and classified—their uses were embedded in folk-taxonomies, the way they were grouped according to use in everyday communication.[4] The nomadic life-style was drastically changed when settled communities were established in about twelve centres around the world during the Neolithic Revolution which extended from about 10,000 to 2500 years ago depending on the region. With these communities came the development of the technology and skills needed for the domestication of plants and animals and the emergence of the written word provided evidence for the passing of systematic knowledge and culture from one generation to the next.[5]

Plant lore and plant selection edit

 
A Sumerian harvester's sickle dated to 3000 BC

During the Neolithic Revolution, plant knowledge increased most obviously through the use of plants for food and medicine. All of today's staple foods were domesticated in prehistoric times as a gradual process of selection of higher-yielding varieties took place, possibly unknowingly, over hundreds to thousands of years. Legumes were cultivated on all continents but cereals made up most of the regular diet: rice in East Asia, wheat and barley in the Middle east, and maize in Central and South America. By Greco-Roman times, popular food plants of today, including grapes, apples, figs, and olives, were being listed as named varieties in early manuscripts.[6] Botanical authority William Stearn has observed that "cultivated plants are mankind's most vital and precious heritage from remote antiquity".[7]

It is also from the Neolithic, in about 3000 BC, that we glimpse the first known illustrations of plants[8] and read descriptions of impressive gardens in Egypt.[9] However protobotany, the first pre-scientific written record of plants, did not begin with food; it was born out of the medicinal literature of Egypt, China, Mesopotamia and India.[10] Botanical historian Alan Morton notes that agriculture was the occupation of the poor and uneducated, while medicine was the realm of socially influential shamans, priests, apothecaries, magicians and physicians, who were more likely to record their knowledge for posterity.[11]

Early botany edit

Ancient India edit

An early example of ancient Indian plant classification is found in the Rigveda, a collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns from about 3700–3100 BP. Plants are divided into vṛska (trees), osadhi (herbs useful to humans) and virudha (creepers), with further subdivisions. The sacred Hindu text Atharvaveda divides plants into eight classes: visakha (spreading branches), manjari (leaves with long clusters[clarification needed]), sthambini (bushy plants), prastanavati (which expands); ekasṛnga (those with monopodial growth), pratanavati (creeping plants), amsumati (with many stalks), and kandini (plants with knotty joints). The Taittiriya Samhita classifies the plant kingdom into vṛksa, vana and druma (trees), visakha (shrubs with spreading branches), sasa (herbs), amsumali (spreading plant), vratati (climber), stambini (bushy plant), pratanavati (creeper), and alasala (spreading on the ground). Other examples of early Indian taxonomy include Manusmriti, the Law book of Hindus, which classifies plants into eight major categories. Elaborate taxonomies also occur in the Charaka Samhitā, Sushruta Samhita and Vaisesika.[12]

Classical antiquity edit

Classical Greece edit

 

Ancient Athens, of the 6th century BC, was the busy trade centre at the confluence of Egyptian, Mesopotamian and Minoan cultures at the height of Greek colonisation of the Mediterranean. The philosophical thought of this period ranged freely through many subjects. Empedocles (490–430 BC) foreshadowed Darwinian evolutionary theory in a crude formulation of the mutability of species and natural selection.[13] The physician Hippocrates (460–370 BC) avoided the prevailing superstition of his day and approached healing by close observation and the test of experience. At this time, a genuine non-anthropocentric curiosity about plants emerged. The major works written about plants extended beyond the description of their medicinal uses to the topics of plant geography, morphology, physiology, nutrition, growth and reproduction.[14]

Theophrastus and the origin of botanical science edit

 
Statue of Theophrastus 371–287 BC
"Father of Botany"
Palermo Botanic Gardens

Foremost among the scholars studying botany was Theophrastus of Eressus (Greek: Θεόφραστος; c. 371–287 BC) who has been frequently referred to as the "Father of Botany". He was a student and close friend of Aristotle (384–322 BC) and succeeded him as head of the Lyceum (an educational establishment like a modern university) in Athens with its tradition of peripatetic philosophy. Aristotle's special treatise on plants — θεωρία περὶ φυτῶν — is now lost, although there are many botanical observations scattered throughout his other writings (these have been assembled by Christian Wimmer in Phytologiae Aristotelicae Fragmenta, 1836) but they give little insight into his botanical thinking.[15] The Lyceum prided itself in a tradition of systematic observation of causal connections, critical experiment and rational theorizing. Theophrastus challenged the superstitious medicine employed by the physicians of his day, called rhizotomi, and also the control over medicine exerted by priestly authority and tradition.[16] Together with Aristotle, he had tutored Alexander the Great whose military conquests were carried out with all the scientific resources of the day, the Lyceum garden probably containing many botanical trophies collected during his campaigns as well as other explorations in distant lands.[17] It was in this garden where he gained much of his plant knowledge.[18]

Enquiry into Plants and Causes of Plants edit
 
The frontispiece to an illustrated 1644 edition of Historia Plantarum
 
Wild asparagus (Asparagus aphyllus) native to the Levant

Theophrastus's major botanical works were the Enquiry into Plants (Historia Plantarum) and Causes of Plants (Causae Plantarum) which were his lecture notes for the Lyceum.[19] The opening sentence of the Enquiry reads like a botanical manifesto:

We must consider the distinctive characters and the general nature of plants from the point of view of their morphology, their behaviour under external conditions, their mode of generation and the whole course of their life.

— Theophrastus, Enquiry into Plants

The Enquiry is 9 books of "applied" botany dealing with the forms and classification of plants and economic botany, examining the techniques of agriculture (relationship of crops to soil, climate, water and habitat) and horticulture. He described some 500 plants in detail, often including descriptions of habitat and geographic distribution, and he recognised some plant groups that can be recognised as modern-day plant families. Some names he used, like Crataegus, Daucus and Asparagus have persisted until today. His second book Causes of Plants covers plant growth and reproduction (akin to modern physiology).[20] Like Aristotle, he grouped plants into "trees", "undershrubs", "shrubs" and "herbs" but he also made several other important botanical distinctions and observations. He noted that plants could be annuals, perennials and biennials, they were also either monocotyledons or dicotyledons and he also noticed the difference between determinate and indeterminate growth and details of floral structure including the degree of fusion of the petals, position of the ovary and more.[21][22] These lecture notes of Theophrastus comprise the first clear exposition of the rudiments of plant anatomy, physiology, morphology and ecology — presented in a way that would not be matched for another eighteen centuries.[23]

Pedanius Dioscorides edit

 
Dioscorides and Heuresis

A full synthesis of ancient Greek pharmacology was compiled in De Materia Medica c. 60 AD by Pedanius Dioscorides (c. 40-90 AD) who was a Greek physician with the Roman army. This work proved to be the definitive text on medicinal herbs, both oriental and occidental, for fifteen hundred years until the dawn of the European Renaissance being slavishly copied again and again throughout this period.[24] Though rich in medicinal information with descriptions of about 600 medicinal herbs, the botanical content of the work was extremely limited.[25]

Ancient Rome edit

 
Gallic-Roman harvester. Relief from Trier

The Romans contributed little to the foundations of botanical science laid by the ancient Greeks, but made a sound contribution to our knowledge of applied botany as agriculture. In works titled De Re Rustica, four Roman writers contributed to a compendium Scriptores Rei Rusticae, published from the Renaissance on, which set out the principles and practice of agriculture. These authors were Cato (234–149 BC), Varro (116–27 BC) and, in particular, Columella (4–70 AD) and Palladius (4th century AD).[26]

Pliny the Elder edit

Roman encyclopaedist Pliny the Elder (23–79 AD) deals with plants in Books 12 to 26 of his 37-volume highly influential work Naturalis Historia in which he frequently quotes Theophrastus but with a lack of botanical insight although he does, nevertheless, draw a distinction between true botany on the one hand, and farming and medicine on the other.[27] It is estimated that at the time of the Roman Empire between 1300 and 1400 plants had been recorded in the West.[28]

Ancient China edit

In ancient China, lists of different plants and herb concoctions for pharmaceutical purposes date back to at least the time of the Warring States (481 BC-221 BC). Many Chinese writers over the centuries contributed to the written knowledge of herbal pharmaceutics. The Chinese dictionary-encyclopaedia Erh Ya probably dates from about 300 BC and describes about 334 plants classed as trees or shrubs, each with a common name and illustration. The Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD) includes the notable work of the Huangdi Neijing and the famous pharmacologist Zhang Zhongjing.

Medieval knowledge edit

Medicinal plants of the early Middle Ages edit

 
An Arabic copy of Avicenna's Canon of Medicine dated 1593

In Western Europe, after Theophrastus, botany passed through a bleak period of 1800 years when little progress was made and, indeed, many of the early insights were lost. As Europe entered the Middle Ages (5th to 15th centuries), China, India and the Arab world enjoyed a golden age.

Medieval China edit

Chinese philosophy had followed a similar path to that of the ancient Greeks. Between 100 and 1700 AD, many new works on pharmaceutical botany were produced. The 11th century scientists and statesmen Su Song and Shen Kuo compiled learned treatises on natural history, emphasising herbal medicine.[29] Among the pharmaceutical botany works were encyclopaedic accounts and treatises compiled for the Chinese imperial court. These were free of superstition and myth with carefully researched descriptions and nomenclature; they included cultivation information and notes on economic and medicinal uses — and even elaborate monographs on ornamental plants. But there was no experimental method and no analysis of the plant sexual system, nutrition, or anatomy.[30]

Medieval India edit

In India, simple artificial plant classification systems of the Rigveda, Atharvaveda and Taittiriya Samhita became more botanical with the work of Parashara (c. 400 – c. 500 AD), the author of Vṛksayurveda (the science of life of trees). He made close observations of cells and leaves and divided plants into Dvimatrka (Dicotyledons) and Ekamatrka (Monocotyledons). The dicotyledons were further classified into groupings (ganas) akin to modern floral families: Samiganiya (Fabaceae), Puplikagalniya (Rutaceae), Svastikaganiya (Cruciferae), Tripuspaganiya (Cucurbitaceae), Mallikaganiya (Apocynaceae), and Kurcapuspaganiya (Asteraceae).[31][32] Important medieval Indian works of plant physiology include the Prthviniraparyam of Udayana, Nyayavindutika of Dharmottara, Saddarsana-samuccaya of Gunaratna, and Upaskara of Sankaramisra.

Islamic Golden Age edit

 
Physician preparing an elixir, from an Arabic version of the De Materia Medica by Dioscorides

The 400-year period from the 9th to 13th centuries AD was the Islamic Renaissance, a time when Islamic culture and science thrived. Greco-Roman texts were preserved, copied and extended although new texts always emphasised the medicinal aspects of plants. Kurdish biologist Ābu Ḥanīfah Āḥmad ibn Dawūd Dīnawarī (828–896 AD) is known as the founder of Arabic botany; his Kitâb al-nabât ('Book of Plants') describes 637 species, discussing plant development from germination to senescence and including details of flowers and fruits.[33] The Mutazilite philosopher and physician Ibn Sina (Avicenna) (c. 980–1037 AD) was another influential figure, his The Canon of Medicine being a landmark in the history of medicine treasured until the Enlightenment.[34]

The Silk Road edit

Following the fall of Constantinople (1453), the newly expanded Ottoman Empire welcomed European embassies in its capital, which in turn became the sources of plants from those regions to the east which traded with the empire. In the following century, twenty times as many plants entered Europe along the Silk Road as had been transported in the previous two thousand years, mainly as bulbs. Others were acquired primarily for their alleged medicinal value. Initially, Italy benefited from this new knowledge, especially Venice, which traded extensively with the East. From there, these new plants rapidly spread to the rest of Western Europe.[35] By the middle of the sixteenth century, there was already a flourishing export trade of various bulbs from Turkey to Europe.[36]

The Age of Herbals edit

 
Dioscorides', De Materia Medica, Byzantium, 15th century.

In the European Middle Ages of the 15th and 16th centuries, the lives of European citizens were based around agriculture but when printing arrived, with movable type and woodcut illustrations, it was not treatises on agriculture that were published, but lists of medicinal plants with descriptions of their properties or "virtues". These first plant books, known as herbals showed that botany was still a part of medicine, as it had been for most of ancient history.[34] Authors of herbals were often curators of university gardens,[37] and most herbals were derivative compilations of classic texts, especially De Materia Medica.

 
European white waterlily Nymphaea alba, from Herbarium Vivae Eicones

The authors of the oldest herbals of the 16th century, Brunfels, Fuchs, Bock, Mattioli and others, regarded plants mainly as the vehicles of medicinal virtues. ... Their chief object was to discover the plants employed by the physicians of antiquity, the knowledge of which had been lost in later times. The corrupt texts of Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Pliny and Galen had been in many respects improved and illustrated by ... Italian commentators of the 15th and ... early part of the 16th century; but there was one imperfection which no criticism could remove,—the highly unsatisfactory descriptions of the old authors or the entire absence of descriptions.[38]

It was moreover at first assumed that the plants described by the Greek physicians must grow wild in Germany also, and generally in the rest of Europe; each author identified a different native plant with some one mentioned by Dioscorides or Theophrastus or others, and thus there arose [in] the 16th century a confusion of nomenclature.[38]

However, the need for accurate and detailed plant descriptions meant that some herbals were more botanical than medicinal.

 
Two Lavandula species. Woodcut from Hieronymus Bock's Kreütterbuch (2nd ed.) 1546

A great advance was made by the first German composers of herbals, who went straight to nature, described the wild plants growing around them and had figures of them carefully executed in wood. Thus was made the first beginning of a really scientific examination of plants, though the aims pursued were not yet truly scientific, for no questions were proposed as to the nature of plants, their organisation or mutual relations; the only point of interest was the knowledge of individual forms and of their medicinal virtues.[39]

— Julius von Sachs, History of Botany

German Otto Brunfels's (1464–1534) Herbarum Vivae Icones (1530) contained descriptions of about 47 species new to science combined with accurate illustrations. His fellow countryman Hieronymus Bock's (1498–1554) Kreutterbuch of 1539 described plants he found in nearby woods and fields and these were illustrated in the 1546 edition.[40] However, it was Valerius Cordus (1515–1544) who pioneered the formal botanical description that detailed both flowers and fruits, some anatomy including the number of chambers in the ovary, and the type of ovule placentation. He also made observations on pollen and distinguished between inflorescence types.[40] His five-volume Historia Plantarum was published about 18 years after his early death aged 29 in 1561–1563. In England, William Turner (1515–1568) in his Libellus De Re Herbaria Novus (1538) published names, descriptions and localities of many native British plants[41] and in Holland Rembert Dodoens (1517–1585), in Stirpium Historiae (1583), included descriptions of many new species from the Netherlands in a scientific arrangement.[42]

Herbals contributed to botany by setting in train the science of plant description, classification, and botanical illustration. Up to the 17th century, botany and medicine were one and the same but those books emphasising medicinal aspects eventually omitted the plant lore to become modern pharmacopoeias; those that omitted the medicine became more botanical and evolved into the modern compilations of plant descriptions we call Floras. These were often backed by specimens deposited in a herbarium which was a collection of dried plants that verified the plant descriptions given in the Floras. The transition from herbal to Flora marked the final separation of botany from medicine.[43]

The Renaissance and Age of Enlightenment (1550–1800) edit

 
A 1647 portrait of a scholar holding a book of plant diagrams.

The revival of learning during the European Renaissance renewed interest in plants. The church, feudal aristocracy and an increasingly influential merchant class that supported science and the arts, now jostled in a world of increasing trade. Sea voyages of exploration returned botanical treasures to the large public, private, and newly established botanic gardens, and introduced an eager population to novel crops, drugs and spices from Asia, the East Indies and the New World.

The number of scientific publications increased. In England, for example, scientific communication and causes were facilitated by learned societies like Royal Society (founded in 1660) and the Linnaean Society (founded in 1788): there was also the support and activities of botanical institutions like the Jardin du Roi in Paris, Chelsea Physic Garden, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, and the Oxford and Cambridge Botanic Gardens, as well as the influence of renowned private gardens and wealthy entrepreneurial nurserymen.[44] By the early 17th century the number of plants described in Europe had risen to about 6000.[45] The 18th century Enlightenment values of reason and science coupled with new voyages to distant lands instigating another phase of encyclopaedic plant identification, nomenclature, description and illustration, "flower painting" possibly at its best in this period of history.[46][47] Plant trophies from distant lands decorated the gardens of Europe's powerful and wealthy in a period of enthusiasm for natural history, especially botany (a preoccupation sometimes referred to as "botanophilia") that is never likely to recur.[48] Often such exotic new plant imports (primarily from Turkey), when they first appeared in print in English, lacked common names in the language.[47]

During the 18th century, botany was one of the few sciences considered appropriate for genteel educated women. Around 1760, with the popularization of the Linnaean system, botany became much more widespread among educated women who painted plants, attended classes on plant classification, and collected herbarium specimens although emphasis was on the healing properties of plants rather than plant reproduction which had overtones of sexuality. Women began publishing on botanical topics and children's books on botany appeared by authors like Charlotte Turner Smith. Cultural authorities argued that education through botany created culturally and scientifically aware citizens, part of the thrust for 'improvement' that characterised the Enlightenment. However, in the early 19th century with the recognition of botany as an official science, women were again excluded from the discipline.[49] Compared to other sciences, however, in botany the number of female researchers, collectors, or illustrators has always been remarkably high.[50]

Botanical gardens and herbaria edit

 
A 16th century print of the Botanical Garden of Padova (Garden of the Simples) — the oldest academic botanic garden that is still in its original location
 
Preparing a herbarium specimen

Public and private gardens have always been strongly associated with the historical unfolding of botanical science.[51] Early botanical gardens were physic gardens, repositories for the medicinal plants described in the herbals. As they were generally associated with universities or other academic institutions, the plants were also used for study. The directors of these gardens were eminent physicians with an educational role as "scientific gardeners" and it was staff of these institutions that produced many of the published herbals.

The botanical gardens of the modern tradition were established in northern Italy, the first being at Pisa (1544), founded by Luca Ghini (1490–1556). Although part of a medical faculty, the first chair of materia medica, essentially a chair in botany, was established in Padua in 1533. Then in 1534, Ghini became Reader in materia medica at Bologna University, where Ulisse Aldrovandi established a similar garden in 1568 (see below).[52] Collections of pressed and dried specimens were called a hortus siccus (garden of dry plants) and the first accumulation of plants in this way (including the use of a plant press) is attributed to Ghini.[53][54] Buildings called herbaria housed these specimens mounted on card with descriptive labels. Stored in cupboards in systematic order, they could be preserved in perpetuity and easily transferred or exchanged with other institutions, a taxonomic procedure that is still used today.

By the 18th century, the physic gardens had been transformed into "order beds" that demonstrated the classification systems that were being devised by botanists of the day — but they also had to accommodate the influx of curious, beautiful and new plants pouring in from voyages of exploration that were associated with European colonial expansion.

From Herbal to Flora edit

Plant classification systems of the 17th and 18th centuries now related plants to one another and not to man, marking a return to the non-anthropocentric botanical science promoted by Theophrastus over 1500 years before. In England, various herbals in either Latin or English were mainly compilations and translations of continental European works, of limited relevance to the British Isles. This included the rather unreliable work of Gerard (1597).[55] The first systematic attempt to collect information on British plants was that of Thomas Johnson (1629),[56][57] who was later to issue his own revision of Gerard's work (1633–1636).[58]

However, Johnson was not the first apothecary or physician to organise botanical expeditions to systematise their local flora. In Italy, Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522 – 1605) organised an expedition to the Sibylline mountains in Umbria in 1557, and compiled a local Flora. He then began to disseminate his findings amongst other European scholars, forming an early network of knowledge sharing "molti amici in molti luoghi" (many friends in many places),[59][60] including Charles de l'Écluse (Clusius) (1526 – 1609) at Montpellier and Jean de Brancion at Malines. Between them, they started developing Latin names for plants, in addition to their common names.[61] The exchange of information and specimens between scholars was often associated with the founding of botanical gardens (above), and to this end Aldrovandi founded one of the earliest at his university in Bologna, the Orto Botanico di Bologna in 1568.[52]

In France, Clusius journeyed throughout most of Western Europe, making discoveries in the vegetable kingdom along the way. He compiled Flora of Spain (1576), and Austria and Hungary (1583). He was the first to propose dividing plants into classes.[62][63] Meanwhile, in Switzerland, from 1554, Conrad Gessner (1516 – 1565) made regular explorations of the Swiss Alps from his native Zurich and discovered many new plants. He proposed that there were groups or genera of plants. He said that each genus was composed of many species and that these were defined by similar flowers and fruits. This principle of organization laid the groundwork for future botanists. He wrote his important Historia Plantarum shortly before his death. At Malines, in Flanders he established and maintained the botanical gardens of Jean de Brancion from 1568 to 1573, and first encountered tulips.[64][65]

This approach coupled with the new Linnaean system of binomial nomenclature resulted in plant encyclopaedias without medicinal information called Floras that meticulously described and illustrated the plants growing in particular regions.[66] The 17th century also marked the beginning of experimental botany and application of a rigorous scientific method, while improvements in the microscope launched the new discipline of plant anatomy whose foundations, laid by the careful observations of Englishman Nehemiah Grew[67] and Italian Marcello Malpighi, would last for 150 years.[68]

Botanical exploration edit

More new lands were opening up to European colonial powers, the botanical riches being returned to European botanists for description. This was a romantic era of botanical explorers, intrepid plant hunters and gardener-botanists. Significant botanical collections came from: the West Indies (Hans Sloane (1660–1753)); China (James Cunningham); the spice islands of the East Indies (Moluccas, George Rumphius (1627–1702)); China and Mozambique (João de Loureiro (1717–1791)); West Africa (Michel Adanson (1727–1806)) who devised his own classification scheme and forwarded a crude theory of the mutability of species; Canada, Hebrides, Iceland, New Zealand by Captain James Cook's chief botanist Joseph Banks (1743–1820).[69]

Classification and morphology edit

 
Portrait of Carl Linnaeus by Alexander Roslin, 1775

By the middle of the 18th century, the botanical booty resulting from the era of exploration was accumulating in gardens and herbaria – and it needed to be systematically catalogued. This was the task of the taxonomists, the plant classifiers.

Plant classifications have changed over time from "artificial" systems based on general habit and form, to pre-evolutionary "natural" systems expressing similarity using one to many characters, leading to post-evolutionary "natural" systems that use characters to infer evolutionary relationships.[70]

Italian physician Andrea Caesalpino (1519–1603) studied medicine and taught botany at the University of Pisa for about 40 years eventually becoming Director of the Botanic Garden of Pisa from 1554 to 1558. His sixteen-volume De Plantis (1583) described 1500 plants and his herbarium of 260 pages and 768 mounted specimens still remains. Caesalpino proposed classes based largely on the detailed structure of the flowers and fruit;[63] he also applied the concept of the genus.[71] He was the first to try and derive principles of natural classification reflecting the overall similarities between plants and he produced a classification scheme well in advance of its day.[72] Gaspard Bauhin (1560–1624) produced two influential publications Prodromus Theatrici Botanici (1620) and Pinax (1623). These brought order to the 6000 species now described and in the latter he used binomials and synonyms that may well have influenced Linnaeus's thinking. He also insisted that taxonomy should be based on natural affinities.[73]

 
Cover page of Species Plantarum of Carl Linnaeus published in 1753

To sharpen the precision of description and classification, Joachim Jung (1587–1657) compiled a much-needed botanical terminology which has stood the test of time. English botanist John Ray (1623–1705) built on Jung's work to establish the most elaborate and insightful classification system of the day.[74] His observations started with the local plants of Cambridge where he lived, with the Catalogus Stirpium circa Cantabrigiam Nascentium (1860) which later expanded to his Synopsis Methodica Stirpium Britannicarum, essentially the first British Flora. Although his Historia Plantarum (1682, 1688, 1704) provided a step towards a world Flora as he included more and more plants from his travels, first on the continent and then beyond. He extended Caesalpino's natural system with a more precise definition of the higher classification levels, deriving many modern families in the process, and asserted that all parts of plants were important in classification. He recognised that variation arises from both internal (genotypic) and external environmental (phenotypic) causes and that only the former was of taxonomic significance. He was also among the first experimental physiologists. The Historia Plantarum can be regarded as the first botanical synthesis and textbook for modern botany. According to botanical historian Alan Morton, Ray "influenced both the theory and the practice of botany more decisively than any other single person in the latter half of the seventeenth century".[75] Ray's family system was later extended by Pierre Magnol (1638–1715) and Joseph de Tournefort (1656–1708), a student of Magnol, achieved notoriety for his botanical expeditions, his emphasis on floral characters in classification, and for reviving the idea of the genus as the basic unit of classification.[76]

Above all it was Swedish Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778), who eased the task of plant cataloguing. He adopted a sexual system of classification using stamens and pistils as important characters. Among his most important publications were Systema Naturae (1735), Genera Plantarum (1737), and Philosophia Botanica (1751) but it was in his Species Plantarum (1753) that he gave every species a binomial thus setting the path for the future accepted method of designating the names of all organisms. Linnaean thought and books dominated the world of taxonomy for nearly a century.[77] His sexual system was later elaborated by Bernard de Jussieu (1699–1777) whose nephew Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu (1748–1836) extended it yet again to include about 100 orders (present-day families).[78] Frenchman Michel Adanson (1727–1806) in his Familles des Plantes (1763, 1764), apart from extending the current system of family names, emphasized that a natural classification must be based on a consideration of all characters, even though these may later be given different emphasis according to their diagnostic value for the particular plant group. Adanson's method has, in essence, been followed to this day.[79]

18th century plant taxonomy bequeathed to the 19th century a precise binomial nomenclature and botanical terminology, a system of classification based on natural affinities, and a clear idea of the ranks of family, genus and species — although the taxa to be placed within these ranks remains, as always, the subject of taxonomic research.

Anatomy edit

 
Robert Hooke's microscope which he described in the 1665 Micrographia: he coined the biological use of the term cell

In the first half of the 18th century, botany was beginning to move beyond descriptive science into experimental science. Although the microscope was invented in 1590, it was only in the late 17th century that lens grinding provided the resolution needed to make major discoveries. Antony van Leeuwenhoek is a notable example of an early lens grinder who achieved remarkable resolution with his single-lens microscopes. Important general biological observations were made by Robert Hooke (1635–1703) but the foundations of plant anatomy were laid by Italian Marcello Malpighi (1628–1694) of the University of Bologna in his Anatome Plantarum (1675) and Royal Society Englishman Nehemiah Grew (1628–1711) in his The Anatomy of Plants Begun (1671) and Anatomy of Plants (1682). These botanists explored what is now called developmental anatomy and morphology by carefully observing, describing and drawing the developmental transition from seed to mature plant, recording stem and wood formation. This work included the discovery and naming of parenchyma and stomata.[80]

Physiology edit

In plant physiology, research interest was focused on the movement of sap and the absorption of substances through the roots. Jan Helmont (1577–1644) by experimental observation and calculation, noted that the increase in weight of a growing plant cannot be derived purely from the soil, and concluded it must relate to water uptake.[81] Englishman Stephen Hales[82] (1677–1761) established by quantitative experiment that there is uptake of water by plants and a loss of water by transpiration and that this is influenced by environmental conditions: he distinguished "root pressure", "leaf suction" and "imbibition" and also noted that the major direction of sap flow in woody tissue is upward. His results were published in Vegetable Staticks (1727) He also noted that "air makes a very considerable part of the substance of vegetables".[83] English chemist Joseph Priestley (1733–1804) is noted for his discovery of oxygen (as now called) and its production by plants. Later, Jan Ingenhousz (1730–1799) observed that only in sunlight do the green parts of plants absorb air and release oxygen, this being more rapid in bright sunlight while, at night, the air (CO2) is released from all parts. His results were published in Experiments upon vegetables (1779) and with this the foundations for 20th century studies of carbon fixation were laid. From his observations, he sketched the cycle of carbon in nature even though the composition of carbon dioxide was yet to be resolved.[84] Studies in plant nutrition had also progressed. In 1804, Nicolas-Théodore de Saussure's (1767–1845) Recherches Chimiques sur la Végétation was an exemplary study of scientific exactitude that demonstrated the similarity of respiration in both plants and animals, that the fixation of carbon dioxide includes water, and that just minute amounts of salts and nutrients (which he analyzed in chemical detail from plant ash) have a powerful influence on plant growth.[85]

Plant sexuality edit

 
Diagram showing the sexual parts of a mature flower

It was Rudolf Camerarius (1665–1721) who was the first to establish plant sexuality conclusively by experiment. He declared in a letter to a colleague, dated 1694 and titled De Sexu Plantarum Epistola, that "no ovules of plants could ever develop into seeds from the female style and ovary without first being prepared by the pollen from the stamens, the male sexual organs of the plant".[86]

Some time later, the German academic and natural historian Joseph Kölreuter (1733–1806) extended this work by noting the function of nectar in attracting pollinators and the role of wind and insects in pollination. He also produced deliberate hybrids, observed the microscopic structure of pollen grains and how the transfer of matter from the pollen to the ovary inducing the formation of the embryo.[87]

 
Angiosperm (flowering plant) life cycle showing alternation of generations

One hundred years after Camerarius, in 1793, Christian Sprengel (1750–1816) broadened the understanding of flowers by describing the role of nectar guides in pollination, the adaptive floral mechanisms used for pollination, and the prevalence of cross-pollination, even though male and female parts are usually together on the same flower.[88]

Much was learned about plant sexuality by unravelling the reproductive mechanisms of mosses, liverworts and algae. In his Vergleichende Untersuchungen of 1851, Wilhelm Hofmeister (1824–1877) starting with the ferns and bryophytes demonstrated that the process of sexual reproduction in plants entails an "alternation of generations" between sporophytes and gametophytes.[89] This initiated the new field of comparative morphology which, largely through the combined work of William Farlow (1844–1919), Nathanael Pringsheim (1823–1894), Frederick Bower, Eduard Strasburger and others, established that an "alternation of generations" occurs throughout the plant kingdom.[90]

Nineteenth-century foundations of modern botany edit

In about the mid-19th century, scientific communication changed. Until this time, ideas were largely exchanged by reading the works of authoritative individuals who dominated in their field: these were often wealthy and influential "gentlemen scientists". Now, research was reported by the publication of "papers" that emanated from research "schools" that promoted the questioning of conventional wisdom. This process had started in the late 18th century when specialist journals began to appear.[91] Even so, botany was greatly stimulated by the appearance of the first "modern" textbook, Matthias Schleiden's (1804–1881) Grundzüge der Wissenschaftlichen Botanik, published in English in 1849 as Principles of Scientific Botany.[92] By 1850, an invigorated organic chemistry had revealed the structure of many plant constituents.[93] Although the great era of plant classification had now passed, the work of description continued. Augustin de Candolle (1778–1841) succeeded Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu in managing the botanical project Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis (1824–1841) which involved 35 authors: it contained all the dicotyledons known in his day, some 58000 species in 161 families, and he doubled the number of recognized plant families, the work being completed by his son Alphonse (1806–1893) in the years from 1841 to 1873.[94]

Plant geography and ecology edit

 
Alexander von Humboldt 1769–1859 painted by Joseph Stieler in 1843

The opening of the 19th century was marked by an increase in interest in the connection between climate and plant distribution. Carl Willdenow (1765–1812) examined the connection between seed dispersal and distribution, the nature of plant associations and the impact of geological history. He noticed the similarities between the floras of N America and N Asia, the Cape and Australia, and he explored the ideas of "centre of diversity" and "centre of origin". German Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859) and Frenchman Aime Bonpland (1773–1858) published a massive and highly influential 30 volume work on their travels; Robert Brown (1773–1852) noted the similarities between the floras of S Africa, Australia and India, while Joakim Schouw (1789–1852) explored more deeply than anyone else the influence on plant distribution of temperature, soil factors, especially soil water, and light, work that was continued by Alphonse de Candolle (1806–1893).[95] Joseph Hooker (1817–1911) pushed the boundaries of floristic studies with his work on Antarctica, India and the Middle East with special attention to endemism. August Grisebach (1814–1879) in Die Vegetation der Erde (1872) examined physiognomy in relation to climate and in America geographic studies were pioneered by Asa Gray (1810–1888).[96]

Physiological plant geography, or ecology, emerged from floristic biogeography in the late 19th century as environmental influences on plants received greater recognition. Early work in this area was synthesised by Danish professor Eugenius Warming (1841–1924) in his book Plantesamfund (Ecology of Plants, generally taken to mark the beginning of modern ecology) including new ideas on plant communities, their adaptations and environmental influences. This was followed by another grand synthesis, the Pflanzengeographie auf Physiologischer Grundlage of Andreas Schimper (1856–1901) in 1898 (published in English in 1903 as Plant-geography upon a physiological basis translated by W. R. Fischer, Oxford: Clarendon press, 839 pp).[97]

Anatomy edit

 
Plant cells with visible chloroplasts

During the 19th century, German scientists led the way towards a unitary theory of the structure and life-cycle of plants. Following improvements in the microscope at the end of the 18th century, Charles Mirbel (1776–1854) in 1802 published his Traité d'Anatomie et de Physiologie Végétale and Johann Moldenhawer (1766–1827) published Beyträge zur Anatomie der Pflanzen (1812) in which he describes techniques for separating cells from the middle lamella. He identified vascular and parenchymatous tissues, described vascular bundles, observed the cells in the cambium, and interpreted tree rings. He found that stomata were composed of pairs of cells, rather than a single cell with a hole.[98]

Anatomical studies on the stele were consolidated by Carl Sanio (1832–1891), who described the secondary tissues and meristem including cambium and its action. Hugo von Mohl (1805–1872) summarized work in anatomy leading up to 1850 in Die Vegetabilische Zelle (1851) but this work was later eclipsed by the encyclopaedic comparative anatomy of Heinrich Anton de Bary in 1877. An overview of knowledge of the stele in root and stem was completed by Van Tieghem (1839–1914) and of the meristem by Carl Nägeli (1817–1891). Studies had also begun on the origins of the carpel and flower that continue to the present day.[99]

Water relations edit

The riddle of water and nutrient transport through the plant remained. Physiologist Von Mohl explored solute transport and the theory of water uptake by the roots using the concepts of cohesion, transpirational pull, capillarity and root pressure.[93] German dominance in the field of physiology was underlined by the publication of the definitive textbook on plant physiology synthesising the work of this period, Sachs' Vorlesungen über Pflanzenphysiologie of 1882. There were, however, some advances elsewhere such as the early exploration of geotropism (the effect of gravity on growth) by Englishman Thomas Knight, and the discovery and naming of osmosis by Frenchman Henri Dutrochet (1776–1847).[100] The American Dennis Robert Hoagland (1884–1949) discovered the dependence of nutrient absorption and translocation by the plant on metabolic energy.[101]

Cytology edit

The cell nucleus was discovered by Robert Brown in 1831. Demonstration of the cellular composition of all organisms, with each cell possessing all the characteristics of life, is attributed to the combined efforts of botanist Matthias Schleiden and zoologist Theodor Schwann (1810–1882) in the early 19th century, although Moldenhawer had already shown that plants were wholly cellular with each cell having its own wall and Julius von Sachs had shown the continuity protoplasm between cell walls.[102]

From 1870 to 1880, it became clear that cell nuclei are never formed anew but always derived from the substance of another nucleus. In 1882, Flemming observed the longitudinal splitting of chromosomes in the dividing nucleus and concluded that each daughter nucleus received half of each of the chromosomes of the mother nucleus: then by the early 20th century, it was found that the number of chromosomes in a given species is constant. With genetic continuity confirmed and the finding by Eduard Strasburger that the nuclei of reproductive cells (in pollen and embryo) have a reducing division (halving of chromosomes, now known as meiosis) the field of heredity was opened up. By 1926, Thomas Morgan was able to outline a theory of the gene and its structure and function. The form and function of plastids received similar attention, the association with starch being noted at an early date.[103] With observation of the cellular structure of all organisms and the process of cell division and continuity of genetic material, the analysis of the structure of protoplasm and the cell wall as well as that of plastids and vacuoles – what is now known as cytology, or cell theory became firmly established.

Later, the cytological basis of the gene-chromosome theory of heredity extended from about 1900–1944 and was initiated by the rediscovery of Gregor Mendel's (1822–1884) laws of plant heredity first published in 1866 in Experiments on Plant Hybridization and based on cultivated pea, Pisum sativum: this heralded the opening up of plant genetics. The cytological basis for gene-chromosome theory was explored through the role of polyploidy and hybridization in speciation and it was becoming better understood that interbreeding populations were the unit of adaptive change in biology.[104]

Developmental morphology and evolution edit

Until the 1860s, it was believed that species had remained unchanged through time: each biological form was the result of an independent act of creation and therefore absolutely distinct and immutable. But the hard reality of geological formations and strange fossils needed scientific explanation. Charles Darwin's Origin of Species (1859) replaced the assumption of constancy with the theory of descent with modification. Phylogeny became a new principle as "natural" classifications became classifications reflecting, not just similarities, but evolutionary relationships. Wilhelm Hofmeister established that there was a similar pattern of organization in all plants expressed through the alternation of generations and extensive homology of structures.[105]

Polymath German intellect Johann Goethe (1749–1832) had interests and influence that extended into botany. In Die Metamorphose der Pflanzen (1790), he provided a theory of plant morphology (he coined the word "morphology") and he included within his concept of "metamorphosis" modification during evolution, thus linking comparative morphology with phylogeny. Though the botanical basis of his work has been challenged, there is no doubt that he prompted discussion and research on the origin and function of floral parts.[106] His theory probably stimulated the opposing views of German botanists Alexander Braun (1805–1877) and Matthias Schleiden who applied the experimental method to the principles of growth and form that were later extended by Augustin de Candolle (1778–1841).[107]

Carbon fixation (photosynthesis) edit

 
Photosynthesis splits water to liberate O2 and fixes CO2 into sugar

At the start of the 19th century, the idea that plants could synthesize almost all their tissues from atmospheric gases had not yet emerged. The energy component of photosynthesis, the capture and storage of the Sun's radiant energy in carbon bonds (a process on which all life depends) was first elucidated in 1847 by Mayer, but the details of how this was done would take many more years.[108] Chlorophyll was named in 1818 and its chemistry gradually determined, to be finally resolved in the early 20th century. The mechanism of photosynthesis remained a mystery until the mid-19th century when Sachs, in 1862, noted that starch was formed in green cells only in the presence of light, and in 1882, he confirmed carbohydrates as the starting point for all other organic compounds in plants.[109] The connection between the pigment chlorophyll and starch production was finally made in 1864 but tracing the precise biochemical pathway of starch formation did not begin until about 1915.

Nitrogen fixation edit

Significant discoveries relating to nitrogen assimilation and metabolism, including ammonification, nitrification and nitrogen fixation (the uptake of atmospheric nitrogen by symbiotic soil microorganisms) had to wait for advances in chemistry and bacteriology in the late 19th century and this was followed in the early 20th century by the elucidation of protein and amino-acid synthesis and their role in plant metabolism. With this knowledge, it was then possible to outline the global nitrogen cycle.[110]

Twentieth century edit

 
Thin layer chromatography is used to separate components of chlorophyll

20th century science grew out of the solid foundations laid by the breadth of vision and detailed experimental observations of the 19th century. A vastly increased research force was now rapidly extending the horizons of botanical knowledge at all levels of plant organization from molecules to global plant ecology. There was now an awareness of the unity of biological structure and function at the cellular and biochemical levels of organisation. Botanical advance was closely associated with advances in physics and chemistry with the greatest advances in the 20th century mainly relating to the penetration of molecular organization.[111] However, at the level of plant communities it would take until mid century to consolidate work on ecology and population genetics.[112] By 1910, experiments using labelled isotopes were being used to elucidate plant biochemical pathways, to open the line of research leading to gene technology. On a more practical level, research funding was now becoming available from agriculture and industry.

Molecules edit

In 1903, Chlorophylls a and b were separated by thin layer chromatography then, through the 1920s and 1930s, biochemists, notably Hans Krebs (1900–1981) and Carl (1896–1984) and Gerty Cori (1896–1957) began tracing out the central metabolic pathways of life. Between the 1930s and 1950s, it was determined that ATP, located in mitochondria, was the source of cellular chemical energy and the constituent reactions of photosynthesis were progressively revealed. Then, in 1944, DNA was extracted for the first time.[113] Along with these revelations, there was the discovery of plant hormones or "growth substances", notably auxins, (1934) gibberellins (1934) and cytokinins (1964)[114] and the effects of photoperiodism, the control of plant processes, especially flowering, by the relative lengths of day and night.[115]

Following the establishment of Mendel's laws, the gene-chromosome theory of heredity was confirmed by the work of August Weismann who identified chromosomes as the hereditary material. Also, in observing the halving of the chromosome number in germ cells he anticipated work to follow on the details of meiosis, the complex process of redistribution of hereditary material that occurs in the germ cells. In the 1920s and 1930s, population genetics combined the theory of evolution with Mendelian genetics to produce the modern synthesis. By the mid-1960s, the molecular basis of metabolism and reproduction was firmly established through the new discipline of molecular biology. Genetic engineering, the insertion of genes into a host cell for cloning, began in the 1970s with the invention of recombinant DNA techniques and its commercial applications applied to agricultural crops followed in the 1990s. There was now the potential to identify organisms by molecular "fingerprinting" and to estimate the times in the past when critical evolutionary changes had occurred through the use of "molecular clocks".

Computers, electron microscopes and evolution edit

 
Electron microscope constructed by Ernst Ruska in 1933

Increased experimental precision combined with vastly improved scientific instrumentation was opening up exciting new fields. In 1936, Alexander Oparin (1894–1980) demonstrated a possible mechanism for the synthesis of organic matter from inorganic molecules. In the 1960s, it was determined that the Earth's earliest life-forms treated as plants, the cyanobacteria known as stromatolites, dated back some 3.5 billion years.[116]

Mid-century transmission and scanning electron microscopy presented another level of resolution to the structure of matter, taking anatomy into the new world of "ultrastructure".[117]

New and revised "phylogenetic" classification systems of the plant kingdom were produced by several botanists, including August Eichler. A massive 23 volume Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien was published by Adolf Engler & Karl Prantl over the period 1887 to 1915. Taxonomy based on gross morphology was now being supplemented by using characters revealed by pollen morphology, embryology, anatomy, cytology, serology, macromolecules and more.[118] The introduction of computers facilitated the rapid analysis of large data sets used for numerical taxonomy (also called taximetrics or phenetics). The emphasis on truly natural phylogenies spawned the disciplines of cladistics and phylogenetic systematics. The grand taxonomic synthesis An Integrated System of Classification of Flowering Plants (1981) of American Arthur Cronquist (1919–1992) was superseded when, in 1998, the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group published a phylogeny of flowering plants based on the analysis of DNA sequences using the techniques of the new molecular systematics which was resolving questions concerning the earliest evolutionary branches of the angiosperms (flowering plants). The exact relationship of fungi to plants had for some time been uncertain. Several lines of evidence pointed to fungi being different from plants, animals and bacteria – indeed, more closely related to animals than plants. In the 1980s-90s, molecular analysis revealed an evolutionary divergence of fungi from other organisms about 1 billion years ago – sufficient reason to erect a unique kingdom separate from plants.[119]

Biogeography and ecology edit

 
Map of terrestrial biomes classified by vegetation type

The publication of Alfred Wegener's (1880–1930) theory of continental drift 1912 gave additional impetus to comparative physiology and the study of biogeography while ecology in the 1930s contributed the important ideas of plant community, succession, community change, and energy flows.[120] From 1940 to 1950, ecology matured to become an independent discipline as Eugene Odum (1913–2002) formulated many of the concepts of ecosystem ecology, emphasising relationships between groups of organisms (especially material and energy relationships) as key factors in the field. Building on the extensive earlier work of Alphonse de Candolle, Nikolai Vavilov (1887–1943) from 1914 to 1940 produced accounts of the geography, centres of origin, and evolutionary history of economic plants.[121]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Prasad, G. P. (Jan–Jun 2016). "Vŗkşăyurvĕda of Parăśara--an ancient treatise on plant science". Bulletin of the Indian Institute of History of Medicine (Hyderabad). 36 (1): 63–74.
  2. ^ Morton 1981, p. 49
  3. ^ Sachs 1890, p. v
  4. ^ Walters 1981, p. 3
  5. ^ Morton 1981, p. 2
  6. ^ Stearn 1986.
  7. ^ Stearn 1965, pp. 279–91, 322–41
  8. ^ Reed 1942, p. 3
  9. ^ Morton 1981, p. 5
  10. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 7–29
  11. ^ Morton 1981, p. 15
  12. ^ Morton 1981, p. 12
  13. ^ Morton 1981, p. 23
  14. ^ Morton 1981, p. 25
  15. ^ Vines in Oliver 1913, p. 8
  16. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 29–43
  17. ^ Singer 1923, p. 98
  18. ^ Reed 1942, p. 34
  19. ^ Morton 1981, p. 42
  20. ^ Reed 1942, p. 37
  21. ^ Thanos 2005.
  22. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 36–43
  23. ^ Harvey-Gibson 1919, p. 9
  24. ^ Singer 1923, p. 101
  25. ^ Morton 1981, p. 68
  26. ^ Morton 1981, p. 69
  27. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 70–1
  28. ^ Sengbusch 2004.
  29. ^ Needham et al 1986.
  30. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 58–64
  31. ^ Tiwari 2003.
  32. ^ Majumdar 1982, pp. 356–411
  33. ^ Fahd 1996, p. 815
  34. ^ a b Morton 1981, p. 82
  35. ^ Pavord 2005, pp. 11–13
  36. ^ Pavord 1999.
  37. ^ Sachs 1890, p. 19
  38. ^ a b Sachs 1890, p. 3.
  39. ^ Sachs 1890, pp. 3–4.
  40. ^ a b Reed 1942, p. 65
  41. ^ Arber 1986, pp. 119–124
  42. ^ Reed 1942, p. 68
  43. ^ Arber in Oliver 1913, pp. 146–246
  44. ^ Henrey 1975, pp. 631–46
  45. ^ Morton 1981, p. 145
  46. ^ Buck 2017.
  47. ^ a b Jacobson 2014.
  48. ^ Williams 2001.
  49. ^ Shteir 1996, Prologue.
  50. ^ Women in Botany
  51. ^ Spencer & Cross 2017, pp. 43–93
  52. ^ a b Conan 2005, p. 96.
  53. ^ Sachs 1890, p. 18
  54. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 120–4
  55. ^ Gerard 1597
  56. ^ Johnson 1629
  57. ^ Pavord 2005, pp. 5–10
  58. ^ Johnson 1636
  59. ^ Conan 2005, pp. 121, 123.
  60. ^ Bethencourt & Egmond 2007.
  61. ^ Pavord 2005, p. 16
  62. ^ Helmsley & Poole 2004.
  63. ^ a b Meyer 1854–57
  64. ^ Willes 2011, p. 76.
  65. ^ Goldgar 2007, p. 34.
  66. ^ Arber 1986, p. 270
  67. ^ Arber in Oliver 1913, pp. 44–64
  68. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 178–80
  69. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 110–1
  70. ^ Woodland 1991, pp. 372–408
  71. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 71–3
  72. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 130–40
  73. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 147–8
  74. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 82–3
  75. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 196–216
  76. ^ Woodland 1991, pp. 372–375
  77. ^ Stafleu 1971, p. 79
  78. ^ Reed 1942, p. 102
  79. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 301–11
  80. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 88–9
  81. ^ Reed 1942, p. 91
  82. ^ Darwin in Oliver 1913, pp. 65–83
  83. ^ Morton 1981, p. 250
  84. ^ Reed 1942, p. 107
  85. ^ Morton 1981, p. 338
  86. ^ Reed 1942, p. 96
  87. ^ Reed 1942, p. 97
  88. ^ Reed 1942, p. 98
  89. ^ Reed 1942, p. 138
  90. ^ Reed 1942, p. 140
  91. ^ Reynolds Green 1909, p. 502
  92. ^ Morton 1981, p. 377
  93. ^ a b Morton 1981, p. 388
  94. ^ Morton 1981, p. 372
  95. ^ Morton 1981, p. 364
  96. ^ Morton 1981, p. 413
  97. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 126–33
  98. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 368–370
  99. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 386–395
  100. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 390–1
  101. ^ Hoagland, D R; Hibbard, P L; Davis, A R (1926). "The influence of light, temperature, and other conditions on the ability of Nitella cells to concentrate halogens in the cell sap". Journal of General Physiology. 10 (1): 121–126. doi:10.1085/jgp.10.1.121. PMC 2140878. PMID 19872303.
  102. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 381–2
  103. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 154–75
  104. ^ Morton 1981, p. 453
  105. ^ Reynolds Green 1909, pp. 7–10, 501
  106. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 343–6
  107. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 371–3
  108. ^ Reed 1942, p. 207
  109. ^ Reed 1942, p. 197
  110. ^ Reed 1942, pp. 214–40
  111. ^ Morton 1981, p. 448
  112. ^ Morton 1981, p. 451
  113. ^ Morton 1981, p. 460
  114. ^ Morton 1981, p. 461
  115. ^ Morton 1981, p. 464
  116. ^ Morton 1981, p. 454
  117. ^ Morton 1981, p. 459
  118. ^ Morton 1981, p. 456
  119. ^ Bruns 2006.
  120. ^ Morton 1981, p. 457
  121. ^ de Candolle 1885.

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  • Reynolds Green, Joseph (1909). History of Botany 1860–1900. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Sachs, Julius von (1875). Geschichte der Botanik vom 16. Jahrhundert bis 1860. Munich: Oldenbourg. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  • Sachs, Julius von (1890) [1875]. Geschichte der Botanik vom 16. Jahrhundert bis 1860 [History of botany (1530-1860)]. translated by Henry E. F. Garnsey, revised by Isaac Bayley Balfour. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.30585. Retrieved 13 December 2015., see also History of botany (1530-1860) at Google Books
  • Green, J Reynolds. A history of botany 1860-1900; being a continuation of Sachs History of botany, 1530-1860. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  • Stace, Clive A. (1989) [1980]. Plant taxonomy and biosystematics (2nd. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521427852. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  • Vavilov, Nicolai I. (1992). Origin and Geography of Cultivated Plants. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-40427-3.
  • Williams, Roger L. (2001). Botanophilia in Eighteenth-Century France: The Spirit of the Enlightenment. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-0-7923-6886-1.
  • Winterborne, Jeffrey (2005). Hydroponics: indoor horticulture. Guildford: Pukka Press. ISBN 978-0-9550112-0-7. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
  • Woodland, Dennis W. (1991). Contemporary Plant Systematics. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-205-12182-3.

Antiquity edit

  • Baumann, Hellmut (1993) [1986]. Die griechische Pflanzenwelt in Mythos, Kunst und Literatur [The Greek Plant World in Myth, Art, and Literature]. trans. William Thomas Stearn, Eldwyth Ruth Stearn. Timber Press. ISBN 9780881922318.
  • Hardy, Gavin; Totelin, Laurence (2016). Ancient Botany. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 9781134386796.
  • Raven, J.E. (2000). Stearn, W.T. (ed.). Plants and plant lore in ancient Greece. Oxford: Leopard's Press. ISBN 9780904920406.
  • Thanos, Costas A. (2005). (PDF). In Karamanos, A.J.; Thanos C.A. (eds.). Biodiversity and Natural Heritage in the Aegean, Proceedings of the Conference 'Theophrastus 2000' (Eressos - Sigri, Lesbos, July 6–8, 2000). Athens: Fragoudis. pp. 23–45. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-03. Retrieved 2009-11-11.

British botany edit

Cultural studies edit

  • Bethencourt, Francisco; Egmond, Florike, eds. (2007). Cultural exchange in Early Modern Europe. Volume 3 Correspondence and Cultural Exchange in Europe, 1400-1700. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 9780521845489. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  • Fara, Patricia (2003). Sex, Botany and Empire: The Story of Carl Linnaeus and Joseph Banks. Cambridge: Icon Books. ISBN 9781840464443. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  • George, Sam (2007). Botany, sexuality, and women's writing 1760-1830 : from modest shoot to forward plant. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719076978. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  • Goldgar, Anne (2007). Tulipmania: money, honor, and knowledge in the Dutch golden age. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226301303. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  • Kelley, Theresa M. (2012). Clandestine marriage botany and Romantic culture. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9781421407609. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  • Page, Judith W.; Smith, Elise L. (2011). Women, literature, and the domesticated landscape: England's disciples of Flora, 1780-1870. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521768658. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  • Pavord, Anna (1999). The Tulip. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7475-4296-4.
  • Pavord, Anna (2005). The naming of names: the search for order in the world of plants. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59691-071-3.
  • Shteir, Ann B. (1996). Cultivating women, cultivating science: Flora's daughters and botany in England, 1760-1860. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6175-8. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  • Thomas, Vivian; Faircloth, Nicki (2014). Shakespeare's Plants and Gardens: A Dictionary. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4725-5858-9.

Botanical art and illustration edit

  • Kusukawa, Sachiko (2012). Picturing the Book of Nature: Image, Text, and Argument in Sixteenth-Century Human Anatomy and Medical Botany. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-46529-6.
  • Lefèvre, Wolfgang; Renn, Jürgen; Schoepflin, Urs, eds. (2003). The Power of Images in Early Modern Science. Basel: Birkhäuser Basel. ISBN 9783034880992.
  • Tomasi, Lucia Tongiorgi; Hirschauer, Gretchen A. (2002). The flowering of Florence: botanical art for the Medici. 3 March-27 May (PDF) (Exhibition catalogue). Washington: National Gallery of Art. ISBN 978-0-85331-857-6.

Historical sources edit

  • Gerard, John (1597). The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes. London: John Norton. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  • Johnson, Thomas, ed. (1636). Herball, or Generall Historie of Plantes, gathered by John Gerarde. London: Adam Islip, Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  • Johnson, Thomas (1629). Iter Plantarum Investigationis ergo susceptum a decem Sociis in Agrum Cantianum, anno Dom. 1629, Julii 13. London.
  • Fuchs, Leonhart (1642). De Historia Stirpium Commentarii Insignes. Basileae: In officina Isingriniana. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  • Pulteney, Richard (1790). Historical and biographical sketches of the progress of botany in England from its origin to the introduction of the Linnæan system. London: T. Cadell.
  • Penny Cyclopedia (1828–1843). The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. London: Charles Knight.
  • de Candolle, Alphonse (1885) [1882]. Origine des Plantes Cultivées [Origin of Cultivated Plants] (in French). New York: Appleton. Retrieved 19 February 2015.

Bibliographic sources edit

  • Johnston, Stanley H. (1992). The Cleveland Herbal, Botanical, and Horticultural Collections: A Descriptive Bibliography of Pre-1830 Works from the Libraries of the Holden Arboretum, the Cleveland Medical Library Association, and the Garden Center of Greater Cleveland. Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-433-9.
  • Stafleu, Frans A.; Cowan, Richard S. (1976–1988). Taxonomic literature: a selective guide to botanical publications and collections with dates, commentaries and types. 7 vols. + VIII supplements (2nd ed.). Utrecht: Bohn, Scheltema & Holkema. ISBN 9789031302246.

Articles edit

  • Bruns, Tom (2006). "Evolutionary biology: a kingdom revised". Nature. 443 (7113): 758–61. Bibcode:2006Natur.443..758B. doi:10.1038/443758a. PMID 17051197. S2CID 648881.
  • Denham, Tim; Haberle, SG; Lentfer, C; Fullagar, R; Field, J; Therin, M; Porch, N; Winsborough, B; et al. (2003). "Origins of Agriculture at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands of New Guinea". Science. 301 (5630): 189–193. doi:10.1126/science.1085255. PMID 12817084. S2CID 10644185.
  • Johnson, Dale E. (1985). "Literature on the history of botany and botanic gardens 1730–1840: A bibliography" (PDF). Huntia. 6 (1): 1–121. PMID 11620777.
  • Singer, Charles (1923). "Herbals". The Edinburgh Review. 237: 95–112.
  • Spencer, Roger; Cross, Rob (2017). "The origins of botanic gardens and their relation to plant science with special reference to horticultural botany and cultivated plant taxonomy". Muelleria. 35: 43–93. doi:10.5962/p.291985. S2CID 251005623.
  • Stearn, William T. (1965). "The Origin and Later Development of Cultivated Plants". Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society. 90: 279–291, 322–341.
  • Stearn, William T. (1986). "Historical Survey of the Naming of Cultivated Plants". Acta Horticulturae. 182: 18–28.
  • Vavilov, Nicolai I. (1951). trans. K. Starr Chester. "The Origin, Variation, Immunity and Breeding of Cultivated Plants". Chronica Botanica. 13 (6): 1–366. Bibcode:1951SoilS..72..482V. doi:10.1097/00010694-195112000-00018.
  • Raven, John A. (April 2004). "Building botany in Cambridge. 1904–2004: the centenary of the opening of the Botany School, University of Cambridge, UK". New Phytologist. 162 (1): 7–8. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.2004.01040.x.
  • George, Sam (June 2005). "'Not Strictly Proper For A Female Pen': Eighteenth-Century Poetry and the Sexuality of Botany". Comparative Critical Studies. 2 (2): 191–210. doi:10.3366/ccs.2005.2.2.191.
  • Shteir, Ann B. (Spring 1990). "Botanical Dialogues: Maria Jacson and Women's Popular Science Writing in England". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 23 (3): 301–317. doi:10.2307/2738798. JSTOR 2738798.
  • Shteir, Ann B. (2007). "Flora primavera or Flora meretrix ? Iconography, Gender, and Science". Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture. 36 (1): 147–168. doi:10.1353/sec.2007.0014. S2CID 143804304.
  • Williams, Roger L. (2011). "On the establishment of the principal gardens of botany: a bibliographical essay by Jean-Philippe-François Deleuze" (PDF). Huntia. 14 (2): 147–176.

Websites edit

  • BSA. "Evolution and Diversity". Botany for the Next Millennium: I. The intellectual: evolution, development, ecosystems. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  • Buck, Jutta (2017). "A Brief History of Botanical Art". American Society of Botanical Artists. Retrieved 20 November 2017.
  • Sengbusch, Peter (2004). "Botany: The History of a Science". Botany online. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  • Tiwari, Lalit (24 June 2003). "Ancient Indian Botany and Taxonomy". The Infinity Foundation. Retrieved 15 December 2009.
  • Widder, Agnes Haigh. "Women and Botany in 18th and Early 19th-Century England". Michigan State University Libraries.
National Library of Medicine
  • North, Michael. "Curious Herbals". The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
    • North, Michael (14 May 2015). "1. The Earliest Herbals". The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
    • North, Michael (9 July 2015). "2. Medieval Herbals in Movable Type". The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
    • North, Michael (29 September 2015). "3. A German Botanical Renaissance". The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 19 November 2017.

history, botany, history, botany, examines, human, effort, understand, life, earth, tracing, historical, development, discipline, botany, that, part, natural, science, dealing, with, organisms, traditionally, treated, plants, some, traditional, tools, botanica. The history of botany examines the human effort to understand life on Earth by tracing the historical development of the discipline of botany that part of natural science dealing with organisms traditionally treated as plants Some traditional tools of botanical scienceRudimentary botanical science began with empirically based plant lore passed from generation to generation in the oral traditions of paleolithic hunter gatherers The first writings that show human curiosity about plants themselves rather than the uses that could be made of them appear in ancient Greece and ancient India In Ancient Greece the teachings of Aristotle s student Theophrastus at the Lyceum in ancient Athens in about 350 BC are considered the starting point for Western botany In ancient India the Vṛkṣayurveda attributed to Parashara is also considered one of the earliest texts to describe various branches of botany 1 In Europe botanical science was soon overshadowed by a medieval preoccupation with the medicinal properties of plants that lasted more than 1000 years During this time the medicinal works of classical antiquity were reproduced in manuscripts and books called herbals In China and the Arab world the Greco Roman work on medicinal plants was preserved and extended In Europe the Renaissance of the 14th 17th centuries heralded a scientific revival during which botany gradually emerged from natural history as an independent science distinct from medicine and agriculture Herbals were replaced by floras books that described the native plants of local regions The invention of the microscope stimulated the study of plant anatomy and the first carefully designed experiments in plant physiology were performed With the expansion of trade and exploration beyond Europe the many new plants being discovered were subjected to an increasingly rigorous process of naming description and classification Progressively more sophisticated scientific technology has aided the development of contemporary botanical offshoots in the plant sciences ranging from the applied fields of economic botany notably agriculture horticulture and forestry to the detailed examination of the structure and function of plants and their interaction with the environment over many scales from the large scale global significance of vegetation and plant communities biogeography and ecology through to the small scale of subjects like cell theory molecular biology and plant biochemistry Contents 1 Introduction 2 Ancient knowledge 2 1 Plant lore and plant selection 2 2 Early botany 2 2 1 Ancient India 2 3 Classical antiquity 2 3 1 Classical Greece 2 3 2 Theophrastus and the origin of botanical science 2 3 2 1 Enquiry into Plants and Causes of Plants 2 3 3 Pedanius Dioscorides 2 3 4 Ancient Rome 2 3 4 1 Pliny the Elder 2 4 Ancient China 3 Medieval knowledge 3 1 Medicinal plants of the early Middle Ages 3 1 1 Medieval China 3 1 2 Medieval India 3 1 3 Islamic Golden Age 3 2 The Silk Road 3 3 The Age of Herbals 4 The Renaissance and Age of Enlightenment 1550 1800 4 1 Botanical gardens and herbaria 4 2 From Herbal to Flora 4 3 Botanical exploration 4 4 Classification and morphology 4 5 Anatomy 4 6 Physiology 4 7 Plant sexuality 5 Nineteenth century foundations of modern botany 5 1 Plant geography and ecology 5 2 Anatomy 5 3 Water relations 5 4 Cytology 5 5 Developmental morphology and evolution 5 6 Carbon fixation photosynthesis 5 7 Nitrogen fixation 6 Twentieth century 6 1 Molecules 6 2 Computers electron microscopes and evolution 6 3 Biogeography and ecology 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Books 9 1 1 History of science 9 1 2 History of botany agriculture and horticulture 9 1 3 Antiquity 9 1 4 British botany 9 1 5 Cultural studies 9 1 6 Botanical art and illustration 9 1 7 Historical sources 9 1 8 Bibliographic sources 9 2 Articles 9 3 WebsitesIntroduction editMain article Outline of botany Botany Greek Botanh grass fodder Medieval Latin botanicus herb plant 2 and zoology are historically the core disciplines of biology whose history is closely associated with the natural sciences chemistry physics and geology A distinction can be made between botanical science in a pure sense as the study of plants themselves and botany as applied science which studies the human use of plants Early natural history divided pure botany into three main streams morphology classification anatomy and physiology that is external form internal structure and functional operation 3 The most obvious topics in applied botany are horticulture forestry and agriculture although there are many others like weed science plant pathology floristry pharmacognosy economic botany and ethnobotany which lie outside modern courses in botany Since the origin of botanical science there has been a progressive increase in the scope of the subject as technology has opened up new techniques and areas of study Modern molecular systematics for example entails the principles and techniques of taxonomy molecular biology computer science and more Within botany there are a number of sub disciplines that focus on particular plant groups each with their own range of related studies anatomy morphology etc Included here are phycology algae pteridology ferns bryology mosses and liverworts and palaeobotany fossil plants and their histories are treated elsewhere see side bar To this list can be added mycology the study of fungi which were once treated as plants but are now ranked as a unique kingdom Ancient knowledge editMain article Neolithic Revolution Nomadic hunter gatherer societies passed on by oral tradition what they knew their empirical observations about the different kinds of plants that they used for food shelter poisons medicines for ceremonies and rituals etc The uses of plants by these pre literate societies influenced the way the plants were named and classified their uses were embedded in folk taxonomies the way they were grouped according to use in everyday communication 4 The nomadic life style was drastically changed when settled communities were established in about twelve centres around the world during the Neolithic Revolution which extended from about 10 000 to 2500 years ago depending on the region With these communities came the development of the technology and skills needed for the domestication of plants and animals and the emergence of the written word provided evidence for the passing of systematic knowledge and culture from one generation to the next 5 Plant lore and plant selection edit Further information Cultivated plant taxonomy and Herbal nbsp A Sumerian harvester s sickle dated to 3000 BCDuring the Neolithic Revolution plant knowledge increased most obviously through the use of plants for food and medicine All of today s staple foods were domesticated in prehistoric times as a gradual process of selection of higher yielding varieties took place possibly unknowingly over hundreds to thousands of years Legumes were cultivated on all continents but cereals made up most of the regular diet rice in East Asia wheat and barley in the Middle east and maize in Central and South America By Greco Roman times popular food plants of today including grapes apples figs and olives were being listed as named varieties in early manuscripts 6 Botanical authority William Stearn has observed that cultivated plants are mankind s most vital and precious heritage from remote antiquity 7 It is also from the Neolithic in about 3000 BC that we glimpse the first known illustrations of plants 8 and read descriptions of impressive gardens in Egypt 9 However protobotany the first pre scientific written record of plants did not begin with food it was born out of the medicinal literature of Egypt China Mesopotamia and India 10 Botanical historian Alan Morton notes that agriculture was the occupation of the poor and uneducated while medicine was the realm of socially influential shamans priests apothecaries magicians and physicians who were more likely to record their knowledge for posterity 11 Early botany edit Ancient India edit An early example of ancient Indian plant classification is found in the Rigveda a collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns from about 3700 3100 BP Plants are divided into vṛska trees osadhi herbs useful to humans and virudha creepers with further subdivisions The sacred Hindu text Atharvaveda divides plants into eight classes visakha spreading branches manjari leaves with long clusters clarification needed sthambini bushy plants prastanavati which expands ekasṛnga those with monopodial growth pratanavati creeping plants amsumati with many stalks and kandini plants with knotty joints The Taittiriya Samhita classifies the plant kingdom into vṛksa vana and druma trees visakha shrubs with spreading branches sasa herbs amsumali spreading plant vratati climber stambini bushy plant pratanavati creeper and alasala spreading on the ground Other examples of early Indian taxonomy include Manusmriti the Law book of Hindus which classifies plants into eight major categories Elaborate taxonomies also occur in the Charaka Samhita Sushruta Samhita and Vaisesika 12 Classical antiquity edit Classical Greece edit nbsp School of Athens Fresco in Apostolic Palace Rome Vatican City by Raphael 1509 1510Ancient Athens of the 6th century BC was the busy trade centre at the confluence of Egyptian Mesopotamian and Minoan cultures at the height of Greek colonisation of the Mediterranean The philosophical thought of this period ranged freely through many subjects Empedocles 490 430 BC foreshadowed Darwinian evolutionary theory in a crude formulation of the mutability of species and natural selection 13 The physician Hippocrates 460 370 BC avoided the prevailing superstition of his day and approached healing by close observation and the test of experience At this time a genuine non anthropocentric curiosity about plants emerged The major works written about plants extended beyond the description of their medicinal uses to the topics of plant geography morphology physiology nutrition growth and reproduction 14 Theophrastus and the origin of botanical science edit Main article Theophrastus nbsp Statue of Theophrastus 371 287 BC Father of Botany Palermo Botanic GardensForemost among the scholars studying botany was Theophrastus of Eressus Greek 8eofrastos c 371 287 BC who has been frequently referred to as the Father of Botany He was a student and close friend of Aristotle 384 322 BC and succeeded him as head of the Lyceum an educational establishment like a modern university in Athens with its tradition of peripatetic philosophy Aristotle s special treatise on plants 8ewria perὶ fytῶn is now lost although there are many botanical observations scattered throughout his other writings these have been assembled by Christian Wimmer in Phytologiae Aristotelicae Fragmenta 1836 but they give little insight into his botanical thinking 15 The Lyceum prided itself in a tradition of systematic observation of causal connections critical experiment and rational theorizing Theophrastus challenged the superstitious medicine employed by the physicians of his day called rhizotomi and also the control over medicine exerted by priestly authority and tradition 16 Together with Aristotle he had tutored Alexander the Great whose military conquests were carried out with all the scientific resources of the day the Lyceum garden probably containing many botanical trophies collected during his campaigns as well as other explorations in distant lands 17 It was in this garden where he gained much of his plant knowledge 18 Enquiry into Plants and Causes of Plants edit nbsp The frontispiece to an illustrated 1644 edition of Historia Plantarum nbsp Wild asparagus Asparagus aphyllus native to the LevantTheophrastus s major botanical works were the Enquiry into Plants Historia Plantarum and Causes of Plants Causae Plantarum which were his lecture notes for the Lyceum 19 The opening sentence of the Enquiry reads like a botanical manifesto We must consider the distinctive characters and the general nature of plants from the point of view of their morphology their behaviour under external conditions their mode of generation and the whole course of their life Theophrastus Enquiry into Plants The Enquiry is 9 books of applied botany dealing with the forms and classification of plants and economic botany examining the techniques of agriculture relationship of crops to soil climate water and habitat and horticulture He described some 500 plants in detail often including descriptions of habitat and geographic distribution and he recognised some plant groups that can be recognised as modern day plant families Some names he used like Crataegus Daucus and Asparagus have persisted until today His second book Causes of Plants covers plant growth and reproduction akin to modern physiology 20 Like Aristotle he grouped plants into trees undershrubs shrubs and herbs but he also made several other important botanical distinctions and observations He noted that plants could be annuals perennials and biennials they were also either monocotyledons or dicotyledons and he also noticed the difference between determinate and indeterminate growth and details of floral structure including the degree of fusion of the petals position of the ovary and more 21 22 These lecture notes of Theophrastus comprise the first clear exposition of the rudiments of plant anatomy physiology morphology and ecology presented in a way that would not be matched for another eighteen centuries 23 Pedanius Dioscorides edit nbsp Dioscorides and HeuresisA full synthesis of ancient Greek pharmacology was compiled in De Materia Medica c 60 AD by Pedanius Dioscorides c 40 90 AD who was a Greek physician with the Roman army This work proved to be the definitive text on medicinal herbs both oriental and occidental for fifteen hundred years until the dawn of the European Renaissance being slavishly copied again and again throughout this period 24 Though rich in medicinal information with descriptions of about 600 medicinal herbs the botanical content of the work was extremely limited 25 Ancient Rome edit Main article Roman agriculture nbsp Gallic Roman harvester Relief from TrierThe Romans contributed little to the foundations of botanical science laid by the ancient Greeks but made a sound contribution to our knowledge of applied botany as agriculture In works titled De Re Rustica four Roman writers contributed to a compendium Scriptores Rei Rusticae published from the Renaissance on which set out the principles and practice of agriculture These authors were Cato 234 149 BC Varro 116 27 BC and in particular Columella 4 70 AD and Palladius 4th century AD 26 Pliny the Elder edit Roman encyclopaedist Pliny the Elder 23 79 AD deals with plants in Books 12 to 26 of his 37 volume highly influential work Naturalis Historia in which he frequently quotes Theophrastus but with a lack of botanical insight although he does nevertheless draw a distinction between true botany on the one hand and farming and medicine on the other 27 It is estimated that at the time of the Roman Empire between 1300 and 1400 plants had been recorded in the West 28 Ancient China edit In ancient China lists of different plants and herb concoctions for pharmaceutical purposes date back to at least the time of the Warring States 481 BC 221 BC Many Chinese writers over the centuries contributed to the written knowledge of herbal pharmaceutics The Chinese dictionary encyclopaedia Erh Ya probably dates from about 300 BC and describes about 334 plants classed as trees or shrubs each with a common name and illustration The Han Dynasty 202 BC 220 AD includes the notable work of the Huangdi Neijing and the famous pharmacologist Zhang Zhongjing Medieval knowledge editMedicinal plants of the early Middle Ages edit Further information Herbalism and Byzantine medicine nbsp An Arabic copy of Avicenna s Canon of Medicine dated 1593In Western Europe after Theophrastus botany passed through a bleak period of 1800 years when little progress was made and indeed many of the early insights were lost As Europe entered the Middle Ages 5th to 15th centuries China India and the Arab world enjoyed a golden age Medieval China edit Further information Traditional Chinese medicine Chinese philosophy had followed a similar path to that of the ancient Greeks Between 100 and 1700 AD many new works on pharmaceutical botany were produced The 11th century scientists and statesmen Su Song and Shen Kuo compiled learned treatises on natural history emphasising herbal medicine 29 Among the pharmaceutical botany works were encyclopaedic accounts and treatises compiled for the Chinese imperial court These were free of superstition and myth with carefully researched descriptions and nomenclature they included cultivation information and notes on economic and medicinal uses and even elaborate monographs on ornamental plants But there was no experimental method and no analysis of the plant sexual system nutrition or anatomy 30 Medieval India edit In India simple artificial plant classification systems of the Rigveda Atharvaveda and Taittiriya Samhita became more botanical with the work of Parashara c 400 c 500 AD the author of Vṛksayurveda the science of life of trees He made close observations of cells and leaves and divided plants into Dvimatrka Dicotyledons and Ekamatrka Monocotyledons The dicotyledons were further classified into groupings ganas akin to modern floral families Samiganiya Fabaceae Puplikagalniya Rutaceae Svastikaganiya Cruciferae Tripuspaganiya Cucurbitaceae Mallikaganiya Apocynaceae and Kurcapuspaganiya Asteraceae 31 32 Important medieval Indian works of plant physiology include the Prthviniraparyam of Udayana Nyayavindutika of Dharmottara Saddarsana samuccaya of Gunaratna and Upaskara of Sankaramisra Islamic Golden Age edit Further information Medicine in the medieval Islamic world nbsp Physician preparing an elixir from an Arabic version of the De Materia Medica by DioscoridesThe 400 year period from the 9th to 13th centuries AD was the Islamic Renaissance a time when Islamic culture and science thrived Greco Roman texts were preserved copied and extended although new texts always emphasised the medicinal aspects of plants Kurdish biologist Abu Ḥanifah Aḥmad ibn Dawud Dinawari 828 896 AD is known as the founder of Arabic botany his Kitab al nabat Book of Plants describes 637 species discussing plant development from germination to senescence and including details of flowers and fruits 33 The Mutazilite philosopher and physician Ibn Sina Avicenna c 980 1037 AD was another influential figure his The Canon of Medicine being a landmark in the history of medicine treasured until the Enlightenment 34 The Silk Road edit Following the fall of Constantinople 1453 the newly expanded Ottoman Empire welcomed European embassies in its capital which in turn became the sources of plants from those regions to the east which traded with the empire In the following century twenty times as many plants entered Europe along the Silk Road as had been transported in the previous two thousand years mainly as bulbs Others were acquired primarily for their alleged medicinal value Initially Italy benefited from this new knowledge especially Venice which traded extensively with the East From there these new plants rapidly spread to the rest of Western Europe 35 By the middle of the sixteenth century there was already a flourishing export trade of various bulbs from Turkey to Europe 36 The Age of Herbals edit Main article Herbal nbsp Dioscorides De Materia Medica Byzantium 15th century In the European Middle Ages of the 15th and 16th centuries the lives of European citizens were based around agriculture but when printing arrived with movable type and woodcut illustrations it was not treatises on agriculture that were published but lists of medicinal plants with descriptions of their properties or virtues These first plant books known as herbals showed that botany was still a part of medicine as it had been for most of ancient history 34 Authors of herbals were often curators of university gardens 37 and most herbals were derivative compilations of classic texts especially De Materia Medica nbsp European white waterlily Nymphaea alba from Herbarium Vivae EiconesThe authors of the oldest herbals of the 16th century Brunfels Fuchs Bock Mattioli and others regarded plants mainly as the vehicles of medicinal virtues Their chief object was to discover the plants employed by the physicians of antiquity the knowledge of which had been lost in later times The corrupt texts of Theophrastus Dioscorides Pliny and Galen had been in many respects improved and illustrated by Italian commentators of the 15th and early part of the 16th century but there was one imperfection which no criticism could remove the highly unsatisfactory descriptions of the old authors or the entire absence of descriptions 38 It was moreover at first assumed that the plants described by the Greek physicians must grow wild in Germany also and generally in the rest of Europe each author identified a different native plant with some one mentioned by Dioscorides or Theophrastus or others and thus there arose in the 16th century a confusion of nomenclature 38 However the need for accurate and detailed plant descriptions meant that some herbals were more botanical than medicinal nbsp Two Lavandula species Woodcut from Hieronymus Bock s Kreutterbuch 2nd ed 1546A great advance was made by the first German composers of herbals who went straight to nature described the wild plants growing around them and had figures of them carefully executed in wood Thus was made the first beginning of a really scientific examination of plants though the aims pursued were not yet truly scientific for no questions were proposed as to the nature of plants their organisation or mutual relations the only point of interest was the knowledge of individual forms and of their medicinal virtues 39 Julius von Sachs History of Botany German Otto Brunfels s 1464 1534 Herbarum Vivae Icones 1530 contained descriptions of about 47 species new to science combined with accurate illustrations His fellow countryman Hieronymus Bock s 1498 1554 Kreutterbuch of 1539 described plants he found in nearby woods and fields and these were illustrated in the 1546 edition 40 However it was Valerius Cordus 1515 1544 who pioneered the formal botanical description that detailed both flowers and fruits some anatomy including the number of chambers in the ovary and the type of ovule placentation He also made observations on pollen and distinguished between inflorescence types 40 His five volume Historia Plantarum was published about 18 years after his early death aged 29 in 1561 1563 In England William Turner 1515 1568 in his Libellus De Re Herbaria Novus 1538 published names descriptions and localities of many native British plants 41 and in Holland Rembert Dodoens 1517 1585 in Stirpium Historiae 1583 included descriptions of many new species from the Netherlands in a scientific arrangement 42 Herbals contributed to botany by setting in train the science of plant description classification and botanical illustration Up to the 17th century botany and medicine were one and the same but those books emphasising medicinal aspects eventually omitted the plant lore to become modern pharmacopoeias those that omitted the medicine became more botanical and evolved into the modern compilations of plant descriptions we call Floras These were often backed by specimens deposited in a herbarium which was a collection of dried plants that verified the plant descriptions given in the Floras The transition from herbal to Flora marked the final separation of botany from medicine 43 The Renaissance and Age of Enlightenment 1550 1800 edit nbsp A 1647 portrait of a scholar holding a book of plant diagrams The revival of learning during the European Renaissance renewed interest in plants The church feudal aristocracy and an increasingly influential merchant class that supported science and the arts now jostled in a world of increasing trade Sea voyages of exploration returned botanical treasures to the large public private and newly established botanic gardens and introduced an eager population to novel crops drugs and spices from Asia the East Indies and the New World The number of scientific publications increased In England for example scientific communication and causes were facilitated by learned societies like Royal Society founded in 1660 and the Linnaean Society founded in 1788 there was also the support and activities of botanical institutions like the Jardin du Roi in Paris Chelsea Physic Garden Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and the Oxford and Cambridge Botanic Gardens as well as the influence of renowned private gardens and wealthy entrepreneurial nurserymen 44 By the early 17th century the number of plants described in Europe had risen to about 6000 45 The 18th century Enlightenment values of reason and science coupled with new voyages to distant lands instigating another phase of encyclopaedic plant identification nomenclature description and illustration flower painting possibly at its best in this period of history 46 47 Plant trophies from distant lands decorated the gardens of Europe s powerful and wealthy in a period of enthusiasm for natural history especially botany a preoccupation sometimes referred to as botanophilia that is never likely to recur 48 Often such exotic new plant imports primarily from Turkey when they first appeared in print in English lacked common names in the language 47 During the 18th century botany was one of the few sciences considered appropriate for genteel educated women Around 1760 with the popularization of the Linnaean system botany became much more widespread among educated women who painted plants attended classes on plant classification and collected herbarium specimens although emphasis was on the healing properties of plants rather than plant reproduction which had overtones of sexuality Women began publishing on botanical topics and children s books on botany appeared by authors like Charlotte Turner Smith Cultural authorities argued that education through botany created culturally and scientifically aware citizens part of the thrust for improvement that characterised the Enlightenment However in the early 19th century with the recognition of botany as an official science women were again excluded from the discipline 49 Compared to other sciences however in botany the number of female researchers collectors or illustrators has always been remarkably high 50 Botanical gardens and herbaria edit Further information Botanical garden List of botanical gardens and Herbarium nbsp A 16th century print of the Botanical Garden of Padova Garden of the Simples the oldest academic botanic garden that is still in its original location nbsp Preparing a herbarium specimenPublic and private gardens have always been strongly associated with the historical unfolding of botanical science 51 Early botanical gardens were physic gardens repositories for the medicinal plants described in the herbals As they were generally associated with universities or other academic institutions the plants were also used for study The directors of these gardens were eminent physicians with an educational role as scientific gardeners and it was staff of these institutions that produced many of the published herbals The botanical gardens of the modern tradition were established in northern Italy the first being at Pisa 1544 founded by Luca Ghini 1490 1556 Although part of a medical faculty the first chair of materia medica essentially a chair in botany was established in Padua in 1533 Then in 1534 Ghini became Reader in materia medica at Bologna University where Ulisse Aldrovandi established a similar garden in 1568 see below 52 Collections of pressed and dried specimens were called a hortus siccus garden of dry plants and the first accumulation of plants in this way including the use of a plant press is attributed to Ghini 53 54 Buildings called herbaria housed these specimens mounted on card with descriptive labels Stored in cupboards in systematic order they could be preserved in perpetuity and easily transferred or exchanged with other institutions a taxonomic procedure that is still used today By the 18th century the physic gardens had been transformed into order beds that demonstrated the classification systems that were being devised by botanists of the day but they also had to accommodate the influx of curious beautiful and new plants pouring in from voyages of exploration that were associated with European colonial expansion From Herbal to Flora edit Main article Flora Plant classification systems of the 17th and 18th centuries now related plants to one another and not to man marking a return to the non anthropocentric botanical science promoted by Theophrastus over 1500 years before In England various herbals in either Latin or English were mainly compilations and translations of continental European works of limited relevance to the British Isles This included the rather unreliable work of Gerard 1597 55 The first systematic attempt to collect information on British plants was that of Thomas Johnson 1629 56 57 who was later to issue his own revision of Gerard s work 1633 1636 58 However Johnson was not the first apothecary or physician to organise botanical expeditions to systematise their local flora In Italy Ulisse Aldrovandi 1522 1605 organised an expedition to the Sibylline mountains in Umbria in 1557 and compiled a local Flora He then began to disseminate his findings amongst other European scholars forming an early network of knowledge sharing molti amici in molti luoghi many friends in many places 59 60 including Charles de l Ecluse Clusius 1526 1609 at Montpellier and Jean de Brancion at Malines Between them they started developing Latin names for plants in addition to their common names 61 The exchange of information and specimens between scholars was often associated with the founding of botanical gardens above and to this end Aldrovandi founded one of the earliest at his university in Bologna the Orto Botanico di Bologna in 1568 52 In France Clusius journeyed throughout most of Western Europe making discoveries in the vegetable kingdom along the way He compiled Flora of Spain 1576 and Austria and Hungary 1583 He was the first to propose dividing plants into classes 62 63 Meanwhile in Switzerland from 1554 Conrad Gessner 1516 1565 made regular explorations of the Swiss Alps from his native Zurich and discovered many new plants He proposed that there were groups or genera of plants He said that each genus was composed of many species and that these were defined by similar flowers and fruits This principle of organization laid the groundwork for future botanists He wrote his important Historia Plantarum shortly before his death At Malines in Flanders he established and maintained the botanical gardens of Jean de Brancion from 1568 to 1573 and first encountered tulips 64 65 This approach coupled with the new Linnaean system of binomial nomenclature resulted in plant encyclopaedias without medicinal information called Floras that meticulously described and illustrated the plants growing in particular regions 66 The 17th century also marked the beginning of experimental botany and application of a rigorous scientific method while improvements in the microscope launched the new discipline of plant anatomy whose foundations laid by the careful observations of Englishman Nehemiah Grew 67 and Italian Marcello Malpighi would last for 150 years 68 Botanical exploration edit Main article Plant geography More new lands were opening up to European colonial powers the botanical riches being returned to European botanists for description This was a romantic era of botanical explorers intrepid plant hunters and gardener botanists Significant botanical collections came from the West Indies Hans Sloane 1660 1753 China James Cunningham the spice islands of the East Indies Moluccas George Rumphius 1627 1702 China and Mozambique Joao de Loureiro 1717 1791 West Africa Michel Adanson 1727 1806 who devised his own classification scheme and forwarded a crude theory of the mutability of species Canada Hebrides Iceland New Zealand by Captain James Cook s chief botanist Joseph Banks 1743 1820 69 Classification and morphology edit Further information List of systems of plant taxonomy Plant taxonomy and History of plant systematics nbsp Portrait of Carl Linnaeus by Alexander Roslin 1775By the middle of the 18th century the botanical booty resulting from the era of exploration was accumulating in gardens and herbaria and it needed to be systematically catalogued This was the task of the taxonomists the plant classifiers Plant classifications have changed over time from artificial systems based on general habit and form to pre evolutionary natural systems expressing similarity using one to many characters leading to post evolutionary natural systems that use characters to infer evolutionary relationships 70 Italian physician Andrea Caesalpino 1519 1603 studied medicine and taught botany at the University of Pisa for about 40 years eventually becoming Director of the Botanic Garden of Pisa from 1554 to 1558 His sixteen volume De Plantis 1583 described 1500 plants and his herbarium of 260 pages and 768 mounted specimens still remains Caesalpino proposed classes based largely on the detailed structure of the flowers and fruit 63 he also applied the concept of the genus 71 He was the first to try and derive principles of natural classification reflecting the overall similarities between plants and he produced a classification scheme well in advance of its day 72 Gaspard Bauhin 1560 1624 produced two influential publications Prodromus Theatrici Botanici 1620 and Pinax 1623 These brought order to the 6000 species now described and in the latter he used binomials and synonyms that may well have influenced Linnaeus s thinking He also insisted that taxonomy should be based on natural affinities 73 nbsp Cover page of Species Plantarum of Carl Linnaeus published in 1753To sharpen the precision of description and classification Joachim Jung 1587 1657 compiled a much needed botanical terminology which has stood the test of time English botanist John Ray 1623 1705 built on Jung s work to establish the most elaborate and insightful classification system of the day 74 His observations started with the local plants of Cambridge where he lived with the Catalogus Stirpium circa Cantabrigiam Nascentium 1860 which later expanded to his Synopsis Methodica Stirpium Britannicarum essentially the first British Flora Although his Historia Plantarum 1682 1688 1704 provided a step towards a world Flora as he included more and more plants from his travels first on the continent and then beyond He extended Caesalpino s natural system with a more precise definition of the higher classification levels deriving many modern families in the process and asserted that all parts of plants were important in classification He recognised that variation arises from both internal genotypic and external environmental phenotypic causes and that only the former was of taxonomic significance He was also among the first experimental physiologists The Historia Plantarum can be regarded as the first botanical synthesis and textbook for modern botany According to botanical historian Alan Morton Ray influenced both the theory and the practice of botany more decisively than any other single person in the latter half of the seventeenth century 75 Ray s family system was later extended by Pierre Magnol 1638 1715 and Joseph de Tournefort 1656 1708 a student of Magnol achieved notoriety for his botanical expeditions his emphasis on floral characters in classification and for reviving the idea of the genus as the basic unit of classification 76 Above all it was Swedish Carl Linnaeus 1707 1778 who eased the task of plant cataloguing He adopted a sexual system of classification using stamens and pistils as important characters Among his most important publications were Systema Naturae 1735 Genera Plantarum 1737 and Philosophia Botanica 1751 but it was in his Species Plantarum 1753 that he gave every species a binomial thus setting the path for the future accepted method of designating the names of all organisms Linnaean thought and books dominated the world of taxonomy for nearly a century 77 His sexual system was later elaborated by Bernard de Jussieu 1699 1777 whose nephew Antoine Laurent de Jussieu 1748 1836 extended it yet again to include about 100 orders present day families 78 Frenchman Michel Adanson 1727 1806 in his Familles des Plantes 1763 1764 apart from extending the current system of family names emphasized that a natural classification must be based on a consideration of all characters even though these may later be given different emphasis according to their diagnostic value for the particular plant group Adanson s method has in essence been followed to this day 79 18th century plant taxonomy bequeathed to the 19th century a precise binomial nomenclature and botanical terminology a system of classification based on natural affinities and a clear idea of the ranks of family genus and species although the taxa to be placed within these ranks remains as always the subject of taxonomic research Anatomy edit Further information Microscopy and Plant anatomy nbsp Robert Hooke s microscope which he described in the 1665 Micrographia he coined the biological use of the term cellIn the first half of the 18th century botany was beginning to move beyond descriptive science into experimental science Although the microscope was invented in 1590 it was only in the late 17th century that lens grinding provided the resolution needed to make major discoveries Antony van Leeuwenhoek is a notable example of an early lens grinder who achieved remarkable resolution with his single lens microscopes Important general biological observations were made by Robert Hooke 1635 1703 but the foundations of plant anatomy were laid by Italian Marcello Malpighi 1628 1694 of the University of Bologna in his Anatome Plantarum 1675 and Royal Society Englishman Nehemiah Grew 1628 1711 in his The Anatomy of Plants Begun 1671 and Anatomy of Plants 1682 These botanists explored what is now called developmental anatomy and morphology by carefully observing describing and drawing the developmental transition from seed to mature plant recording stem and wood formation This work included the discovery and naming of parenchyma and stomata 80 Physiology edit Main article Plant physiology In plant physiology research interest was focused on the movement of sap and the absorption of substances through the roots Jan Helmont 1577 1644 by experimental observation and calculation noted that the increase in weight of a growing plant cannot be derived purely from the soil and concluded it must relate to water uptake 81 Englishman Stephen Hales 82 1677 1761 established by quantitative experiment that there is uptake of water by plants and a loss of water by transpiration and that this is influenced by environmental conditions he distinguished root pressure leaf suction and imbibition and also noted that the major direction of sap flow in woody tissue is upward His results were published in Vegetable Staticks 1727 He also noted that air makes a very considerable part of the substance of vegetables 83 English chemist Joseph Priestley 1733 1804 is noted for his discovery of oxygen as now called and its production by plants Later Jan Ingenhousz 1730 1799 observed that only in sunlight do the green parts of plants absorb air and release oxygen this being more rapid in bright sunlight while at night the air CO2 is released from all parts His results were published in Experiments upon vegetables 1779 and with this the foundations for 20th century studies of carbon fixation were laid From his observations he sketched the cycle of carbon in nature even though the composition of carbon dioxide was yet to be resolved 84 Studies in plant nutrition had also progressed In 1804 Nicolas Theodore de Saussure s 1767 1845 Recherches Chimiques sur la Vegetation was an exemplary study of scientific exactitude that demonstrated the similarity of respiration in both plants and animals that the fixation of carbon dioxide includes water and that just minute amounts of salts and nutrients which he analyzed in chemical detail from plant ash have a powerful influence on plant growth 85 Plant sexuality edit Further information Plant sexuality and Alternation of generations nbsp Diagram showing the sexual parts of a mature flowerIt was Rudolf Camerarius 1665 1721 who was the first to establish plant sexuality conclusively by experiment He declared in a letter to a colleague dated 1694 and titled De Sexu Plantarum Epistola that no ovules of plants could ever develop into seeds from the female style and ovary without first being prepared by the pollen from the stamens the male sexual organs of the plant 86 Some time later the German academic and natural historian Joseph Kolreuter 1733 1806 extended this work by noting the function of nectar in attracting pollinators and the role of wind and insects in pollination He also produced deliberate hybrids observed the microscopic structure of pollen grains and how the transfer of matter from the pollen to the ovary inducing the formation of the embryo 87 nbsp Angiosperm flowering plant life cycle showing alternation of generationsOne hundred years after Camerarius in 1793 Christian Sprengel 1750 1816 broadened the understanding of flowers by describing the role of nectar guides in pollination the adaptive floral mechanisms used for pollination and the prevalence of cross pollination even though male and female parts are usually together on the same flower 88 Much was learned about plant sexuality by unravelling the reproductive mechanisms of mosses liverworts and algae In his Vergleichende Untersuchungen of 1851 Wilhelm Hofmeister 1824 1877 starting with the ferns and bryophytes demonstrated that the process of sexual reproduction in plants entails an alternation of generations between sporophytes and gametophytes 89 This initiated the new field of comparative morphology which largely through the combined work of William Farlow 1844 1919 Nathanael Pringsheim 1823 1894 Frederick Bower Eduard Strasburger and others established that an alternation of generations occurs throughout the plant kingdom 90 Nineteenth century foundations of modern botany editIn about the mid 19th century scientific communication changed Until this time ideas were largely exchanged by reading the works of authoritative individuals who dominated in their field these were often wealthy and influential gentlemen scientists Now research was reported by the publication of papers that emanated from research schools that promoted the questioning of conventional wisdom This process had started in the late 18th century when specialist journals began to appear 91 Even so botany was greatly stimulated by the appearance of the first modern textbook Matthias Schleiden s 1804 1881 Grundzuge der Wissenschaftlichen Botanik published in English in 1849 as Principles of Scientific Botany 92 By 1850 an invigorated organic chemistry had revealed the structure of many plant constituents 93 Although the great era of plant classification had now passed the work of description continued Augustin de Candolle 1778 1841 succeeded Antoine Laurent de Jussieu in managing the botanical project Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis 1824 1841 which involved 35 authors it contained all the dicotyledons known in his day some 58000 species in 161 families and he doubled the number of recognized plant families the work being completed by his son Alphonse 1806 1893 in the years from 1841 to 1873 94 Plant geography and ecology edit Further information Ecology and Plant community nbsp Alexander von Humboldt 1769 1859 painted by Joseph Stieler in 1843The opening of the 19th century was marked by an increase in interest in the connection between climate and plant distribution Carl Willdenow 1765 1812 examined the connection between seed dispersal and distribution the nature of plant associations and the impact of geological history He noticed the similarities between the floras of N America and N Asia the Cape and Australia and he explored the ideas of centre of diversity and centre of origin German Alexander von Humboldt 1769 1859 and Frenchman Aime Bonpland 1773 1858 published a massive and highly influential 30 volume work on their travels Robert Brown 1773 1852 noted the similarities between the floras of S Africa Australia and India while Joakim Schouw 1789 1852 explored more deeply than anyone else the influence on plant distribution of temperature soil factors especially soil water and light work that was continued by Alphonse de Candolle 1806 1893 95 Joseph Hooker 1817 1911 pushed the boundaries of floristic studies with his work on Antarctica India and the Middle East with special attention to endemism August Grisebach 1814 1879 in Die Vegetation der Erde 1872 examined physiognomy in relation to climate and in America geographic studies were pioneered by Asa Gray 1810 1888 96 Physiological plant geography or ecology emerged from floristic biogeography in the late 19th century as environmental influences on plants received greater recognition Early work in this area was synthesised by Danish professor Eugenius Warming 1841 1924 in his book Plantesamfund Ecology of Plants generally taken to mark the beginning of modern ecology including new ideas on plant communities their adaptations and environmental influences This was followed by another grand synthesis the Pflanzengeographie auf Physiologischer Grundlage of Andreas Schimper 1856 1901 in 1898 published in English in 1903 as Plant geography upon a physiological basis translated by W R Fischer Oxford Clarendon press 839 pp 97 Anatomy edit Further information Plant anatomy and Cell theory nbsp Plant cells with visible chloroplastsDuring the 19th century German scientists led the way towards a unitary theory of the structure and life cycle of plants Following improvements in the microscope at the end of the 18th century Charles Mirbel 1776 1854 in 1802 published his Traite d Anatomie et de Physiologie Vegetale and Johann Moldenhawer 1766 1827 published Beytrage zur Anatomie der Pflanzen 1812 in which he describes techniques for separating cells from the middle lamella He identified vascular and parenchymatous tissues described vascular bundles observed the cells in the cambium and interpreted tree rings He found that stomata were composed of pairs of cells rather than a single cell with a hole 98 Anatomical studies on the stele were consolidated by Carl Sanio 1832 1891 who described the secondary tissues and meristem including cambium and its action Hugo von Mohl 1805 1872 summarized work in anatomy leading up to 1850 in Die Vegetabilische Zelle 1851 but this work was later eclipsed by the encyclopaedic comparative anatomy of Heinrich Anton de Bary in 1877 An overview of knowledge of the stele in root and stem was completed by Van Tieghem 1839 1914 and of the meristem by Carl Nageli 1817 1891 Studies had also begun on the origins of the carpel and flower that continue to the present day 99 Water relations edit Main article Transpiration The riddle of water and nutrient transport through the plant remained Physiologist Von Mohl explored solute transport and the theory of water uptake by the roots using the concepts of cohesion transpirational pull capillarity and root pressure 93 German dominance in the field of physiology was underlined by the publication of the definitive textbook on plant physiology synthesising the work of this period Sachs Vorlesungen uber Pflanzenphysiologi e of 1882 There were however some advances elsewhere such as the early exploration of geotropism the effect of gravity on growth by Englishman Thomas Knight and the discovery and naming of osmosis by Frenchman Henri Dutrochet 1776 1847 100 The American Dennis Robert Hoagland 1884 1949 discovered the dependence of nutrient absorption and translocation by the plant on metabolic energy 101 Cytology edit Main article Cell theory The cell nucleus was discovered by Robert Brown in 1831 Demonstration of the cellular composition of all organisms with each cell possessing all the characteristics of life is attributed to the combined efforts of botanist Matthias Schleiden and zoologist Theodor Schwann 1810 1882 in the early 19th century although Moldenhawer had already shown that plants were wholly cellular with each cell having its own wall and Julius von Sachs had shown the continuity protoplasm between cell walls 102 From 1870 to 1880 it became clear that cell nuclei are never formed anew but always derived from the substance of another nucleus In 1882 Flemming observed the longitudinal splitting of chromosomes in the dividing nucleus and concluded that each daughter nucleus received half of each of the chromosomes of the mother nucleus then by the early 20th century it was found that the number of chromosomes in a given species is constant With genetic continuity confirmed and the finding by Eduard Strasburger that the nuclei of reproductive cells in pollen and embryo have a reducing division halving of chromosomes now known as meiosis the field of heredity was opened up By 1926 Thomas Morgan was able to outline a theory of the gene and its structure and function The form and function of plastids received similar attention the association with starch being noted at an early date 103 With observation of the cellular structure of all organisms and the process of cell division and continuity of genetic material the analysis of the structure of protoplasm and the cell wall as well as that of plastids and vacuoles what is now known as cytology or cell theory became firmly established Later the cytological basis of the gene chromosome theory of heredity extended from about 1900 1944 and was initiated by the rediscovery of Gregor Mendel s 1822 1884 laws of plant heredity first published in 1866 in Experiments on Plant Hybridization and based on cultivated pea Pisum sativum this heralded the opening up of plant genetics The cytological basis for gene chromosome theory was explored through the role of polyploidy and hybridization in speciation and it was becoming better understood that interbreeding populations were the unit of adaptive change in biology 104 Developmental morphology and evolution edit Main article Evolution Until the 1860s it was believed that species had remained unchanged through time each biological form was the result of an independent act of creation and therefore absolutely distinct and immutable But the hard reality of geological formations and strange fossils needed scientific explanation Charles Darwin s Origin of Species 1859 replaced the assumption of constancy with the theory of descent with modification Phylogeny became a new principle as natural classifications became classifications reflecting not just similarities but evolutionary relationships Wilhelm Hofmeister established that there was a similar pattern of organization in all plants expressed through the alternation of generations and extensive homology of structures 105 Polymath German intellect Johann Goethe 1749 1832 had interests and influence that extended into botany In Die Metamorphose der Pflanzen 1790 he provided a theory of plant morphology he coined the word morphology and he included within his concept of metamorphosis modification during evolution thus linking comparative morphology with phylogeny Though the botanical basis of his work has been challenged there is no doubt that he prompted discussion and research on the origin and function of floral parts 106 His theory probably stimulated the opposing views of German botanists Alexander Braun 1805 1877 and Matthias Schleiden who applied the experimental method to the principles of growth and form that were later extended by Augustin de Candolle 1778 1841 107 Carbon fixation photosynthesis edit Further information Soil plant atmosphere continuum and Photosynthesis nbsp Photosynthesis splits water to liberate O2 and fixes CO2 into sugarAt the start of the 19th century the idea that plants could synthesize almost all their tissues from atmospheric gases had not yet emerged The energy component of photosynthesis the capture and storage of the Sun s radiant energy in carbon bonds a process on which all life depends was first elucidated in 1847 by Mayer but the details of how this was done would take many more years 108 Chlorophyll was named in 1818 and its chemistry gradually determined to be finally resolved in the early 20th century The mechanism of photosynthesis remained a mystery until the mid 19th century when Sachs in 1862 noted that starch was formed in green cells only in the presence of light and in 1882 he confirmed carbohydrates as the starting point for all other organic compounds in plants 109 The connection between the pigment chlorophyll and starch production was finally made in 1864 but tracing the precise biochemical pathway of starch formation did not begin until about 1915 Nitrogen fixation edit Main article Nitrogen fixation Significant discoveries relating to nitrogen assimilation and metabolism including ammonification nitrification and nitrogen fixation the uptake of atmospheric nitrogen by symbiotic soil microorganisms had to wait for advances in chemistry and bacteriology in the late 19th century and this was followed in the early 20th century by the elucidation of protein and amino acid synthesis and their role in plant metabolism With this knowledge it was then possible to outline the global nitrogen cycle 110 Twentieth century edit nbsp Thin layer chromatography is used to separate components of chlorophyll20th century science grew out of the solid foundations laid by the breadth of vision and detailed experimental observations of the 19th century A vastly increased research force was now rapidly extending the horizons of botanical knowledge at all levels of plant organization from molecules to global plant ecology There was now an awareness of the unity of biological structure and function at the cellular and biochemical levels of organisation Botanical advance was closely associated with advances in physics and chemistry with the greatest advances in the 20th century mainly relating to the penetration of molecular organization 111 However at the level of plant communities it would take until mid century to consolidate work on ecology and population genetics 112 By 1910 experiments using labelled isotopes were being used to elucidate plant biochemical pathways to open the line of research leading to gene technology On a more practical level research funding was now becoming available from agriculture and industry Molecules edit Main article Molecular biology In 1903 Chlorophylls a and b were separated by thin layer chromatography then through the 1920s and 1930s biochemists notably Hans Krebs 1900 1981 and Carl 1896 1984 and Gerty Cori 1896 1957 began tracing out the central metabolic pathways of life Between the 1930s and 1950s it was determined that ATP located in mitochondria was the source of cellular chemical energy and the constituent reactions of photosynthesis were progressively revealed Then in 1944 DNA was extracted for the first time 113 Along with these revelations there was the discovery of plant hormones or growth substances notably auxins 1934 gibberellins 1934 and cytokinins 1964 114 and the effects of photoperiodism the control of plant processes especially flowering by the relative lengths of day and night 115 Following the establishment of Mendel s laws the gene chromosome theory of heredity was confirmed by the work of August Weismann who identified chromosomes as the hereditary material Also in observing the halving of the chromosome number in germ cells he anticipated work to follow on the details of meiosis the complex process of redistribution of hereditary material that occurs in the germ cells In the 1920s and 1930s population genetics combined the theory of evolution with Mendelian genetics to produce the modern synthesis By the mid 1960s the molecular basis of metabolism and reproduction was firmly established through the new discipline of molecular biology Genetic engineering the insertion of genes into a host cell for cloning began in the 1970s with the invention of recombinant DNA techniques and its commercial applications applied to agricultural crops followed in the 1990s There was now the potential to identify organisms by molecular fingerprinting and to estimate the times in the past when critical evolutionary changes had occurred through the use of molecular clocks Computers electron microscopes and evolution edit Further information Ultrastructure and Palynology nbsp Electron microscope constructed by Ernst Ruska in 1933Increased experimental precision combined with vastly improved scientific instrumentation was opening up exciting new fields In 1936 Alexander Oparin 1894 1980 demonstrated a possible mechanism for the synthesis of organic matter from inorganic molecules In the 1960s it was determined that the Earth s earliest life forms treated as plants the cyanobacteria known as stromatolites dated back some 3 5 billion years 116 Mid century transmission and scanning electron microscopy presented another level of resolution to the structure of matter taking anatomy into the new world of ultrastructure 117 New and revised phylogenetic classification systems of the plant kingdom were produced by several botanists including August Eichler A massive 23 volume Die naturlichen Pflanzenfamilien was published by Adolf Engler amp Karl Prantl over the period 1887 to 1915 Taxonomy based on gross morphology was now being supplemented by using characters revealed by pollen morphology embryology anatomy cytology serology macromolecules and more 118 The introduction of computers facilitated the rapid analysis of large data sets used for numerical taxonomy also called taximetrics or phenetics The emphasis on truly natural phylogenies spawned the disciplines of cladistics and phylogenetic systematics The grand taxonomic synthesis An Integrated System of Classification of Flowering Plants 1981 of American Arthur Cronquist 1919 1992 was superseded when in 1998 the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group published a phylogeny of flowering plants based on the analysis of DNA sequences using the techniques of the new molecular systematics which was resolving questions concerning the earliest evolutionary branches of the angiosperms flowering plants The exact relationship of fungi to plants had for some time been uncertain Several lines of evidence pointed to fungi being different from plants animals and bacteria indeed more closely related to animals than plants In the 1980s 90s molecular analysis revealed an evolutionary divergence of fungi from other organisms about 1 billion years ago sufficient reason to erect a unique kingdom separate from plants 119 Biogeography and ecology edit Main article Biogeography nbsp Map of terrestrial biomes classified by vegetation typeThe publication of Alfred Wegener s 1880 1930 theory of continental drift 1912 gave additional impetus to comparative physiology and the study of biogeography while ecology in the 1930s contributed the important ideas of plant community succession community change and energy flows 120 From 1940 to 1950 ecology matured to become an independent discipline as Eugene Odum 1913 2002 formulated many of the concepts of ecosystem ecology emphasising relationships between groups of organisms especially material and energy relationships as key factors in the field Building on the extensive earlier work of Alphonse de Candolle Nikolai Vavilov 1887 1943 from 1914 to 1940 produced accounts of the geography centres of origin and evolutionary history of economic plants 121 See also edit nbsp Plants portalInternational Botanical Congress History of plant systematics Botanical illustration History of phycology List of botanists List of botanists by author abbreviationReferences edit Prasad G P Jan Jun 2016 Vŗksăyurvĕda of Parăsara an ancient treatise on plant science Bulletin of the Indian Institute of History of Medicine Hyderabad 36 1 63 74 Morton 1981 p 49 Sachs 1890 p v Walters 1981 p 3 Morton 1981 p 2 Stearn 1986 Stearn 1965 pp 279 91 322 41 Reed 1942 p 3 Morton 1981 p 5 Reed 1942 pp 7 29 Morton 1981 p 15 Morton 1981 p 12 Morton 1981 p 23 Morton 1981 p 25 Vines in Oliver 1913 p 8 Morton 1981 pp 29 43 Singer 1923 p 98 Reed 1942 p 34 Morton 1981 p 42 Reed 1942 p 37 Thanos 2005 Morton 1981 pp 36 43 Harvey Gibson 1919 p 9 Singer 1923 p 101 Morton 1981 p 68 Morton 1981 p 69 Morton 1981 pp 70 1 Sengbusch 2004 Needham et al 1986 Morton 1981 pp 58 64 Tiwari 2003 Majumdar 1982 pp 356 411 Fahd 1996 p 815 a b Morton 1981 p 82 Pavord 2005 pp 11 13 Pavord 1999 Sachs 1890 p 19 a b Sachs 1890 p 3 Sachs 1890 pp 3 4 a b Reed 1942 p 65 Arber 1986 pp 119 124 Reed 1942 p 68 Arber in Oliver 1913 pp 146 246 Henrey 1975 pp 631 46 Morton 1981 p 145 Buck 2017 a b Jacobson 2014 Williams 2001 Shteir 1996 Prologue Women in Botany Spencer amp Cross 2017 pp 43 93 a b Conan 2005 p 96 Sachs 1890 p 18 Morton 1981 pp 120 4 Gerard 1597 Johnson 1629 Pavord 2005 pp 5 10 Johnson 1636 Conan 2005 pp 121 123 Bethencourt amp Egmond 2007 Pavord 2005 p 16 Helmsley amp Poole 2004 a b Meyer 1854 57 Willes 2011 p 76 Goldgar 2007 p 34 Arber 1986 p 270 Arber in Oliver 1913 pp 44 64 Morton 1981 pp 178 80 Reed 1942 pp 110 1 Woodland 1991 pp 372 408 Reed 1942 pp 71 3 Morton 1981 pp 130 40 Morton 1981 pp 147 8 Reed 1942 pp 82 3 Morton 1981 pp 196 216 Woodland 1991 pp 372 375 Stafleu 1971 p 79 Reed 1942 p 102 Morton 1981 pp 301 11 Reed 1942 pp 88 9 Reed 1942 p 91 Darwin in Oliver 1913 pp 65 83 Morton 1981 p 250 Reed 1942 p 107 Morton 1981 p 338 Reed 1942 p 96 Reed 1942 p 97 Reed 1942 p 98 Reed 1942 p 138 Reed 1942 p 140 Reynolds Green 1909 p 502 Morton 1981 p 377 a b Morton 1981 p 388 Morton 1981 p 372 Morton 1981 p 364 Morton 1981 p 413 Reed 1942 pp 126 33 Morton 1981 pp 368 370 Morton 1981 pp 386 395 Morton 1981 pp 390 1 Hoagland D R Hibbard P L Davis A R 1926 The influence of light temperature and other conditions on the ability of Nitella cells to concentrate halogens in the cell sap Journal of General Physiology 10 1 121 126 doi 10 1085 jgp 10 1 121 PMC 2140878 PMID 19872303 Morton 1981 pp 381 2 Reed 1942 pp 154 75 Morton 1981 p 453 Reynolds Green 1909 pp 7 10 501 Morton 1981 pp 343 6 Morton 1981 pp 371 3 Reed 1942 p 207 Reed 1942 p 197 Reed 1942 pp 214 40 Morton 1981 p 448 Morton 1981 p 451 Morton 1981 p 460 Morton 1981 p 461 Morton 1981 p 464 Morton 1981 p 454 Morton 1981 p 459 Morton 1981 p 456 Bruns 2006 Morton 1981 p 457 de Candolle 1885 Bibliography editSee also Bibliography of botany Books edit History of science edit Harkness Deborah E 2007 The Jewel house of art and nature Elizabethan London and the social foundations of the scientific revolution New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300111965 see also The Jewel House Huff Toby 2003 The Rise of Early Modern Science Islam China and the West Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52994 5 Majumdar G P 1982 Studies in History of Science in India In Chattopadhyaya Debiprasad ed The history of botany and allied sciences in India c 2000 B C to 100 A D Asha Jyoti New Delhi Editorial Enterprise Needham Joseph amp Lu Gwei Djen 2000 Sivin Nathan ed Science and Civilisation in China Vol 6 Part 6 Medicine Cambridge Cambridge University Press Ogilvie Brian W 2006 The Science of Describing Natural History in Renaissance Europe Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226620862 Stafleu Frans A 1971 Linnaeus and the Linnaeans Utrecht International Association of Plant Taxonomy ISBN 978 90 6046 064 1 History of botany agriculture and horticulture edit Arber Agnes 1986 1912 2nd ed 1938 Stearn William T ed Herbals their origin and evolution A chapter in the history of botany 1470 1670 3rd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521338790 Conan Michel ed 2005 Baroque garden cultures emulation sublimation subversion Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection ISBN 978 0 88402 304 3 Retrieved 21 February 2015 Erichsen Brown Charlotte 1979 Medicinal and Other Uses of North American Plants A Historical Survey with Special Reference to the Eastern Indian Tribes Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 25951 2 Ewan Joseph Arnold Chester Arthur 1969 A short history of botany in the United States Hafner Publishing Co ISBN 9780028443607 Fahd Toufic 1996 Botany and agriculture In Morelon Regis Rashed Roshdi eds Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol 3 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 12410 2 Fischer Hubertus Remmert Volker R Wolschke Bulmahn Joachim 2016 Gardens Knowledge and the Sciences in the Early Modern Period Birkhauser ISBN 978 3 319 26342 7 Fries Robert Elias 1950 A short history of botany in Sweden Uppsala Almqvist amp Wiksells boktr OCLC 3954193 Greene Edward Lee 1983a Egerton Frank N ed Landmarks of Botanical History Part 1 Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 1075 6 originally published as Greene Edward L 1909 Landmarks of Botanical History 1 Prior to 1562 A D Washington Smithsonian Institution OCLC 174698401 Greene Edward Lee 1983b Egerton Frank N ed Landmarks of Botanical History Part 2 Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 1075 6 Harvey Gibson Robert J 1919 Outlines of the history of botany London A amp C Black ISBN 9788171415083 Retrieved 29 April 2015 1999 reprint Google Books Helmsley Alan R Poole Imogen eds 2004 The Evolution of Plant Physiology From Whole Plants to Ecosystems London Elsevier Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 339552 8 Henrey Blanche 1975 British botanical and horticultural literature before 1800 Vols 1 3 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211548 5 Jackson Benjamin D 1881 Guide to the Literature of Botany Being a Classified Selection of Botanical Works London Longmans Green Jacobson Miriam 2014 Barbarous Antiquity Reorienting the Past in the Poetry of Early Modern England University of Pennsylvania Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 8122 9007 3 Morton Alan G 1981 History of Botanical Science An Account of the Development of Botany from Ancient Times to the Present Day London Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 508382 9 available here at Internet Archive Meyer Ernst H F 1854 57 Geschichte der Botanik Konigsberg Verlag de Gebruder Borntrager Retrieved 2009 12 11 Geschichte der Botanik Meyer Needham Joseph Lu Gwei djen amp Huang Hsing Tsung 1986 Science and Civilisation in China Vol 6 Part 1 Botany Cambridge Cambridge University Press Radl Emanuel 1909 1913 Geschichte der biologischen Theorien in der Neuzeit in German 2nd ed Leipzig Verlag von W Engelmann Rakow Donald Lee Sharon eds 2013 Public garden management Hoboken N J Wiley ISBN 9780470904596 Retrieved 21 February 2015 Reed Howard S 1942 A Short History of the Plant Sciences New York Ronald Press Reynolds Green Joseph 1909 History of Botany 1860 1900 Oxford Clarendon Press Sachs Julius von 1875 Geschichte der Botanik vom 16 Jahrhundert bis 1860 Munich Oldenbourg Retrieved 13 December 2015 Sachs Julius von 1890 1875 Geschichte der Botanik vom 16 Jahrhundert bis 1860 History of botany 1530 1860 translated by Henry E F Garnsey revised by Isaac Bayley Balfour Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 5962 bhl title 30585 Retrieved 13 December 2015 see also History of botany 1530 1860 at Google Books Green J Reynolds A history of botany 1860 1900 being a continuation of Sachs History of botany 1530 1860 Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved 13 December 2015 Stace Clive A 1989 1980 Plant taxonomy and biosystematics 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521427852 Retrieved 29 April 2015 Vavilov Nicolai I 1992 Origin and Geography of Cultivated Plants Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40427 3 Williams Roger L 2001 Botanophilia in Eighteenth Century France The Spirit of the Enlightenment Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 0 7923 6886 1 Winterborne Jeffrey 2005 Hydroponics indoor horticulture Guildford Pukka Press ISBN 978 0 9550112 0 7 Retrieved 2009 12 14 Woodland Dennis W 1991 Contemporary Plant Systematics New Jersey Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 205 12182 3 Antiquity edit Baumann Hellmut 1993 1986 Die griechische Pflanzenwelt in Mythos Kunst und Literatur The Greek Plant World in Myth Art and Literature trans William Thomas Stearn Eldwyth Ruth Stearn Timber Press ISBN 9780881922318 Hardy Gavin Totelin Laurence 2016 Ancient Botany Abingdon Routledge ISBN 9781134386796 Raven J E 2000 Stearn W T ed Plants and plant lore in ancient Greece Oxford Leopard s Press ISBN 9780904920406 Thanos Costas A 2005 The Geography of Theophrastus Life and of his Botanical Writings Peri Fytwn PDF In Karamanos A J Thanos C A eds Biodiversity and Natural Heritage in the Aegean Proceedings of the Conference Theophrastus 2000 Eressos Sigri Lesbos July 6 8 2000 Athens Fragoudis pp 23 45 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 03 Retrieved 2009 11 11 British botany edit Barlow Horace Mallinson 1913 Old English herbals 1525 1640 Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine London John Bale Sons amp Danielsson 6 Sect Hist Med 108 49 doi 10 1177 003591571300601512 PMC 2006232 PMID 19977241 Grubb Peter J Snow E Anne Walters S Max 2004 100 Years of Plant Sciences in Cambridge 1904 2004 Department of Plant Sciences Cambridge University Gunther Robert Theodore 1922 Early British botanists and their gardens based on unpublished writings of Goodyer Tradescant and others Oxford University Press Hoeniger F David Hoeniger J F M 1969 The Development of Natural History in Tudor England MIT Press ISBN 978 0 918016 29 4 Hoeniger F D Hoeniger J F M 1969 The Growth of Natural History in Stuart England From Gerard to the Royal Society Charlottesville Folger Books ISBN 978 0 918016 14 0 Oliver Francis W ed 1913 Makers of British Botany Cambridge Cambridge University Press Raven Charles E 1950 1942 John Ray naturalist his life and works 2nd ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521310833 Raven Charles E 1947 English naturalists from Neckham to Ray a study of the making if the modern world Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108016346 Walters Stuart M 1981 The shaping of Cambridge botany a short history of whole plant botany in Cambridge from the time of Ray into the present century Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521237956 Willes Margaret 2011 The making of the English gardener Plants Books and Inspiration 1560 1660 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300163827 Cultural studies edit Bethencourt Francisco Egmond Florike eds 2007 Cultural exchange in Early Modern Europe Volume 3 Correspondence and Cultural Exchange in Europe 1400 1700 Cambridge Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 9780521845489 Retrieved 21 February 2015 Fara Patricia 2003 Sex Botany and Empire The Story of Carl Linnaeus and Joseph Banks Cambridge Icon Books ISBN 9781840464443 Retrieved 22 February 2015 George Sam 2007 Botany sexuality and women s writing 1760 1830 from modest shoot to forward plant Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719076978 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Goldgar Anne 2007 Tulipmania money honor and knowledge in the Dutch golden age Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226301303 Retrieved 21 February 2015 Kelley Theresa M 2012 Clandestine marriage botany and Romantic culture Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9781421407609 Retrieved 6 March 2015 Page Judith W Smith Elise L 2011 Women literature and the domesticated landscape England s disciples of Flora 1780 1870 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521768658 Retrieved 6 March 2015 Pavord Anna 1999 The Tulip London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 7475 4296 4 Pavord Anna 2005 The naming of names the search for order in the world of plants New York Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 59691 071 3 Shteir Ann B 1996 Cultivating women cultivating science Flora s daughters and botany in England 1760 1860 Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 6175 8 Retrieved 18 February 2015 Thomas Vivian Faircloth Nicki 2014 Shakespeare s Plants and Gardens A Dictionary Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4725 5858 9 Botanical art and illustration edit Kusukawa Sachiko 2012 Picturing the Book of Nature Image Text and Argument in Sixteenth Century Human Anatomy and Medical Botany University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 46529 6 Lefevre Wolfgang Renn Jurgen Schoepflin Urs eds 2003 The Power of Images in Early Modern Science Basel Birkhauser Basel ISBN 9783034880992 Tomasi Lucia Tongiorgi Hirschauer Gretchen A 2002 The flowering of Florence botanical art for the Medici 3 March 27 May PDF Exhibition catalogue Washington National Gallery of Art ISBN 978 0 85331 857 6 Historical sources edit Gerard John 1597 The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes London John Norton Retrieved 26 November 2014 Johnson Thomas ed 1636 Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes gathered by John Gerarde London Adam Islip Joice Norton and Richard Whitakers Retrieved 19 February 2015 Johnson Thomas 1629 Iter Plantarum Investigationis ergo susceptum a decem Sociis in Agrum Cantianum anno Dom 1629 Julii 13 London Fuchs Leonhart 1642 De Historia Stirpium Commentarii Insignes Basileae In officina Isingriniana Retrieved 20 February 2015 Pulteney Richard 1790 Historical and biographical sketches of the progress of botany in England from its origin to the introduction of the Linnaean system London T Cadell Penny Cyclopedia 1828 1843 The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge London Charles Knight Penny Cyclopaedia vol V Blois Buffalo 1836 in Penny Cyclopedia 1828 1843 Botany pp 243 254 de Candolle Alphonse 1885 1882 Origine des Plantes Cultivees Origin of Cultivated Plants in French New York Appleton Retrieved 19 February 2015 Bibliographic sources edit Johnston Stanley H 1992 The Cleveland Herbal Botanical and Horticultural Collections A Descriptive Bibliography of Pre 1830 Works from the Libraries of the Holden Arboretum the Cleveland Medical Library Association and the Garden Center of Greater Cleveland Kent State University Press ISBN 978 0 87338 433 9 Stafleu Frans A Cowan Richard S 1976 1988 Taxonomic literature a selective guide to botanical publications and collections with dates commentaries and types 7 vols VIII supplements 2nd ed Utrecht Bohn Scheltema amp Holkema ISBN 9789031302246 Articles edit Bruns Tom 2006 Evolutionary biology a kingdom revised Nature 443 7113 758 61 Bibcode 2006Natur 443 758B doi 10 1038 443758a PMID 17051197 S2CID 648881 Denham Tim Haberle SG Lentfer C Fullagar R Field J Therin M Porch N Winsborough B et al 2003 Origins of Agriculture at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands of New Guinea Science 301 5630 189 193 doi 10 1126 science 1085255 PMID 12817084 S2CID 10644185 Johnson Dale E 1985 Literature on the history of botany and botanic gardens 1730 1840 A bibliography PDF Huntia 6 1 1 121 PMID 11620777 Singer Charles 1923 Herbals The Edinburgh Review 237 95 112 Spencer Roger Cross Rob 2017 The origins of botanic gardens and their relation to plant science with special reference to horticultural botany and cultivated plant taxonomy Muelleria 35 43 93 doi 10 5962 p 291985 S2CID 251005623 Stearn William T 1965 The Origin and Later Development of Cultivated Plants Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society 90 279 291 322 341 Stearn William T 1986 Historical Survey of the Naming of Cultivated Plants Acta Horticulturae 182 18 28 Vavilov Nicolai I 1951 trans K Starr Chester The Origin Variation Immunity and Breeding of Cultivated Plants Chronica Botanica 13 6 1 366 Bibcode 1951SoilS 72 482V doi 10 1097 00010694 195112000 00018 Raven John A April 2004 Building botany in Cambridge 1904 2004 the centenary of the opening of the Botany School University of Cambridge UK New Phytologist 162 1 7 8 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 2004 01040 x George Sam June 2005 Not Strictly Proper For A Female Pen Eighteenth Century Poetry and the Sexuality of Botany Comparative Critical Studies 2 2 191 210 doi 10 3366 ccs 2005 2 2 191 Shteir Ann B Spring 1990 Botanical Dialogues Maria Jacson and Women s Popular Science Writing in England Eighteenth Century Studies 23 3 301 317 doi 10 2307 2738798 JSTOR 2738798 Shteir Ann B 2007 Flora primavera or Flora meretrix Iconography Gender and Science Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture 36 1 147 168 doi 10 1353 sec 2007 0014 S2CID 143804304 Williams Roger L 2011 On the establishment of the principal gardens of botany a bibliographical essay by Jean Philippe Francois Deleuze PDF Huntia 14 2 147 176 Websites edit BSA Evolution and Diversity Botany for the Next Millennium I The intellectual evolution development ecosystems Retrieved 19 February 2015 Buck Jutta 2017 A Brief History of Botanical Art American Society of Botanical Artists Retrieved 20 November 2017 Sengbusch Peter 2004 Botany The History of a Science Botany online Retrieved 19 November 2017 Tiwari Lalit 24 June 2003 Ancient Indian Botany and Taxonomy The Infinity Foundation Retrieved 15 December 2009 Widder Agnes Haigh Women and Botany in 18th and Early 19th Century England Michigan State University Libraries National Library of MedicineNorth Michael Curious Herbals The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine National Library of Medicine Retrieved 19 November 2017 North Michael 14 May 2015 1 The Earliest Herbals The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine National Library of Medicine Retrieved 19 November 2017 North Michael 9 July 2015 2 Medieval Herbals in Movable Type The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine National Library of Medicine Retrieved 19 November 2017 North Michael 29 September 2015 3 A German Botanical Renaissance The Historical Collections of the National Library of Medicine National Library of Medicine Retrieved 19 November 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of botany amp oldid 1189764086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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