Ecuador collecting 1993

Slippertalk Orchid Forum

Help Support Slippertalk Orchid Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Thanks for the link, I allready forward it by mail to some orchidfriends of mine :)
 
I wanted to scream seeing him press those plants for specimens.. A useless waste of a plant. Why cant we use detailed photos, a small specimen for the genetic material, and take the plant back to grow????

I just cant help but some botanists and taxonimists live in the past or hanker for the days of the great orchid hunters
 
Great scenery and plae!!! Really impressive!!! It also gives ideas on how to grow things...!

On the other hand, taking a specimen plant will not affect the whole population of orchids (there are excessive theories about this matter), but nowadays there are better means to document wildlife for every purpose (taxonomic etc). The best would be to take live speciemens and grow them wherever they are taken to.

The bad thing is the whole "taxonmy" thing..... it began with something useful and ended in something more troubling...LOL...
 
I don't mind the botanists / taxanomist taking plants for their valid research as long as they are taking them from a healthy population.

If however the same reserve is visited by each and every University / Botanical Garden on a yearly basis it's a different story. Also pressing plants only to have a big herbarium with lot's of forms of a single species is wrong in my eyes as well.
 
Unfortunately burocracy sometime make things very difficult and so not so easy to take back plants and be shure they still alive....so dried material for research still an important heritage...

The taxonomist in Stig Daelstrom...great guy!!!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top