David Griffiths (botanist)

David Griffiths (1867–1935) was an early 20th century American agronomist and botanist who was a specialist on fungi and on seed-producing plants, especially cacti.

Biography

David Griffiths grew up in South Dakota after his family emigrated there from his birthplace of Aberystwyth, Wales.[1] He attended South Dakota Agricultural College, receiving both a B.A. (1892) and an MSc (1893) from that institution. For a few years after leaving college, he taught high school science classes. In 1898, he began doctoral studies at Columbia University, focusing on fungi and publishing on such agriculturally important fungal diseases as powdery mildew, ergots, and smuts.[1]

After gaining his Ph.D. degree in 1900,[2] he became a professor of botany at the University of Arizona Experiment Station, where he studied desert plants.[3] A year later, he moved to the Bureau of Plant Industry of the United States Department of Agriculture, where he would spend a decade and a half as a specialist on grasses in charge of field management of the Grass and Forage Plant Investigations unit of the bureau.[2][3] For the bureau, he traveled around northern Mexico and the United States studying and collecting native grasses and range plants, ultimately assembling an enormous collection at the Plant Introduction Garden in Chico, California.[1] In 1901 alone, he traveled over 700 miles between Nevada and Oregon, and he took some of the earliest known photos of the Great Basin that were intended specifically to record conditions out on the range.[4] In this period, the fencing-in of the west over the previous half century had pushed sheep and cattle onto ever-smaller areas of rangeland, resulting in overstocking that had damaged the land. Griffiths' researches were part of a drive by the USDA to help find ways to improve range management in the western states.[4]

In the course of his researches, Griffiths became especially interested in plants adapted to low-water environments such as prickly pear cactus that could be used as supplemental or emergency feed for livestock.[1][5] As a result of his investigations into the cultivation potential of these kinds of food sources, he became an authority an cacti, assembling a collection of well over 3000 members of the cactus genus Opuntia. Under his supervision, the botanical illustrator Louis Charles Christopher Krieger painted a series of watercolors of his Opuntia collection.[6] The year Griffiths died, his cactus collection (as well as his photographs of cacti) was donated to the United States National Museum.[1][2]

In his final two decades, Griffiths focused on bulbous plants both native and imported, becoming a senior horticulturalist for USDA's research on bulb production.[1] He authored a series of booklets on cultivation bulbs in general and of daffodils, narcissus, tulips, lilies, and hyacinths in particular.

Honors

Griffiths was honored for his work on grasses by having an entire grass genus named after him, Griffithsochloa (now Bouteloua) . His name is also on the species Agropyron griffithsii (a synonym for Elymus albicans).[1]

Selected publications

The standard author abbreviation Griffiths is used to indicate this individual as the author when citing a botanical name.[7]

Sources

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Griffiths, David (1867–1935)". Jstor Global Plants.
  2. 1 2 3 "SIA RU007370, Griffiths, David 1867-1935, David Griffiths Collection, circa 1900-1920". Smithsonian Institution Archives.
  3. 1 2 Quattrocchi, Umberto. CRC World Dictionary of Grasses: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms. Taylor & Francis, 2006.
  4. 1 2 Young, James Albert, and Charlie D. Clements. Cheatgrass: Fire and Forage on the Range. University of Nevada Press, 2009.
  5. Hunter, Walter David, Frederick Charles Pratt, and Joseph Daniel Mitchell. The Principal Cactus Insects of the United States. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 2010.
  6. White, James J., and Erik A. Neumann. "The Collection of Pomological Watercolors at the U.S. National Arboretum". Huntia: A Journal of Botanical History 4:2 (January 1982), pp. 103–104.
  7. IPNI.  Griffiths.
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