Vijaya, Thanks for the link, very interesting reading... I had thought big time plant hunters had disappeared from the earth with the fall of the colonial atrocities... but no!! it continues... How do these people know that 70,000 plants still need to be found, catalogued and named etc in the tropics... who has counted, if they have not been explored, collected and named?
weird... usha di On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 10:59 PM, Vijayasankar <[email protected]>wrote: > Thanks a lot Prashant ji, for sharing your experience with Dr. Wood. > I am pleased to know... Thanks so much... > > Regards > > Vijayasankar Raman > National Center for Natural Products Research > University of Mississippi > > > On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 12:10 PM, Prashant Awale <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Thanks Vijaysanakr ji for sharing this article. >> >> In the year 2008 i had been to Mizoram and came across some interesting >> Acanthaceae plants, some Strobilanthes sp. I had tough time in fixing >> Ids. Then i came to know about Mr John Wood who had studied Strobilanthes >> sp of Mizoram. I interacted with him (thru email only) and he was kind >> enough to respond. All my plants were identifed by him and he was happy to >> see the photographs of the living plant which he had collected and kept in >> his herbarium. >> >> Thanks Vijasankar ji once again for sharing his article.. >> Regards >> Prashant >> >> On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 9:50 PM, Vijayasankar >> <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> Dear all >>> >>> I thought this article may be of interest to you: >>> http://www.nature.com/news/superstars-of-botany-rare-specimens-1.10498 >>> >>> Regards >>> >>> Vijayasankar Raman >>> National Center for Natural Products Research >>> University of Mississippi >>> >> >> > -- Usha di ===========

