John McEwan Dalziel explained

John McEwan Dalziel
Birth Date:1872
Birth Place:Nagpur
Death Date:1948
Nationality:British
Field:Botany, Medicine
Author Abbrev Bot:Dalziel

John McEwan Dalziel (1872–1948) was a British physician, botanist, and plant collector.

He was born in Nagpur, India in 1872. He served as a medical missionary in China from 1895 to 1902, and afterwards joined the West African Medical Service and became a forest officer from 1905 to 1922. From 1923 he was employed at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and from 1925 to 1927 he joined the botanical expedition aboard the research vessel Utowana led by botanist David G. Fairchild and funded by philanthropist Allison Vincent Armour. Dalziel also served as the vessel's medical officer. The Fairchild expeditions of visited Sri Lanka, Sumatra and Java in 1926, and coastal West Africa, from Gambia to Bioko, in 1927. [1]

Dalziel was active as a plant collector from 1895 to 1927, and collected in China and in present-day Cameroon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Niger, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone in tropical Africa.[2]

With Arthur Hugh Garfit Alston and John Hutchinson, he edited the Flora of West Tropical Africa.[2] He authored or co-authored 488 botanical names, many of them with John Hutchinson.[3]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Fairchild, David (1928). Two Expeditions after Living Plants. The Scientific Monthly, 26(2), 97–127. http://www.jstor.org/stable/7990
  2. https://plants.jstor.org/stable/10.5555/al.ap.person.bm000001807 Dalziel, John McEwan (1872-1948)
  3. https://www.ipni.org/a/1969-1 Dalziel, John McEwan (1872-1948)