Margaret J.A. Simpson | |
Birth Name: | Margaret Jane Annand Simpson |
Birth Date: | 7 July 1920 |
Birth Place: | Scotland |
Death Date: | 3 May 1996 (aged 76) |
Other Names: | Margaret Bulfin, Margaret J.A. Bulfin, Margaret Jane Annand Bulfin, M.J.A. Simpson |
Occupation: | botanist, botanical collector, mountaineer |
Notable Works: | Seeds of New Zealand Gymnosperms and Dicotyledons |
Margaret Jane Annand Bulfin (née Simpson) (1920–1996) was a Scotland-born New Zealand botanist, botanical collector, and mountaineer. She was an expert on New Zealand seeds and their germination, viability and identification, and as a Scientist at the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research she performed extensive field work including vegetation surveys in different areas of New Zealand. She co-authored the book Seeds of New Zealand Gymnosperms and Dicotyledons, and was awarded the Allan Mere Award for her contributions to New Zealand botany.
Margaret Jane Annand Simpson was born in Scotland on 7 July 1920 and emigrated with her family to New Zealand when she was five years old.[1] She grew up in the Bay of Plenty, and became an avid tramper, mountaineer and botanist.
Simpson received a Diploma of Horticulture at Massey Agricultural College (now Massey University) in 1945, and later a BSc at Auckland University. In 1950 she started working as a science technician in the Botany Division of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR) with botanists Lucy Moore and Ruth Mason, first in Wellington and then in Christchurch and Lincoln.
One of the projects Simpson assisted with early in her career was the curation of a fruit and seed collection, which she continued to work on for the next thirty years until she retired. Other projects she worked on included a long-term high-country vegetation field study at Molesworth Station, and a vegetation survey of Nelson Lakes National Park. For over a decade of the latter project, New Zealand horticulturalist Janet Moss was her field assistant and boatman.
Simpson was appointed as DSIR Scientist in 1974, and her research focused on native New Zealand species' seed germination, viability and identification. She was a keen field botanist, and went on many field trips, often in the company of other women botanists as well as visiting international botanists. Although she retired in July 1985, she continued her research on seeds.
In 1991, Simpson received the New Zealand Botanical Society Allan Mere Award, which acknowledged her contribution to research on New Zealand seeds and their germination, including the valuable seed reference collection that she put together.[2]
Although she was not a taxonomist, Simpson named one species together with Lucy Moore: Myosotis brockiei L.B.Moore & M.J.A.Simpson. At least two plants have been named after her, both of which are found in Nelson Lakes National Park:
Simpson collected nearly 4,000 herbarium specimens over the course of her career, most of which are housed at the Allan Herbarium at Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research in Lincoln.[3] She published a handful of scientific articles over the course of her scientific career, and these were published under her unmarried name, Margaret J.A. Simpson. In 2001 she co-authored a major book, Seeds of New Zealand Gymnosperms and Dicotyledons, with her colleague Colin J. Webb. Through her botanical field work, Simpson became interested in French naturalists who visited New Zealand, and she wrote short biographies of Jules Dumont d'Urville[4] and Étienne Raoul, among others.
Simpson was an experienced mountaineer who summited numerous peaks in New Zealand, and elsewhere. She and her husband Raymond Alexander Bulfin lived near the banks of the Liffey in Lincoln, where she enjoyed gardening and music. Simpson died on 3 May 1996.[5]