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Ruth Mason (7 November 1913 - 14 May 1990) was a New Zealand botanist specialising in the taxonomy and ecology of freshwater plants. She was employed at the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research for 35 years undertaking research into aquatic plants, pioneering new techniques for plant preservation and collecting over 13,000 plant specimens in the field. She was awarded life membership by the New Zealand Ecological Society.
Mason was born in Auckland, New Zealand, in 1913.[1] She attended St Cuthbert's College until 1931 and was Dux. She was educated at the University of Auckland (then known as Auckland University College, part of the University of New Zealand) where she completed a Bachelor of Arts in Pure Mathematics in 1934 and a Bachelor of Science in Botany and Applied Mathematics in 1935.
She went on to complete a Master of Science in botany in 1937. Mason's MSc thesis is entitled, "Some observations on Griselinia lucida (Forst.)", in which she studied the morphology, anatomy and ecology of this epiphytic species of native New Zealand tree, including anatomical comparison of the roots of the developing epiphyte and stem.
While at university, she was a member of the Auckland University College Field Club.
In 1939, Mason was appointed to the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR) as an assistant botanist. She joined her colleague, supervisor, and fellow botanist Lucy Moore, who had started at DSIR the previous year. Some of the first projects she worked on included establishing a seed herbarium and, contributing to the war effort for the Second World War, researching fibre quality in linen flax grown on different soil types. Other early research projects focused on investigating the seeds and other plant material in the gizzards of several herbivores that were introduced to New Zealand, such as birds, possums and deer, as well as the extinct New Zealand endemic moa, to determine their food preferences. Mason was one of the botanists on the 1949 New Zealand American Fiordland Expedition, and was the only woman participant of the 49 official members of the expedition.
Mason is best known for her research on the taxonomy and ecology of aquatic plants, which included genera from a range of plant families, such as Typha (bulrush or raupō), Callitriche (starwort), and Ruppia (horse's mane). In 1949, Mason was the first to record Wolffia (duckweed) in New Zealand, which is an aquatic plant and one of the smallest flowering plants in the world. Her most long-standing research interest was in the freshwater algae commonly known as stoneworts.[2] Her research and collections have made major contributions to our understanding of the taxonomy, ecology and distribution of aquatic plants in New Zealand and throughout the world.
Ruth Mason worked at DSIR for 35 years until her retirement in 1974. Over the course of her career, she initiated and developed the study of plant anatomy at DSIR. Due to her extensive fieldwork, Mason pioneered new techniques for plant preservation in the field, and collected over 13,000 specimens, many of which are housed at the Allan Herbarium at Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, Lincoln.[3] Mason's specimens were important to those working on aquatic plants in New Zealand and internationally, including her colleagues working on the series of volumes of the Flora of New Zealand.[4]
Mason was also a founding member of the Canterbury Botanical Society, the New Zealand Limnological Society and the New Zealand Ecological Society.
In 2017, Mason was selected as one of the Royal Society Te Apārangi's "150 women in 150 words", celebrating the contributions of women to knowledge in New Zealand.[5] She is one of only two women who have been conferred life membership by the New Zealand Ecological Society.
Several species of plants and at least one fungus have been named in honour of Ruth Mason.[6] [7]
Ruth Mason's father was Rex Mason (1885–1975), a New Zealand politician who served in many ministerial roles and was in parliament from 1926 to 1966. Her mother was Dulcia Martina Mason née Rockell (1883–1971). She had three younger siblings, and never married.[8] Mason was an avid tramper and was active in the Tararua Tramping Club and Wellington Botanical Society prior to moving to the South Island in 1954, where she lived in Prebbleton (near Christchurch, New Zealand) for almost three decades. In addition to botany and the outdoors, Mason had wide-ranging interests throughout her life in music, lexicography, history, yoga and working for UNICEF.
Mason died in Christchurch at Christchurch Hospital in 1990.
Ruth Mason named seven species in four different genera of plants.[9]