Ruurd Dirk Hoogland Explained

Ruurd Dirk Hoogland (1922 Leeuwarden - 18 November 1994 Paris) was a Dutch-born explorer and naturalist, who migrated to Australia and made numerous botanical expeditions to New Guinea, Oceania and Europe. He was an expert on the family Cunoniaceae.[1]

He received his university education in Groningen and Leiden. He earned his doctorate in 1952 with a review of the genus Dillenia under Professor van Steenis and in that year he joined the Australian CSIRO in the Division of Land Research in Canberra as a botanist initially focusing on the then Australian "dependency" of Papua New Guinea. Subsequently, his field work included expeditions to remote Australian territories such as Lord Howe and Norfolk Islands, and to other Commonwealth countries including Sri Lanka and Malaysia. He transferred from CSIRO to the Research School of Biological Sciences at the Australian National University, but was forced to "retire" after contracting Myasthenia gravis. Despite this, he continued to work wherever he could find appropriate facilities, and was fortunate to obtain a visiting fellowship at the Laboratoire de Phanérogamie within the Muséum Nationale d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris before he turned 65, where he continued to work until shortly before his death. His last field trip was to New Caledonia about 6 months before his death. Throughout his career, he made regular visits and contributed specimens to collaborating herbaria or botanic gardens around the world including Sydney (over 740 specimens), Leiden and Kew Gardens, amongst many others.[2] [3]

Plants named after author

Genera:
Species

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ipni.org/ipni/idAuthorSearch.do?id=4083-1&show_history=false&output_format=normal International Plant Names Index: Ruurd Dirk Hoogland
  2. http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/abrs/publications/flora-of-australia/vol49.html Australian Government. Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities. Flora of Australia Volume 49—Oceanic Islands 1
  3. Personal communication. Martin R Hoogland, second son of the subject
  4. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 91(2): 261. 2004
  5. Blumea 44(1): 53. 1999 (IK)
  6. Nova Guinea, Bot. 24: 542. 1966 (IK)
  7. Kew Bulletin 47(2) 1992 (APNI)
  8. Adansonia sér. 3, 20(1): 37. 1998 (IK)
  9. Contr. Gray Herb. 200: 34. 1970 (IF)
  10. Nuytsia 7(1): 69. 1989 (IK)
  11. Blumea xi. 91 1961 (IK)
  12. Blumea 14: 327. 1967 (IF)
  13. Kew Bull. 33(3): 407. 1979 (IK)
  14. Brunonia 2(2): 307 1980 (IK)
  15. J. Jap. Bot. 48(8): 239 1973 (IK)
  16. Blumea 28(1): 88 1982 (IK)
  17. Gard. Bull. Singapore 23: 156. 1968 (IK)
  18. Blumea xv. 278 1968 (IK)
  19. Pacific Sci. 27(1): 56 1973 (IK)
  20. Syst. Bot. 33(4): 655. 2008
  21. Blumea 339 1969 (IK)
  22. Nova Guinea ser. 2, 10: 145. 1959 (IK)