Stanley Larson Welsh Explained
Stanley Larson Welsh (born 1928) is an American botanist. He has worked as professor of integrative biology at Brigham Young University for 44 years and was the founding curator of that university's herbarium, which is named after him.[1] His fields are North American and Tahitian flora, especially the genera Astragalus, Oxytropis and Atriplex.[2]
Selected publications
stanley larson Welsh; sherel Goodrich. 1980.
Miscellaneous Plant Novelties from Alaska, Nevada, and Utah. Great Basin Naturalist 40:78-88
Books
- 1960. Legumes of the north-central states: Galegeae. Ed. Iowa Agricultural & Home Economics Experiment Station. 249 pp.
- 2003. North American Species of Atriplex Linnaeus (Chenopodiaceae): A Taxonomic Revision.
nephi duane Atwood, sherel Goodrich, stanley larson Welsh. 2007.
A Utah Flora. Ed. Brigham Young University.
External links
- http://www.ipni.org/ipni/authorsearch?id=11539-1&query_type=by_id&output_format=object_view
Notes and References
- Brigham Young University. S. L. Welsh Herbarium - Vascular Plants
- Web site: Oregon State University.