Natalie Whitford Uhl

Natalie Whitford Uhl (1919–2017) was an American botanist[1] who specialised in palms.[2]

Natalie Whitford Uhl
Born
Natalie B. Whitford

1919[1]
DiedMarch 28, 2017(2017-03-28) (aged 97–98)[2]
Georgia, USA[3]
CitizenshipUnited States of America
Alma materRhode Island State College, Cornell University[2]
Spouse(s)Charles H. Uhl[3]
Scientific career
FieldsBotany Palms
InstitutionsL. H. Bailey Hortorium Herbarium[2]
Author abbrev. (botany)N.W.Uhl

The eldest of three sisters, she grew up on a farm in Rhode Island.[4] She graduated B.S in 1940 from Rhode Island State College, publishing two papers on general plant morphology with Vernon Cheadle, her senior year advisor, the same year.[4][5][6] In 1940 she went to Cornell University,[4] earning her M.S. in 1943,[2] and her Ph.D. in 1947.[2][7] While at Cornell, she met and married her husband, Charles Uhl, abandoning botany to start a family.[8]

Her work with palms began in 1963,[2] when she returned to Cornell to work with Harold E. Moore, who was also the chief editor of Principes, the journal which later became Palms.[8][9] She published her first article as sole author in 1966, on palm inflorescence morphology.[10] In 1978, she and John Dransfield became associate editors of Principes, and co-editors in 1980 with the death of Moore.[8] She continued to co-edit it until 2000.[2]

In 2002, she won the Asa Gray award,[4][11] awarded by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists "for outstanding accomplishments pertinent to the goals of the society".[11]

Published names

As a taxonomist, Uhl described twelve new species, all of them in conjunction with other palm taxonomists. She first described two species in conjunction with Dransfield in 1984; the two described another species two years later.[12] She published nine new species in 1990, in conjunction with Donald Robert Hodel -these are all southern Central American dwarf palms in the genus Chamaedorea.[12][13] Along with Dransfield, and in one case Anthony Kyle Irvine, she also published a handful of recombinations, notably moving the monotypic African Wissmannia carinensis to the East Asian and Australian Livistona. After the publication of their 1983 book Genera Palmarum, she and Dransfield formally described a number of the new infrageneric taxa proposed in it in a 1986 article.[12] She is also credited as part of a large team which sequenced genetic code across the Arecaceae, and in 2005 created a few higher taxa to reclassify the infrageneric taxonomy.[12][14]

  • Halmoorea trispatha J.Dransf. & N.W.Uhl (1984)
  • Marojejya darianii J.Dransf. & N.W.Uhl (1984)
  • Ravenea moorei J.Dransf. & N.W.Uhl (1986)
  • Chamaedorea correae Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea guntheriana Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea palmeriana Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea pedunculata Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea robertii Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea sullivaniorum Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea undulatifolia Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea vistae Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)
  • Chamaedorea whitelockiana Hodel & N.W.Uhl (1990)

Selected works

  • Moore, H.E.Jr. & Uhl, N.W. (1984). The indigenous palms of New Caledonia. Lawai, Kauai, Hawaii, Pacific Tropical Botanical Garden.
  • Dransfield, J., Uhl, N.W., et. al. (2008). Genera Palmarum: evolution and classification of palms. Second edition. Kew Publishing.

The standard author abbreviation N.W.Uhl is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[15]

References

  1. IPNI: Natalie Whitford Uhl The International Plant Name Index. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  2. "Natalie Whitford Uhl, L. H. Bailey Hortorium Professor Emerita and palm authority, dies at 98". Blogs:Cornall University. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  3. Cornell Chronicle: Natalie Uhl renowned palm expert dies, at 97. (Matt Hayes, Magdalen Lindeberg, April 3, 2017)
  4. Luckow, M. (2003) "Natalie Whitford Uhl—Recipient of the 2002 Asa Gray Award," Systematic Botany 28(1) doi:10.1043/0363-6445-28.1.1
  5. Cheadle, V.I. & Whitford, N.B. (1940) Notes on the occurrence and general structure of sieve tubes in the Monocotyledoneae. American Journal of Botany: 27 (Supplement to 19), 2s
  6. Cheadle, V.I.; Whitford, N.B. (1941). "Observations on the Phloem in the Monocotyledoneae. I. The Occurrence and Phylogenetic Specialization in Structure of the Sieve Tubes in the Metaphloem". American Journal of Botany. 28 (8): 623–627. doi:10.1002/j.1537-2197.1941.tb10986.x. ISSN 0002-9122.
  7. Whitford, N.B. (1947) Studies in the floral morphology and anatomy of certain members of the Helobiae. Thesis QK82 1947 U31 (doctoral thesis) Cornell, Ithaca, N.Y.
  8. Kurth, D.J. (2000) Natalie Uhl: A Portrait of a Scientist. Palms, 44(1):34-36.
  9. Uhl, N.W.; Moore, H.E. (1971). "The Palm Gynoecium". American Journal of Botany. 58 (10): 945–992. doi:10.1002/j.1537-2197.1971.tb10050.x. ISSN 0002-9122.
  10. Uhl, Natalie W. (1966). "Morphology and Anatomy of the Inflorescence Axis and Flowers of a New Palm, Aristeyera Spicata". Journal of the Arnold Arboretum. 47 (1): 9–22. JSTOR 43781549.
  11. ASPT awards, American Society of Plant Taxonomists. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  12. "Plants authored by N.W.Uhl". The International Plant Name Index. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  13. Hodel, D.R. & Uhl, N.W. (1990) New species of Chamaedorea from Costa Rica and Panama. Principes, 34, 120-133
  14. Dransfield, John; Uhl, Natalie W.; Asmussen, Conny B.; Baker, William J.; Harley, Madeline M.; Lewis, Carl E. (2005). "A New Phylogenetic Classification of the Palm Family, Arecaceae". Kew Bulletin. 60 (4): 559–569. JSTOR 25070242.
  15. IPNI.  N.W.Uhl.
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