View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
ml.roberts
Joined: 11 Jan 2010 Posts: 38
|
Posted: Mon Feb 01, 2010 5:49 pm Post subject: Feedback request: Bupleurum falcatum (24398) |
|
|
This post was made automatically in response to a request for comment on the documentation form. There is more general info about such requests here.
Specimen #287953 Taxon: | Apiaceae: Bupleurum falcatum L. ("Sickle-leaved Hare's-ear") |
---|
Filed in taxon folder: | Apiaceae: Bupleurum falcatum L. ("Sickle-leaved Hare's-ear") |
---|
Collected by: | H Corder |
---|
Collection date: | 7/1894
|
---|
Locality: | Cultivated Great Britain, VC5 South Somerset, Bridgwater, ST23 Great Britain, Essex, Norton Heath, TL60, origin
|
---|
ex herb: | Mr Harold Stuart Thompson |
---|
Institution: | University of Birmingham (BIRM) |
---|
Image: | |
---|
fruits/flowers: | seeds/fruits |
---|
notes: | "discovered in Britain by his (H.Corder's) uncle T Corder" |
---|
Inferred details are marked. Documented by ml.roberts on 1st February 2010. Checked by mossysal Edit historydate | user | change |
---|
01/02/2010 | mossysal | Deleted note: ex herb B'water[?] discovered in Britain by his uncle J Corder | 01/02/2010 | mossysal | Added notes | 01/02/2010 | mossysal | Deleted locality: GB VC18,VC19 Norton Heath | 01/02/2010 | mossysal | Added locality: (cultivated) GB VC18,VC19 Norton Heath, ex hort B[ridg]water | 01/02/2010 | mossysal | Deleted provenance: exherb H Corder [illegible] | 26/01/2013 | xmhcman | Deleted collector: H Corder | 26/01/2013 | xmhcman | Added collector: J Corder | 21/04/2013 | qgroom | Deleted collector: J Corder | 21/04/2013 | qgroom | Added collector: H Corder | 08/09/2014 | xmhcman | Deleted note: "discovered in Britain by his (H.Corder's) uncle J Corder" | 08/09/2014 | xmhcman | Added note: "discovered in Britain by his (H.Corder's) uncle T Corder" | 08/09/2014 | xmhcman | Deleted locality: (cultivated) GB VC18,VC19 Norton Heath, ex hort B[ridg]water | 08/09/2014 | xmhcman | Added locality: GB VC18,VC19 Norton Heath, ex hort B[ridg]water | 08/09/2014 | xmhcman | Added locality: (cultivated) GB VC5 Bridgwater | 10/09/2014 | chrisu | Deleted locality: GB VC18,VC19 Norton Heath, ex hort B[ridg]water | 10/09/2014 | chrisu | Added locality: GB VC18,VC19 Norton Heath, origin |
Documented by ml.roberts on 1st February 2010. Checked by mossysal Edit historyN.B. reporting of the edit history is currently fairly unclear and misleading. Most edits made to specimens appear as a pair of 'add' and 'delete' entries, which may not be together in the list. There are also often 'minor' edits, which are made automatically (rather than due to user activity), for example to merge synonym names. Log-in to edit this sheet.
User comments about this sheet - ml.roberts wrote
- was H Corder's herbarium in Bayswater?
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
mossysal
Joined: 29 Oct 2007 Posts: 1669
|
Posted: Mon Feb 01, 2010 10:54 pm Post subject: |
|
|
No, it refers to HSThompson's garden in Bridgwater.
J. Corder found this plant for the first time in Britain in 1831, and Norton Heath seems to be pretty much its only site. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Roger Horton
Joined: 02 Oct 2012 Posts: 1545 Location: Cambridge, UK
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2014 5:24 pm Post subject: |
|
|
It was Thomas Corder who first recorded Bupleurum falcatum at Norton Heath, see Watsonia (1994) 20, 115-117 [pdf]. Although the original site there is believed to have been destroyed in 1962, a population was restored in 1988, and extended in 2009, in a roadside strip (OS TL6104), just inside the South Essex vc18 boundary as defined by the old Ongar to Chelmsford turnpike - see Roscoe, Gardiner, & Ringwood (2009). |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Chris Liffen
Joined: 08 Oct 2007 Posts: 1850
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2014 7:04 pm Post subject: |
|
|
for interest
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
Roger Horton
Joined: 02 Oct 2012 Posts: 1545 Location: Cambridge, UK
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2014 8:04 pm Post subject: |
|
|
There is a specimen of Bupleurum falcatum in the Charles James Fox Bunbury herbarium in Cambridge collected by Lady Blake at a point on the Ongar to Chelmsford turnpike near "the 7th milestone from Chelmsford and the 3rd from Ongar", dated 1838, and referring, on the label, to its discovery by "Mr Corder" some years earlier. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Chris Liffen
Joined: 08 Oct 2007 Posts: 1850
|
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2014 9:04 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Seems to be little info on Lady Blake (in the database, nothing in the wiki) - will see what I can find.
Snippet from Flora of Suffolk, by Hind.
|
|
Back to top |
|
|
David Price
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Posts: 2214
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2014 7:44 am Post subject: |
|
|
Desmond has "Blake, Dame Louisa (1806-1881). Herb. at Ipswich Museum."
Louisa Pilkington was the daughter of Sir Thomas Pilkington, 7th Bt. In August 1830 she married Reverend George Augustus Dawson of Groton, Suffolk, and had a son, Thomas Pilkington Dawson. She married, secondly, in February 1849, Sir Henry Charles Blake, 4th Bt. of Langham, Co. Suffolk, and lived at Bardwell, Suffolk. She died on 28 December 1881 at Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
Roger Horton
Joined: 02 Oct 2012 Posts: 1545 Location: Cambridge, UK
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2014 4:31 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Perhaps I should have linked to Dame Louisa Blake.
Louisa's second husband, Henry Charles Blake was the son of James H Blake (3rd Bt), in turn the son of Sir Patrick Blake (1st Bt) and Annabella Blake née Bunbury, later Mrs Boscawen.
Her brother, Henry William Bunbury, was the father of Henry Edward Bunbury who married Louisa Amelia Fox. Charles James Fox Bunbury was their son.
Despite this distant relationship Lady (Dame Louisa) Blake and Charles seemed to have had a common interest in the flora of East Anglia (his interest extended to the rest of the world). His mother, and his wife Frances also collected, as did his brother Henry, though he most often plants found during the siege of Sebastopol. The Bunburys were also baronets, Charles being the 8th. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
David Price
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Posts: 2214
|
Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2014 7:50 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Dame Louisa is the style and title of the widow of a baronet tho' known in his lifetime as Lady Blake. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
|