Plant geography and ecology
The opening of the 19th century was marked by an increase in interest in the connection between climate and plant distribution.
Carl Willdenow
(1765–1812) examined the connection between seed dispersal and
distribution, the nature of plant associations and the impact of
geological history. He noticed the similarities between the floras of N
America and N Asia, the Cape and Australia, and he explored the ideas of
“
centre of diversity" and "
centre of origin”. German
Alexander von Humbolt (1769–1859) and Frenchman
Aime Bonpland (1773–1858) published a massive and highly influential 30 volume work on their travels;
Robert Brown (1773–1852) noted the similarities between the floras of S Africa, Australia and India, while
Joakim Schouw (1789–1852) explored more deeply than anyone else the influence on plant distribution of temperature,
soil factors, especially soil water, and light, work that was continued by
Alphonse de Candolle (1806–1893).
Joseph Hooker
(1817–1911) pushed the boundaries of floristic studies with his work on
Antarctica, India and the Middle East with special attention to
endemism.
August Grisebach (1814–1879) in
Die Vegetation der Erde (1872) examined
physiognomy in relation to climate and in America geographic studies were pioneered by
Asa Gray (1810–1888).
Physiological plant geography, perhaps more familiarly termed
ecology,
emerged out of floristic biogeography in the late 19th century as
environmental influences on plants received greater recognition. Early
work in this area was synthesised by Danish professor
Eugenius Warming (1841–1924) in his book
Plantesamfund
(Ecology of Plants, generally taken to mark the beginning of modern
ecology) including new ideas on plant communities, their adaptations and
environmental influences. This was followed by another grand synthesis,
the
Pflanzengeographie auf Physiologischer Grundlage of
Andreas Schimper
(1856–1901) in 1898 (published in English in 1903 as Plant-geography
upon a physiological basis translated by W. R. Fischer, Oxford:
Clarendon press, 839 pp.)
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