George Marshall Woodrow

George Marshall Woodrow (14 February 1846 - 8 June 1911) was a British botanist who made contribution to the study of plants in Western India, particularly in the Northern Western Ghats. He served as a gardener at Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew, in England from 1865 onward. In 1872 he traveled to India to be in charge of Ganeshkind Experimental Garden at Pune and public gardens of Poona. He worked as a lecturer at R. College of Science Poona in 1879 and was the Director of Botanic Survey of Western India 1893-9. He died in Lanarkshire.[1]

The standard author abbreviation Woodrow is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[2]

Accomplishments

Species described by Woodrow

  • Abutilon ranadei[3]
  • Garnotia arborum[4]

Species named after Woodrow

  • Cissus woodrowii[5]
  • Crinum woodrowii[6]
  • Dichanthium woodrowii[7]

Notable writings

  • Notes on a Journey from Haveri to Kumta (1894)[8]
  • Notes on a Journey from Poona to Nagotana (1894)[8]
  • The Flora of Western India (Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society, 1897)[9]
  • Gardening in India (1903)[10]
  • The Mango: Its Culture and Varieties (1904)[11]
gollark: Ale's is bigger.
gollark: Just ask jrengen where it ism
gollark: What?
gollark: The sell shop buys it for 400KST, I think, but you can sell it to other people directly for more than that.
gollark: Welcome!

References

      1. Desmond, R. (2002). Dictionary Of British And Irish Botantists And Horticulturalists Including plant collectors, flower painters and garden designers. CRC Press.
      2. IPNI.  Woodrow.
      3. "Abutilon ranadei - Wikispecies". species.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 2020-01-08.
      4. "Garnotia arborum Stapf ex Woodrow | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 2020-01-08.
      5. "Cissus woodrowii", Wikipedia (in Swedish), 2019-12-21, retrieved 2020-01-08
      6. "Crinum woodrowii", Wikipedia, 2018-01-09, retrieved 2020-01-08
      7. "Dichanthium woodrowii – ELIP (Enciklopedija Lietuvai ir pasauliui)". lietuvai.lt. Retrieved 2020-01-08.
      8. "Biodiversity Heritage Library". www.biodiversitylibrary.org. Retrieved 2020-01-08.
      9. Nerlekar, Ashish N.; Lapalikar, Sairandhri A.; Onkar, Akshay A.; Laware, S. L.; Mahajan, M. C. (2016-02-26). "Flora of Fergusson College campus, Pune, India: monitoring changes over half a century". Journal of Threatened Taxa. 8 (2): 8452–8487. doi:10.11609/jott.1950.8.2.8452-8487. ISSN 0974-7893.
      10. George Marshall Woodrow (1846-1911) (1903). Gardening In India.
      11. Woodrow, G. Marshall (1904). The Mango: Its Culture and Varieties. Alexander Gardner.
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