John Walter Thomson Jr. (1913–2009) was a Scottish-born American botanist and lichenologist, sometimes referred to as the "Dean of North American Lichens".[3]
Biography
When he was eight years old, Thomson moved with his family to the U.S.A.[2] In 1935 he graduated from Columbia University with a bachelor's degree, majoring in botany and zoology. At the University of Wisconsin–Madison (UW Madison) he graduated in botany with a master's degree in 1937 and a Ph.D. in 1939. After receiving his Ph.D., he worked as a naturalist at Manhattan's American Museum of Natural History and taught at Brooklyn College until 1942.[4] During WW II, he taught topics in military aviation and meteorology from 1942 to 1944 for the U.S. Army Air Corps at Superior State Teachers College (now named the University of Wisconsin–Superior).[5] In 1944 he became a faculty member of the department of botany at University of Wisconsin–Madison, retiring there in 1984 as professor emeritus. In retirement, he continued to work almost daily at the Madison campus until he was about 88 years old.[4]
Thomson taught for many summers at the University of Minnesota's Itasca Biological Station and Laboratories campus,[6] which is located on Lake Itasca.[7] He collected lichens not only in the Arctic and in Wisconsin, but also in a number of other U.S. states, including "California, Florida, Indiana, Oklahoma, New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington".[2] He was the author or coauthor of over 100 scientific articles. He accumulated an extremely valuable herbarium of lichens, which gave the Wisconsin State Herbarium at UW Madison perhaps the world's best lichen collection of North American and Arctic material.[2][8] Thomson issued two exsiccatae, namely Lichenes Wisconsinenses exsiccati (1946–1960) and Lichenes Arctici (1960–1966).[9][10]
In 1937 in Madison, Wisconsin, Thomson married the botanist and conservationist Olive Sherman.[11][5] Upon his death he was survived by his widow, three sons, Dennis, Norman, and Roderic, a daughter, Elizabeth, and seven grandchildren.[3] Another son, Douglas E. Thomson, M.D., died in 1978 at age 34.[2][12] As a memorial to Douglas their dead son, John and Olive Thomson gave money to The Nature Conservancy for land acquisition, leading to the establishment of the Thomson Memorial Prairie,[13] which consists of "323 acres of remnant dry prairie".[11] Dennis Thomson and his wife Joan Schurch Thomson donated land to the nonprofit conservation organization The Prairie Enthusiasts, which created the 193-acre preserve named Schurch-Thomson Prairie.[14]
1985 — Gulf Oil Conservation Award jointly given to John and Olive Thomson for their environmental activity
1992 — Acharius Medal of the International Association for Lichenology[15]
1998 — Festschrift held in honor of Thomson's 85th birthday with published volume Lichenographia Thomsoniana (1998)[16]
2010 — John Thomson Research Award established by the Botanical Club of Wisconsin[17]
Selected publications
Articles
Thomson, John W. (1942). "The Lichen Genus Cladonia in Wisconsin". The American Midland Naturalist. 27 (3): 696–709. doi:10.2307/2420920. JSTOR2420920.
Barrett, Paul E.; Thomson, John W. (1975). "Lichens from a High Arctic Coastal Lowland, Devon Island, N.W.T.". The Bryologist. 78 (2): 160–167. doi:10.2307/3242046. JSTOR3242046.
Thomson, J. W.; Bird, C. D. (1978). "The lichen genus Dactylina in North America". Canadian Journal of Botany. 56 (14): 1602–1624. doi:10.1139/b78-190.
Moser, Thomas J.; Nash, Thomas H.; Thomson, John W. (1979). "Lichens of Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska, with Emphasis on the Impact of Caribou Grazing". The Bryologist. 82 (3): 393–408. doi:10.2307/3242215. JSTOR3242215.
Thomson, Norman F.; Thomson, John W. (1984). "Spore Ornamentation in the Lichen Genus Solorina". The Bryologist. 87 (2): 151–153. doi:10.2307/3243122. JSTOR3243122.
Thomson, John W. (1987). "The Lichen Genera Catapyrenium and Placidiopsis in North America". The Bryologist. 90 (1): 27–39. doi:10.2307/3243269. JSTOR3243269.
Thomson, John W. (1991). "The Lichen Genus Staurothele in North America". The Bryologist. 94 (4): 351–367. doi:10.2307/3243824. JSTOR3243824.
Talbot, Stephen S.; Talbot, Sandra Looman; Thomson, John W. (1992). "Lichens of Tuxedni Wilderness Area, Alaska". The Bryologist. 95 (1): 20–30. doi:10.2307/3243780. JSTOR3243780.
^ abCochrane, Theodore S. (April 2009). "In Memoriam: John Walter Thomson 1913 – 2009". Wisconsin Flora (Newsletter of the Botanical Club of Wisconsin): 1–3. reprinted in: Cochrane, Theodore S. (April 2009). "In Memoriam: John W. Thomson". The Great Lakes Botanist: A Journal of North American Botany. 48 (2): 61–62.
^Hawksworth, D. L. (July 1999). "Review of Lichenographia Thomsoniana: North American Lichenology in Honour of John W. Thomson, edited by M. G. Glenn, R. C. Harris, R. Ding and M. S. Cole". The Lichenologist. 31 (4): 403. doi:10.1006/lich.1999.0214. ISSN0024-2829.