Margot Forde
Margot Bernice Forde (née Ashwin; 1 June 1935 – 23 June 1992)[1] was a New Zealand botanist, curator, and taxonomist.[2][3] BiographyForde was educated at Wellington Girls' College, and graduated from Victoria University College where she studied natural history and botany.[4] She was married to fellow New Zealand botanist Bernard Forde, and they both received their PhD degrees from the Botany Department of the University of California, Davis in the early 1960s.[5] Margot Forde researched the plant taxonomies of Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang (China), and the Caucasus. She was a leading scientist in the field of seed conservation in grazing plants.[6] She and her husband both did scientific work regarding climate change, with Margot building a scientific record with hundreds of samples of grasses from across New Zealand that provided evidence of climate change impacts, while Bernard worked to create New Zealand's climate laboratory in the early 1990s, attending an early international summit on the climate change in 1992 – the same year that Margot died from cancer.[6][5] Publications
Honours and awardsForde was awarded the Allan Greenstone Award for meritorious service to botany and the Sesquicentennial Gold Medal for services to science in 1990.[6] The Margot Forde Genebank at AgResearch, in Palmerston North, was named in her honour.[8] Sources
References
External linksWikispecies has information related to Margot Forde. |