新澳门六合彩内幕信息

Badass Babes of Botany

Class Shines a Light on Inspiring Women Botanists of History

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Marina LaForgia posing in a field of flowers
新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis postdoctoral scholar Marina LaForgia led the class "Badass Babes of Botany." (Courtesy Marina LaForgia).

It鈥檚 the turn of the 19th century and botany is the only socially acceptable science for women to pursue. After all, both women and plants are 鈥渄elicate,鈥 so naturally botany is 鈥渇ashionable.鈥 

At least, that was society鈥檚 thinking at the time.

Women took this opportunity to shape the field of botany within a highly whitewashed and male-dominated world of science. Still, even if they had the same professional training as male botanists, women were labeled as 鈥渁mateurs鈥 or 鈥渃onnoisseurs,鈥 and their history was largely erased. 

, 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis postdoctoral scholar, winner of the prestigious and recipient of the Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Mentoring Undergraduate Research, sheds light on these inspiring women through her first year seminar, 鈥淏adass Babes of Botany.鈥

The women LaForgia highlights fought back in pursuit of knowledge. Jeanne Barrett (1740-1807) disguised herself as a man and conducted botanical surveys, becoming the first woman to circumnavigate the globe. Anna Atkins (1799-1871) was the first person to publish a book with photographs鈥撯揷yanotypes of the algae she studied.

Cyanotype of an algae species
Cyanotype pictures from Photographs of British Algae (1844). (Courtesy of The New York Public Library)

Women botanists were among the first women to graduate college and become scientists. 

新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Professor was the first botanist to receive the National Medal of Science and was one of the most influential plant biologists in history before she died in 1997 at age 99. She broke barriers for women in science, and her name now graces the Katherine Esau Science Hall on campus. 

鈥淸Women] are trained to be homemakers. And I was not a homemaker,鈥 said Esau. 

But not all women scientists get recognized in this way. Not even LaForgia knew these botanists before starting her class.

After finding out about Anna Atkin鈥檚 cyanotypes, she started digging: 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know she existed. I was like, who else do I not know exists?鈥 

Who are the Fab 5?  

Women botanists ruled the field. For LaForgia鈥檚 week on taxonomy, she designated her 鈥淔ab 5:" Kate Brandegee, Alice Eastwood, Ynes Mexia, Blanche Trask, and Lester Rowntree. These women were instrumental in documenting and understanding California plant species in the early 1900s, and their collaboration resulted in much of what we know today about the plants in and around California, said LaForgia. 

鈥淭hese women are the epitome of badass: They fought against the stereotypes of their times, were among the first women to earn advanced degrees, and traveled to remote places in search of new and rare plant specimens,鈥 LaForgia wrote in her description of the seminar. 

Badass indeed: When the California Academy of Sciences caught fire in 1906, entered the burning building and saved 1,500 key reference (type) specimens. For the next 40 years, she rebuilt the collection to three times the amount destroyed in the fire. 

Black and white heads shot of botanist Alice Eastwood in hat and black dress
Botanist Alice Eastwood, circa 1910. (California Academy of Sciences)
Ynes Mexia looking at a bird on her shoulder
"Young Black-headed Grosbeak." Portrait of Ynes Mexia, ca. 1921. (California Academy of Sciences.)

Eastwood traveled around California in an open-top Model T Ford with , whose 13-year career began in her 50s. During that short time, Mexia traveled the world and collected nearly 150,000 specimens, described 500 new species, discovered two new genera, and had 50 plants named in her honor.

spent her honeymoon walking from San Diego to San Francisco, collecting plants along the way. She was the third woman to graduate from 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Berkeley, and she made it possible for West Coast botanists to publish their findings by founding the bulletin of the California Academy of Sciences. Brandegee took a pay cut to pay Eastwood as her assistant after seeing Eastwood鈥檚 huge personal collection of botanical specimens. Self-taught Eastwood took over at the Cal Academy when Brandegee retired.

spent her career on Catalina Island documenting plants and writing poetry: 鈥淚 have never known anyone anywhere who knows the plants individually over such a large area as she does鈥 said botanist Willis Linn Jepson. 鈥淪he seems to know the individual trees and shrubs like old friends and knows whether they have changed in the last 10 years and how much.鈥 

Blanche Trask sitting on her balcony porch smiling
Blanche Trask posing on her porch in Avalon, Catalina Island. (新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Berkeley Jepson Herbarium).

The last of the Fab 5, , began her career in botany in her 50s after her divorce and went on to found the California Horticultural Society with Eastwood. Rowntree traveled California alone in her car, and when her car couldn鈥檛 go any higher in the mountains, she鈥檇 go via mule. She鈥檚 the O.G. vanlife granola girl, a pioneer in California native plant propagation and conservation, and the founder of her own seed company.

 鈥淚t took adversity to bring me the sort of life I had always longed for,鈥 Rowntree wrote in her 1936 book, Hardy Californians.

(This girl group rivals any I鈥檝e seen. I can just imagine the BuzzFeed quiz, 鈥淲hich Member Of The Fab 5 Of Botany Are You?")

Inspiring young botanists 

In her undergrad and high school years, LaForgia was deterred from her passion for science.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 see people who looked like me,鈥 she said. 鈥淭o me, a scientist was an old white man in a lab coat. And it鈥檚 just so much more than that. It has been more than that for a long time. I wish someone would have just shaken me and been like, 鈥榃hatever. You鈥檙e worth it. Just do it.'" 

She hopes to be that person for her students now. 

Marina LaForgia planting seed bags
Marina LaForgia buries seed bags to measure survival over time at Sierra Foothill Research and Extension Center. (Courtesy Marina LaForgia).

鈥淚t鈥檚 inspiring to see other women,鈥 said first-year Plant Sciences major B鈥橢lanna Pho, who started volunteering at the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Herbarium after LaForgia took the class there. 

鈥淚 originally wanted to go into geology, but one of the botanist highlights of the week was actually a paleobotanist, so now I want to do that,鈥 said first-year student Keira Baum. 鈥淭here are all of these women I鈥檝e never heard of before, and they pioneered this entire field. They wanted to study science and they did, even though science wasn鈥檛 reserved for them. It鈥檚 fascinating.鈥 

Undergraduates pose with a large fabric poster reading "Badass Babes of Botany"
LaForgia鈥檚 class posing with a cyanotype fabric they made with artist and 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Berkeley lecturer Arielle Rebek. (Courtesy Marina LaForgia)

Even if the students aren鈥檛 in her field, LaForgia hopes they walk away from her class with confidence, and the knowledge that the history she is sharing applies to any career. 

鈥淭here are amazing women and people of color and minorities that are also in those fields,鈥 said LaForgia. 鈥淚 also hope the students get more excited about plant life and nature in general. We need more people conserving and protecting nature, ensuring that there are these beautiful areas in the future.鈥 


Malia Reiss is a science news intern with 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Strategic Communications. She studies environmental science and management at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis.

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Kat Kerlin, 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu 

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