{"title":"ROLF AND GERTRUD DAHLGREN PRIZE FOR 2023 AWARDED TO LOUIS RONSE DE CRAENE","authors":"Ib Friis, Natasha de Vere","doi":"10.1002/tax.13144","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>On 2 December 2023, at the annual celebration of the foundation of the Royal Physiographic Society of Lund, Sweden, the Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren Prize for 2023 was awarded to Louis Ronse De Craene, Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. The Prize, inaugurated in 1988, is given every third year to a scientist who has made major contributions to botany in the broad-minded spirit of Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren, particularly in the fields of systematics and evolution of the angiosperms, and regardless of their nationality. The prize-winner is chosen by active researchers in various fields of botany. Ronse De Craene has been awarded the prize for his work on floral development in a broad range of angiosperm families and the importance of floral morphology in the context of modern phylogenetic studies.</p>\n<p>Ronse De Craene was born in Kortrijk/Courtrai (Flemish Region of Belgium) in 1962. He obtained an M.Sc. at the University of Reading (U.K.) in 1986, with a thesis in which he proposed a clearer circumscription of the genus <i>Polygonum</i> based on floral morphological and anatomical characters. He received a doctorate at the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) in 1992 on a dissertation about the androecium of the angiosperms (<i>The androecium of the Magnoliophytina: Characterisation and systematic importance</i>). After postdoctoral research at Leuven for eight years, he became Director of the M.Sc. program in Biodiversity and Taxonomy of Plants jointly organised by the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) and the University of Edinburgh, a post he held from 2002 to 2022. He remains attached at the RBGE as a Research Associate and an external lecturer.</p>\n<p>At Leuven and Edinburgh, Ronse De Craene developed a broad research program on flower morphology, studying in detail the floral development and anatomy of many angiosperm families in collaboration with scientists around the world. His most important contribution is a book entitled <i>Floral diagrams: An aid to understand floral morphology and evolution</i>, published by Cambridge University Press in 2010 (revised second edition in 2022). This book explores floral morphology of the angiosperms as an essential counterpart of their molecular phylogeny, and it continues in modern botany the scientific approach of Carolus Linnaeus, Wilhelm Eichler, Eugen Warming, and Rolf Dahlgren, among others. Taken as a whole, Ronse De Craene's work represents a valuable combination of research in several areas of systematics and evolution of the angiosperms.</p>\n<p>The Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren Prize is awarded by the Royal Physiographic Society at Lund, an institution with the secondary title of Academy for the Natural Sciences, Medicine and Technology. This academy was founded on 2 December 1772, by, among others, the botanist Anders Jahan Retzius, for whom the South African genus <i>Retzia</i> (Retziaceae, or Stilbaceae) is named, and father of the anatomist Anders Adolf Retzius. Carl Peter Thunberg was elected member in 1773 and Carolus Linnaeus the elder in 1775. Professor Rolf Dahlgren, who was also a member, is best known for his system of angiosperm classification based on the evaluation of many more characters than previously had been used, including anatomical and chemical characters. Dahlgren's classification of the monocotyledons in particular has had lasting influence. Educated at the University of Lund, Rolf Dahlgren became professor of systematic botany at the Botanical Museum and Library (now part of the Natural History Museum of Denmark) at the University of Copenhagen, where he worked from 1973 to his death in 1987. The prize was established by donations from Lund, Copenhagen, and other botanical centres. It has been the tradition that the prize-giving involved both the ceremony in Lund (Fig. 1) and a visit to Copenhagen (Fig. 2), usually with a lecture given by the prize-winner at both universities.</p>\n<figure><picture>\n<source media=\"(min-width: 1650px)\" srcset=\"/cms/asset/2585693e-179b-4e64-8083-23da9b74dd9b/tax13144-fig-0001-m.jpg\"/><img alt=\"Details are in the caption following the image\" data-lg-src=\"/cms/asset/2585693e-179b-4e64-8083-23da9b74dd9b/tax13144-fig-0001-m.jpg\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"/cms/asset/79b1087c-1773-47c3-9a08-42aab9afc5a4/tax13144-fig-0001-m.png\" title=\"Details are in the caption following the image\"/></picture><figcaption>\n<div><strong>Fig. 1<span style=\"font-weight:normal\"></span></strong><div>Open in figure viewer<i aria-hidden=\"true\"></i><span>PowerPoint</span></div>\n</div>\n<div>Catherine and Louis Ronse De Craene at the prize-giving ceremony in Lund, December 2023 (Photo: Ellinor Nordin).</div>\n</figcaption>\n</figure>\n<figure><picture>\n<source media=\"(min-width: 1650px)\" srcset=\"/cms/asset/fbd02b4d-622a-42f8-ad5d-f91582ed6f8b/tax13144-fig-0002-m.jpg\"/><img alt=\"Details are in the caption following the image\" data-lg-src=\"/cms/asset/fbd02b4d-622a-42f8-ad5d-f91582ed6f8b/tax13144-fig-0002-m.jpg\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"/cms/asset/bdd5c73a-f234-4df4-9128-2c2fc83af20e/tax13144-fig-0002-m.png\" title=\"Details are in the caption following the image\"/></picture><figcaption>\n<div><strong>Fig. 2<span style=\"font-weight:normal\"></span></strong><div>Open in figure viewer<i aria-hidden=\"true\"></i><span>PowerPoint</span></div>\n</div>\n<div>Ib Friis, Natasha de Vere and Louis Ronse De Craene in front of the Palm House in the Copenhagen Botanical Garden where Rolf Dahlgren was professor (Photo: Catherine Ronse De Craene).</div>\n</figcaption>\n</figure>","PeriodicalId":49448,"journal":{"name":"Taxon","volume":"29 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Taxon","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/tax.13144","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
On 2 December 2023, at the annual celebration of the foundation of the Royal Physiographic Society of Lund, Sweden, the Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren Prize for 2023 was awarded to Louis Ronse De Craene, Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. The Prize, inaugurated in 1988, is given every third year to a scientist who has made major contributions to botany in the broad-minded spirit of Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren, particularly in the fields of systematics and evolution of the angiosperms, and regardless of their nationality. The prize-winner is chosen by active researchers in various fields of botany. Ronse De Craene has been awarded the prize for his work on floral development in a broad range of angiosperm families and the importance of floral morphology in the context of modern phylogenetic studies.
Ronse De Craene was born in Kortrijk/Courtrai (Flemish Region of Belgium) in 1962. He obtained an M.Sc. at the University of Reading (U.K.) in 1986, with a thesis in which he proposed a clearer circumscription of the genus Polygonum based on floral morphological and anatomical characters. He received a doctorate at the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) in 1992 on a dissertation about the androecium of the angiosperms (The androecium of the Magnoliophytina: Characterisation and systematic importance). After postdoctoral research at Leuven for eight years, he became Director of the M.Sc. program in Biodiversity and Taxonomy of Plants jointly organised by the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) and the University of Edinburgh, a post he held from 2002 to 2022. He remains attached at the RBGE as a Research Associate and an external lecturer.
At Leuven and Edinburgh, Ronse De Craene developed a broad research program on flower morphology, studying in detail the floral development and anatomy of many angiosperm families in collaboration with scientists around the world. His most important contribution is a book entitled Floral diagrams: An aid to understand floral morphology and evolution, published by Cambridge University Press in 2010 (revised second edition in 2022). This book explores floral morphology of the angiosperms as an essential counterpart of their molecular phylogeny, and it continues in modern botany the scientific approach of Carolus Linnaeus, Wilhelm Eichler, Eugen Warming, and Rolf Dahlgren, among others. Taken as a whole, Ronse De Craene's work represents a valuable combination of research in several areas of systematics and evolution of the angiosperms.
The Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren Prize is awarded by the Royal Physiographic Society at Lund, an institution with the secondary title of Academy for the Natural Sciences, Medicine and Technology. This academy was founded on 2 December 1772, by, among others, the botanist Anders Jahan Retzius, for whom the South African genus Retzia (Retziaceae, or Stilbaceae) is named, and father of the anatomist Anders Adolf Retzius. Carl Peter Thunberg was elected member in 1773 and Carolus Linnaeus the elder in 1775. Professor Rolf Dahlgren, who was also a member, is best known for his system of angiosperm classification based on the evaluation of many more characters than previously had been used, including anatomical and chemical characters. Dahlgren's classification of the monocotyledons in particular has had lasting influence. Educated at the University of Lund, Rolf Dahlgren became professor of systematic botany at the Botanical Museum and Library (now part of the Natural History Museum of Denmark) at the University of Copenhagen, where he worked from 1973 to his death in 1987. The prize was established by donations from Lund, Copenhagen, and other botanical centres. It has been the tradition that the prize-giving involved both the ceremony in Lund (Fig. 1) and a visit to Copenhagen (Fig. 2), usually with a lecture given by the prize-winner at both universities.
2023 年 12 月 2 日,在瑞典隆德皇家物理学会成立的年度庆典上,罗尔夫-达尔格伦和格特鲁德-达尔格伦奖(Rolf and Gertrud Dahlgren Prize for 2023)被授予爱丁堡皇家植物园的路易斯-朗斯-德-克雷尼(Louis Ronse De Craene)。该奖于 1988 年设立,每三年颁发一次,奖励那些秉承罗尔夫-达尔格伦和格特鲁德-达尔格伦的宽广胸襟,特别是在被子植物系统学和进化领域做出重大贡献的科学家,且不分国籍。获奖者由植物学各领域的活跃研究人员选出。Ronse De Craene因其在众多被子植物科的花发育方面的工作以及花形态学在现代系统发育研究中的重要性而获奖。1986 年,他在英国雷丁大学获得理学硕士学位,论文中他根据花的形态和解剖特征,提出了更明确的蓼属划分方法。1992 年,他在比利时鲁汶天主教大学(Catholic University of Leuven)获得博士学位,论文涉及被子植物的雄蕊(The androecium of the Magnoliophytina: Characterisation and systematic importance)。在鲁汶进行了八年的博士后研究后,他成为爱丁堡皇家植物园(RBGE)和爱丁堡大学联合举办的植物生物多样性和分类学硕士课程的主任,任期从 2002 年至 2022 年。在鲁汶大学和爱丁堡大学,Ronse De Craene开展了广泛的花形态学研究项目,与世界各地的科学家合作,详细研究了许多被子植物科的花发育和解剖。他最重要的贡献是一本名为《花图》的书:该书由剑桥大学出版社于 2010 年出版(第二版修订版于 2022 年出版)。这本书探讨了被子植物的花卉形态学,作为其分子系统发育的重要对应物,它在现代植物学中延续了卡罗勒斯-林奈、威廉-艾希勒、欧根-沃明和罗尔夫-达尔格伦等人的科学方法。从整体上看,朗斯-德-克雷尼的著作是被子植物系统学和进化论多个领域研究的宝贵结合。罗尔夫-达尔格伦和格特鲁德-达尔格伦奖由隆德皇家物理协会颁发,该协会的二级机构为自然科学、医学和技术学院。该学会成立于 1772 年 12 月 2 日,创始人包括植物学家安德斯-贾汉-雷齐乌斯(Anders Jahan Retzius)和解剖学家安德斯-阿道夫-雷齐乌斯(Anders Adolf Retzius)的父亲。卡尔-彼得-图恩伯格(Carl Peter Thunberg)于 1773 年当选为会员,老卡罗勒斯-林奈(Carolus Linnaeus the elder)于 1775 年当选为会员。罗尔夫-达尔格伦(Rolf Dahlgren)教授也是该学会的成员之一,他最著名的成就是建立了一套被子植物分类系统,该系统基于比以往更多的特征(包括解剖和化学特征)进行评估。达尔格伦对单子叶植物的分类尤其影响深远。罗尔夫-达尔格伦在隆德大学接受教育,1973 年成为哥本哈根大学植物博物馆和图书馆(现为丹麦自然历史博物馆的一部分)的系统植物学教授,直至 1987 年去世。该奖项由隆德、哥本哈根和其他植物学中心捐款设立。按照传统,颁奖仪式既在隆德举行(图 1),也会在哥本哈根举行(图 2),获奖者通常还会在两所大学发表演讲。图 2在图形浏览器中打开PowerPointIb Friis、Natasha de Vere 和 Louis Ronse De Craene 在哥本哈根植物园的棕榈屋前,Rolf Dahlgren 曾在这里担任教授(摄影:Catherine Ronse De Craene)。
期刊介绍:
TAXON is the bi-monthly journal of the International Association for Plant Taxonomy and is devoted to systematic and evolutionary biology with emphasis on plants and fungi. It is published bimonthly by the International Bureau for Plant Taxonomy and Nomenclature, c/o Institute of Botany, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Dúbravská cesta 9, SK-845 23 Bratislava, SLOVAKIA. Details of page charges are given in the Guidelines for authors. Papers will be reviewed by at least two specialists.