Ian Charleson Hedge | |
---|---|
Born | 1928 |
Residence | Scottish |
Nationality | British |
Known for |
Taxonomy Ecology Botany |
Scientific career | |
Fields |
Botany Biology Zoology |
Author abbrev. (botany) | Hedge |
Ian Charleson Hedge is a Scottish botanist at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh. Ian Hedge made important contributions to the flora of Iran and the flora of Iraq and is a recognised authority on the flora of south-west Asia. He has named more than 300 new plant species.
Hedge spent seven months collecting in Turkey in 1957 with Peter Davis. Together they gathered more than 6,000 specimens. Then he spent 3 months in Afghanistan with (a Norwegian botanist) Per Wendelbo, they made significant collections to the Garden Herbarium in 1962 in the north and north-east of the country and then he returned in 1969 with Wendelbo and Lars Ekberg. They were one of the first botanists to explore the area.
He described Salvia buchananii in the Botanical Magazine in 1963.
In 1982, he published a book about Salvia's, which recognised up to 86 species.
By 1988, he was the curator of the Botanical Garden Herbarium.
He collected in Portugal in the 1990s with Fatima Sales. They then published 'Jasione L. taxonomy and phylogeny' in 2002. Also 'Three perplexing names of species of Campanula L.' and 'The taxonomy and conservation of Campanula primulifolia (Campanulaceae), a critically endangered species in the Iberian Peninsula' in 2010 (with Anna Trias-Blasi, Eddie, William M.M. and Michel Möller).
He contributed to 'The Davis Festschrift' (edited by Kit Tan) on Peter Hadland Davis's 70th birthday and his own 60th Birthday in 1989.
He is mentioned in Mabberley's Plant-book of 2003. and his 'The Plant-book: A Portable Dictionary of the Vascular Plants' (in 1990).
In 2010, with other members of the Royal Botanical Garden, he identified various plant specimens for Mark Price's book 'Animal Re-introductions: The Arabian Oryx in Oman'.
On 31 January 2012, he appealed (on behalf of the Royal Botanic Garden) via the BBC to the Pakistani government to release more than 4,000 copies of a botany text book destined for Afghanistan schools and environmental groups. The 10 tonnes of books had been held at customs in Karachi for the past year. It is the 'Field Guide Afghanistan Flora and Vegetation', written by Ian and Siegmar-Walter Breckle in 2010.