AA History (p. VII-XXVI) - The Global Orchid Taxonomic Network
Transcription
AA History (p. VII-XXVI) - The Global Orchid Taxonomic Network
Orchidology in Costa Rica Gustav Reichenbach of Hamburg (Reichenbach 1852, 1854, 1855, 1866). Thus, the official beginning of botany in Costa Rica also coincides with the first scientific steps in the research of Costa Rican orchids. Although the botanical expedition to Mexico by Sessé and Mociño (1787-1803) apparently extended southward along the Central American isthmus to Panama, passing through the town of Cartago (McVaugh 1977, Taracena 1983, León 2002), Costa Rica remained substantially outside the routes of scientific exploration carried out by the Spanish Crown to explore the botanical treasures of the New World. Because Costa Rica was located on the border of the political divisions established for the new Spanish possessions, too far south from the centers of political power of the recently constituted Vice-kingdom of New Spain (in Mexico) and the General Captaincy of Guatemala, and far away from the capital of the Vice-kingdom of New Granada established in Santa Fe de Bogotá (Colombia), it also remained separate from the excited growth of Spanish botany during the second half of the eighteenth century (Ossenbach Sauter 2003, in prep.). However, the aim of our reconstruction is to shed light on the history of orchidology in Costa Rica, or the sum of events which frame the relations between humans and orchids, as well as the humans’ thoughts about orchids, as they occurred in Costa Rica. This can lead us somewhat astray from the “official” cornerstones of orchid science, revealing some different aspects of the intimate orchid culture that pervades Costa Rican life. In no other part of the American isthmus, and perhaps of the entire American continent, can one find such generalized, commonplace, passionate orchid-mania as can be observed in Costa Rica. Not only do Costa Ricans now massively attend the many orchid shows organized yearly by eleven different orchid societies (in a country little larger than Switzerland), not only did Costa Rica select an orchid, Guarianthe skinneri, the Guaria morada, as the national flower, but the practice of growing orchids at home, in gardens and terraces - mainly species of Acineta, Cattleya, Guarianthe, Oncidium, Psyschopsis, and Stanhopea -is common around the country, from the most sumptuous residences in the capital city to simple huts in the remotest rural areas. The work of Linné’s pupil Pehr Löfling was devoted to exploring Venezuela, where he died in 1756 (Steele 1964). Ruiz and Pavón landed in Peru in 1777, and their expedition ranged north to Guayaquil in Ecuador (Steele 1964). In 1799 José Celestino Mutis was committed to shedding light on the flora of New Granada (which included modern-day Colombia as well as Ecuador and Panama), where his expedition labored for almost three decades to produce more than 6,000 botanical illustrations. The corvettes of Alessandro Malaspina, with the botanists in charge of revealing new plants from the Americas, sailed along the coast of Costa Rica in 1791, on their way to Acapulco (Real Jardín Botánico de Madrid 1989). From an official perspective, botany began in Costa Rica only after the independence of the Central American republics, almost a century after the great scientific expeditions to the New World and, in essence, it was not a Spanish matter. The visits (around 1839-1840) by Emmanuel Ritter von Friedrichstall, a Bohemian, and the Danish naturalist Anders Sandoe Oersted in 1846-47 mark the initiation of botanical exploration in Costa Rica. Spain had already lost its political supremacy in the American lands, and the life of the young nations recently born in the isthmus was open to the cultural influence of other European countries. In the first decades of the eighteenth century, a new phenomenon, known as “Orchido-Mania” or orchid fever (Berliocchi 2000), swept through Europe, nourished by a general fascination for the exotic flora. Friedrichstal’s collections at Kew include orchids collected at Chontales, Nicaragua, and along the San Juan River, on the border with Costa Rica, but they are all labeled “Guatemala,” and their relevance to the orchidology of Costa Rica is, therefore, dubious. Among the collections made by Oersted, forty-one orchid species found in Costa Rica were represented (including the pretty Odontoglossum oerstedii, discovered at an altitude of almost 3000 meters on the slopes of the Irazú volcano), and they were revealed to science and humanity during the following 20 years by Professor Heinrich This very particular Costa Rican orchid-way of life, which simply disappears when one crosses the border to Nicaragua or Panama, perhaps has an ancient history. ORCHIDS BEFORE COLUMBUS XI Flying Oncidiums. With the exception of the Nicoya peninsula in the northern Pacific, pre-Hispanic Costa Rica was under the influence of the Chibcha culture, which extended from Colombia to the North to include Panama, the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua, and Honduras. Although the Chibcha culture left no written documents to explain the relationship of the indigenous populations with native flora, in the southern Valley of El General, Costa Rica, archaeologists found interesting pieces of golden jewelry, dated around the 7th century A.D., which show a surprising resemblance to the flower of an orchid. These pieces, commonly known in Costa Rica as aguilas, eagles, have a general shape consistent with the flower of Oncidium cebolleta (Jacq.) Sw. (treated in this book as a member of the genus Cohniella): the eagle’s wings and tail strongly resemble the three-lobed lip of the orchid, whereas the legs correspond to the callus at the base of the lip, and the head with the beak to the small column and the hooked anther of the orchid flower. The similarity of the ancient golden eagles to the orchid flower was first noticed by Costa Rican naturalist Anastasio Alfaro (1935), and it was supported by further observations from John T. Atwood and Dora Emilia Mora-Retana, who in their treatment of Oncidium for the FRANCO PUPULIN and CARLOS OSSENBACH. Jardín Botánico Lankester, Universidad de Costa Rica. 3 1 2 XII 1-3. Source: Collection Museo del Oro Precolombino, Museos Banco Central de Costa Rica Flora Costaricensis (Atwood & Mora-Retana 1999) recorded the use of O. cebolleta as a hallucinogenic drug in preColumbian cultures in Mexico. The alkaloid-containing orchid is a substitute for peyote (Lophophora williamsii, a well-known cactus with hallucinogenic properties) among the Taraumaras of Mexico (Bye 1979, Schultes & Hofman 1980, Lawler 1984, Ossenbach Sauter, in prep.). The crushed, boiled leaves of O. cebolleta, or the sülerkili, are still used in traditional Bribri medicine in Costa Rica against heartache (García Segura 1994). The Colombian Sinú culture (1200-1600 A.C.), close to the Chibchas, yielded similar gold pectorals with mushroom-like, winged representations, seemingly in reference to magic cults using intoxicating fungi (Schultes et al. 1992). In Costa Rican indigenous rituals, the association of the Oncidium preparation with the shamanic experience of “magic fly,” a frequent consequence of hallucinogenic intoxication, and the source of the sacred value associated with the orchid flower, are perhaps convincing arguments to reconsider the significance of these golden artifacts. Costa Rican gold eagles should be interpreted as the first American representation of an orchid species, predating by eight centuries the illustration of Vanilla in the Codex Badianus from 1552 (Ospina 1997), considered to be the first reference to tropical orchids in the western hemisphere (Reinikka 1995), along with the Aztec wood-cuts which used Encyclia pastoris, Bletia campanulata, Stanhopea tigrina and Vanilla planifolia, prepared between 1547 and 1577 for friar Bernardino de Sahagún’s manuscript History of theThings of New Spain, a copy of which is preserved in Florence under the name of Florentine Codex. The ancient history of Vanilla. The ancient history of vanilla deserves special mention. Besides orchid species and hybrids cultivated for their horticultural value, Vanilla planifolia is the only member of the family Orchidaceae to have economic relevance. Vanilla fruits (or “beans,” as they are commonly known) are still used worldwide as a high quality spice to flavor chocolate and baked goods, and their commerce is an important part of the export balance in some islands of the Indian Ocean. Arico aromatico - tlilxóchitl. One of the early representations of Vanilla, from the Historia Natural de la Nueva España by F. Hernández (1651). Vanilla had medicinal and ritual uses among the native population of Belize (Balick et al. 2000), but apparently vanilla was not utilized in southern Central America before the Spanish conquest of Mexico, and Fernández de Oviedo (1526) does not mention vanilla among the recipes used to prepare chocolate in Nicaragua and Nicoya (Costa Rica) during the sixteenth century. In his A New Voyage Round the World, William Dampier observed vanilla plants growing in Bocas del Toro, Panama, in 1681, and he noted that the natives sold vanilla to the Spaniards to perfume chocolate and tobacco (Dampier 1998). The origin of the use of vanilla to perfume the beverage produced from the seeds of cocoa (Theobroma cacao) goes back to the early Mayans of Mexico, who were familiar with the fruits of vanilla and called it sisbic (Bruman 1948, Reinikka 1995). In early Yucatec Mayan dictionaries, vanilla is mentioned as chocolate flavoring (Coe 1996), and the use of Vanilla planifolia is recorded during the Aztec kingdom of Itzcoatl (1427-1440). Vanilla plants were used as payment for tributes during the kingdoms of Moctezuma Ilhuiacamina and Axacayatl, from 1440 to 1482 (García Peña & Peña 1981). At the time of the conquest, the Spanish chroniclers Bernal Díaz del Castillo and Bernardino de Sahagún noted that the Emperor Moctezuma flavored his chocolatle beverage with the ripe fruit of the orchid and with honey, and the Mendoza Codex (written in Mexico around 1545) mentions vanilla among the tributes that the Lord of Xoxonochco had to pay to the Aztecs (Ossenbach Sauter, in prep.). The Miskito Indians from the coasts of Nicaragua and Honduras used diti bainia, or vanilla, to flavor their beverage made of cocoa and maize (Conzemius 1984), and it is possible that Miskitos brought their knowledge of the uses of vanilla from Yucatan to Panama in the seventeenth century. Since the Atlantic regions of Costa Rica were included within the range XIII Gathering vanilla. In his A New Voyage Round the World (1676) William Dampier described the method followed by the Indians of Bocas del Toro to cure the fruits. The new republics had no resources to devote to the development of natural sciences, and the discovery of the natural richness of the region was left in the hands of foreign scientists. Costa Rican botany went practically untouched through the long period of the Spanish empire in the Americas, and the new course of its biology developed from the flow of a very different group of European naturalists and adventurers. of the frequent incursions by the Miskitos along the Caribbean to the territories south of their dominions, it is also possible that Costa Rican natives also learned about the properties of the viny orchid during the eighteenth or early nineteenth centuries. ORCHID-HUNTING IN COSTA RICA Science and Spanish botany. “According to present rules, the terminology of orchids starts on May 1, 1753” (Jacquet 1994), when Carl von Linné (or Linnaeus), a Swede, set the foundation for modern biological nomenclature. It was a fertile time for tropical botany, and in the following fifty years, the revival of Spanish interest in knowing (and exploiting) the products of the new territories was responsible for the greatest biological expeditions that ever set out to the American hemisphere. Botany comes to Costa Rica. In 1846, A.S. Oersted, a Dane who entered the country at the port of Puntarenas on the Pacific (León 2002), started the official history of our orchidology. In a period of ten years, other important orchid collections were made in Costa Rica by Josef Ritter von Rawicz Warszewicz, a Pole, and by Hermann Wendland, a German. They were followed in the second half of the nineteenth century by Moritz Wagner and Carl Ritter von Scherzer, the former German and the latter Austrian, by Carl Hoffman, Alexander von Frantzius and the Carmiol brothers (all Germans), then by Richard Pfau, who was Swiss, Gottlieb Zahn, a German, and the mysterious A.R. Endres (probably Austrian). They were mostly explorers and gardeners, more rarely scientists and botanists, coming to Costa Rica from a Europe under the effects of the “fever” for tropical flora, both from the scientific and the horticultural points of view. Although not all of these collectors are relevant in order to understand Costa Rican orchidology, some of them spent enough time in Costa Rica, or made such extraordinary discoveries, to deserve a special place in this account. The expeditions of Sessé, Mociño and Malaspina revealed almost 150 orchid species from Central America, but the scientific results of their work were buried or dispersed upon their arrival at Spain during days of great political convulsion (for the dispersal of the Spanish botanical collections, see the interesting reconstruction by Ossenbach Sauter, in prep.), and most of the collected specimens are still waiting for identification. In Mexico, the work started by Sessé and Mociño was continued until 1820 by Juan Martínez de Lexarza Lexarza and Pablo de La Llave, whose explorations were the last example of “Spanish botany” in Central America. With defeat in the long war against England and the independence of the Central American republics in 1821, Spain lost both its supremacy in world sea trade and its American empire. Around the time when the Spanish guardians of the treasures brought from America by the botanical expeditions of the latter eighteenth century were dispersing the dried samples and XIV Costa Rica. Hermann Wendland was the last heir to a dynasty of gardeners and botanists of enormous prestige, initiated by his grandfather Johann Christian (Wendland I) and continued by his father Heinrich (Wendland II). the beautiful illustrations prepared for revealing the richest floras of the world, enthusiasm for exotic plants and orchids increased in Europe. England’s victory in the long war against Spain and France gave the British crown a monopoly over world trade, opening to other European countries new relationships and direct contacts with Central America. The exploration of possible alternative routes for the construction of a transisthmic canal, mainly the route of Panama and the route of the San Juan River between Costa Rica and Nicaragua, brought a new generation of scientists and naturalists to Central America. At the time of his Central American journey, Hermann (Wendland III) was considered the world’s leading expert in palms (Arecaceae) and had only a secondary interest in orchids. He reached Costa Rica in 1857, entering the country along the route of the “Mountain of the Englishman,” navigating the Sarapiquí river up to San Miguel (where he collected the type of Dichaea brachypoda), and following by mule on the route to Varablanca and the Central Valley. In the Sarapiquí valley Wendland made important collections at La Virgen, Cariblanco [where he discovered the type of Catasetum (= Dressleria) dilectum], and on the slopes of Cerro Congo. He traveled to the Tilarán range, collecting around San Ramón and Naranjo (type locality of Maxillaria inaudita), and explored the main volcanoes of the Central range. From the Barva volcano he collected one of the first Lepanthes to be described from Costa Rica, the large-flowered L. wendlandii Rchb.f., and on the slopes of the Irazú volcano he collected Odontoglossum (= Rossioglossum) schlieperianum Rchb.f. and the beautiful Zygopetalum wendlandii Rchb.f. (= Cochleanthes aromatica). Through Cartago, Wendland reached Turrialba on the Caribbean watershed of the continental divide, where the largest Lepanthes of Costa Rican flora, L. elata Rchb.f., was collected. When he returned to Hanover, Germany, Wendland On his way to Nicaragua to explore the route along the San Juan River, A.S. Oersted (1816-1872) collected intensively in Costa Rica from 1846 to 1848. Starting from the Pacific coast, he visited the Aguacate mountain chain and the cordilleras of Guanacaste and Tilarán, collected on the slopes of the high Irazú and Barba volcanoes and all around the Central Valley, traveled to the Cerros de Escazú and along the Talamanca range, reaching Turrialba on the Caribbean watershed of the continental divide. Through his Costa Rican collections, Spiranthes aguacatensis (from the Aguacate mountains), Spiranthes costaricensis (Naranjo), Odontoglossum oerstedii and Epidendrum pentadactylum (Irazú volcano), Lockhartia oerstedii (Barva volcano), Lepanthes erinacea and L. turialvae (Turrialba), among others, were discovered (Reichenbach 1866). Hermann Wendland (1825-1903) came to Central America in 1856, where he collected plants in Guatemala, El Salvador and Lockhartia oerstedii Rchb.f. (left) and Odontoglossum (= Ticoglossum) oerstedii Rchb.f. (right), from Curtis’ Botanical Magazine. XV 8 brought with him a collection of orchids which included 134 species. A special greenhouse, called “Costa Rica-Haus,” was inaugurated exclusively for this collection in the renowned gardens of Herrenhausen, created by the Duke Johann Friedrich von Calenberg (Jenny 2002, Ossenbach 2003). Guatemala: “Cattleya dowiana surpasses all the Cattleyas yet known... we must get a batch of it... I was never beat. Dowiana forever”. But Cattleya dowiana was not the only treasure Warszewicz discovered in Costa Rica. He climbed the Irazú and Barva volcanoes, where he collected Oncidium warszewiczii, and explored the central region of the country, discovering Odontoglossum warszewiczii (now Miltoniopsis). Some years later, the great orchidologist A.R. Endrés went to Costa Rica, hired by the Veitch firm to collect the rare Odontoglossum warszewiczii, which had previously resisted all attempts to introduce its cultivation. From Costa Rica, Warszewicz traveled to the mountains of Chiriquí and then to Veraguas, Panama, and in the following year he collected in several South American countries. He passed through Costa Rica again in 1850, on the way to Europe, where he spent several months working as an assistant to Prof. Reichenbach in Hamburg, who described his collections in 1866 and named the orchid genus Warszewiczella in his honor. In his Orchideae Warscewiczianae, Reichenbach wrote: “The name of von Warszewicz shines among those who have considerably increased knowledge about orchids.” Carl Hoffmann (1833-1859) and Alexander von Frantzius (1821-1877) came to Costa Rica in 1853. Hoffmann served as a physician in the Costa Rican army during the war against W. Walker, who was pro-slavery, and finally retired to Puntarenas, where he died when he was only 26 years old. Von Frantzius established his business in Costa Rica and until 1865, when he returned to Germany, managed the Botica Francesa, a pharmacy which became a meeting place for foreign and national naturalists and which played a significant role in the development of natural sciences in Costa Rica during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Both Hoffmann and Frantzius were interested in the exploration of the country and the study of the natural distribution of plants, as well as mammals and birds (León 2002). Hoffmann collected mainly in the Central Valley, around San José and Alajuela, and it is curious that the type specimen of his Epidendrum (= Prosthechea) ionophlebium Rchb.f. was collected at Curridabat, which is currently part of San José, the capital city of Costa Rica. The collections of Carl Hoffmann were sent to Prof. H. G. Reichenbach at Hamburg, who described them in his Orchideae Hoffmannianae in 1866, and are now kept in Reichenbach’s Herbarium in Vienna. The fever for Cattleya dowiana was responsible for the arrival of Karl Kramer, a German, from Panama in Costa Rica in1866, supposedly to replace Enrique Arce, the Guatemalan collector sent to Costa Rica by G. Ure Skinner in his obsessive search for However, not all the explorers who went to Costa Rica in the second half of the nineteenth century were primarily interested in science. European growers had succeeded in cultivating “air-plants” (mostly epiphytic orchids) in hot greenhouses, and the newly established horticultural exhibitions contributed to spreading the passion for tropical flora. Through its rich collection of exotic plants, the Royal Horticultural Society of London was instrumental in introducing orchid culture among the wealthy classes. Soon some of the commercial nurseries in Europe, mainly in England and Belgium, discovered that meeting the increasing demand for new species was highly profitable. They hired their own collectors to travel to tropical countries in search of new plants to stimulate the hobby of orchid collecting. Trained by the botanic garden of the University of Vilnius and by Dr. Regel at the Berlin Botanical Gardens, Joseph Ritter von Rawicz Warszewicz, a Pole, was sponsored by the Royal Nurseries of Ghent, Belgium, to visit Central America and collect orchids and hummingbirds. Warszewicz came to Guatemala in 1845 and from there traveled to El Salvador and to Nicaragua, where he met Oersted. Together they collected more than 2,000 orchids in the forests of Nueva Segovia. He reached Costa Rica in 1848 . That same year, Warszewicz discovered Cattleya dowiana Batem., one of the orchids destined to immortalize Costa Rica in the minds of orchid growers as one of the richest orchid countries in the world. Pursuing the collection of the flamboyant “Guaria de Turrialba” almost obsessively, businessman, diplomat, and amateur botanist George Ure Skinner wrote in 1866, from his headquarters in Odontoglossum (= Miltoniopsis) warszewiczii Rchb.f. From H.G. Reichenbach, Xenia Orchidacea. Left. Zygopetalum wendlandii Rchb.f. (= Cochleanthes aromatica). A watercolour prepared by an artist employed by Prof. Oakes Ames, copy of an original painting in Reichenbach’s Herbarium in Vienna. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Director, Harvard University Herbaria. XVII XVIII the yellow Cattleya from Turrialba. Kramer was equally unsuccessful with this plant, but he discovered a new, delicate oncidioid orchid, later named by H.G. Reichenbach in his honor as Odontoglossum (= Ticoglossum) krameri. Kramer’s “affair” with orchids continued in Brazil, where he lived in Manaos for many years, assuming the role of botanical trainer to Eric Bungeroth, who would become a famous orchid collector in Brazil, Venezuela, and Colombia. Apparently, the destiny of orchidology in Costa Rica during the second half of the nineteenth century was intimately related to Cattleya dowiana. Around 1865, G. Ure Skinner employed a collector in Guatemala to search for unusual orchids for James Bateman, an eccentric, liberal patron of orchid studies and author of one of the most magnificent books ever published about orchids: the gargantuan The Orchidaceae of Mexico and Guatemala. In 1865 or 1866, according to the dates of his first collections kept in the herbarium of the Natural History Museum in Vienna, the collector moved to Costa Rica, and in 1871 he was hired by the Veitch firm, mainly to search for Cattleya dowiana and Odontoglossum warszewiczii. Almost nothing is known about A.R. Endrés’ origins and life, but in the following ten years he played a leading role in the botanical exploration of Costa Rica and the discovery of hundreds of new orchid species. According to Veitch’s staff records, Endrés was a “half-caste” (Veitch 1906), an expression that indicates the offspring of a European or North American and a Latin American. Endrés signed his correspondence with an accent on the second letter “e,” following Latin American usage, but his last name is rather common in Switzerland and Austria. What is perhaps more surprising is his precise, cultivated use of the English language, as well as the quality and precision of the botanical descriptions and the illustrations which were attached to his herbarium specimens. This suggests that he received solid botanical training, probably in England. Endrés’ interest in orchids was obviously botanical, rather than horticultural, as demonstrated by the fact that he directed his main efforts to elucidating the miniature orchid flora of the country. Due to his general preference for collecting small plants and minute flowers, his mission for the Veitch firm ended as soon as 1873, and the British orchid firm considered it “expensive and scarcely a success” (Veitch 1906). We do not know where Endrés settled and lived in Costa Rica, and information about the collecting localities of his fieldtrips is scant. Around 1871, he collected together with George Downton, a British citizen also hired by Veitch. Some of Endrés’ specimens in the Reichenbach Herbarium in Vienna show that he also collected with the Swiss Richard Pfau, who established an orchid firm in Costa Rica around 1870. Endrés probably traveled extensively throughout the country, visiting the rich orchid regions of the Caribbean watershed along the Pejivalle and Pacuare rivers, collecting in the northern San Carlos plains and in the valley of the Sarapiquí River, as well in the region of Dota. Most of his specimens, however, bear no locality data. Odontoglossum (= Ticoglossum) krameri Rchb.f., from Curtis’ Botanical Magazine. Left. Cattleya dowiana Batem., from Curtis’ Botanical Magazine nishing precision. He paid attention to minute structures of taxonomic relevance, like the microscopic appendices of the lip in the species of the genus Lepanthes, which he often drew from below in order to avoid dissecting the lip, or the shape and structure of gynostemium, rostellum, anther and pollinaria, which he usually illustrated at a very high enlargement ratio. Taking into account the zygomorphic symmetry of orchid flowers, he often drew only the right half of the flower organs, folding the drawing paper to simulate an ideal longitudinal mid-line. In many cases he also prepared different views of the flowers, adding some renderings in pencil when needed in order to improve three-dimensional appreciation of the finest structures. Most of the sketches were completed with a detailed drawing of the plant habitat. Each sketch was numbered consecutively, and referenced in the description leaflets. Endrés was a fine observer who employed a methodical approach to the study of orchids. Looking at the dates of his notes and sketches, it appears that he worked within the frame of a systematic project. Each species described and depicted bears a consecutive number referred as “Nº X of gen! coll. Orch.”, which probably corresponds to Endrés’ collecting number, followed by the cross-reference to the sketches and the genus name. Different species within the same genus were numbered fol- Even today, it is difficult to understand what kind of technical equipment he used to enlarge critical details of flowers only a few millimeters big, which were illustrated with asto- XIX Sketch by A.R. Endrés Nº 192. Zygopetalum nº 11. The species was described as Chaubardiella pacuarensis Jenny in 1989. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Keeper of the herbarium, Natural History Museum, Vienna. English, with precise knowledge of technical botanical jargon. They include descriptions of shapes and measurements of each organ, their ornamentation and characteristics of the indumentum, as well as accurate notes on flower colors. The descriptions were improved at different stages, and in some cases as many as four different versions are provided. In many of the descriptions, the name of the genus is followed by a reference to the page and figure number of something like a year-book, i.e., “see fig. p. 95, below, vol. 1869-70”. Unfortunately, we have no information about the project Endrés was working on. lowing their own consecutive numeration. In many cases, the name of the genus is followed by the proposed label for the taxa Endrés considered still undescribed, and some of his new Pleurothallid orchids were effectively published by Dr. Carlyle Luer on the basis of the sketches prepared by Endrés more than 120 years before their formal scientific description. His notes often have scant information about the collecting localities, but in some cases he also noted the name of the host tree and the relative position of the epiphytic orchid on the canopy. The botanical descriptions are written in fluent XX During his Costa Rican journey, he maintained a strong relationship with Prof. Reichenbach in Hamburg, to whom he sent dried materials, notes, and drawings. Their relations were not always cordial, probably due to Reichenbach’s difficult and egocentric character. Endrés was not simply a collector, but a trained botanist with his own ideas about the flora he was discovering in Costa Rica. In many cases the materials he sent to Reichenbach were intended for the publication of new orchid species and also new genera in the family, but the German orchidologist let them languish untouched in his herbarium for the rest of his life. To complicate the matter, when H.G. Reichenbach died in 1889, he left his herbarium, including all the materials to which other botanists had contributed, to the Imperial Museum of Vienna. Most of the material was unmounted, and most of the sheets of Endrés’ specimens were not associated with the corresponding drawings, field notes, and descriptions provided by the collector. The scientific heritage of one of the most noteworthy orchid botanists in Costa Rican history was thus diluted. In 1875 Endrés left Costa Rica and traveled to Colombia, where he was murdered in Riohacha. His legacy is still waiting to be revealed in the cabinets of the Natural History Museum of Vienna. At the time Endrés was describing and illustrating his scientific discoveries in Costa Rica, Richard Pfau, a Swiss, founded a nursery in San José which sold a great variety of ornamental plants. Through his collections we know that he was also in Panama, and at least one of the new species described from plants sent to Europe by Pfau, Vanilla pfaviana Rchb. f., came from Mexico. In Costa Rica Pfau discovered the endemic Epidendrum pfavii, described by R.A. Rolfe at Kew, and in Chiriquí (on the border between Costa Rica and Panamá) he collected Trichocentrum pfavii, described by H.G. Reichenbach in 1881. From material sent by him to Prof. Reichenbach, Rudolf Schlechter described the Costa Rican Sobralia pfavii and Telipogon pfavii in 1923. Richard Pfau combined the genius of a talented writer with his ability as a collector. He wrote the first work published in Costa Rica about the orchids of this country, New, Rare and Beautiful Orchids of Costa Rica (ca. 1895), a book of greater interest for horticulture than for botany, but with some interesting notes about the ecology of some species. A good businessman, Pfau gives advice on how to grow and pack orchids for exportation, and includes a list of the species he had for sale in his nursery. Pfau also wrote about Central America and its orchids for the most prestigious horticultural journals of the Europe at the time, like The Gardener’s Chronicle and The Orchid Review, with articles ranging from the relationship between tropical climate and orchid culture (Pfau 1883), to the fertilization of orchids in the Tropics (Pfau 1894), to the orchid flora of Costa Rica (Pfau 1896). Top. Sketch by A.R. Endrés of Trichocentrum pfavii, which Reichenbach intended to publish with the name of Trichocentrum zonale. Bottom. Copy of Schlechter’s sketch of Telipogon pfavii. The original drawing was burned during the fire that destroyed the herbarium of Berlin in 1943. Both reproduced with the kind permission of the Director, Harvard University Herbaria. Interestingly, the voice of Richard Pfau is also the first to address the rising concern about the destruction of Costa Rican orchid habitats, when he describes one of the most beautiful native orchids: “Cattleya skinneri, some ten years ago, was a common orchid all over Central America; but in the last few years it has been exported by shiploads; and today – at least in Costa Rica – it has almost become rare” (Pfau 1895). XXI XXII THE ERA OF LIBERALISM AND THE BORN A “NATIONAL SCIENCE” that was unparalleled at the time in any country of tropical America. Although hired to teach in secondary schools, Pittier had more ambitious programs and wide scientific interests, ranging from botany to geology, meteorology, ethnology, cartography and archeology. In 1887, just a few months after his arrival, he was named to the board of directors of the newly established National Museum, and in 1888 he founded the Meteorological Institute. The following year, the government consolidated the Museum and the Institute into one center, the “Instituto Físico-Geográfico Nacional de Costa Rica,” and Pittier was appointed as its director for a few months. That merger later broke up and the Museum was again separated under the direction of Anastasio Alfaro. At the Instituto FísicoGeográfico, thanks to the joint efforts of Alfaro, Tonduz, Biolley, Wercklé and Brenes, Pittier formed the National Herbarium, which initially had more than 5000 species, and which was still unequalled in Latin America at the beginning of the twentieth century (Standley 1937). The Institute was dissolved in 1898, and the plant collections amassed by Pittier over the previous decade were put in custody of the staff at the National Museum. After a last attempt to revive the Institute in 1901, Pittier left Costa Rica to work in the United States and to pursue a distinguished career in Venezuela until his death in 1950. Order and progress. Aside from its scientific achievements, the cultural renaissance fostered by the Age of Reason at the end of the eighteenth century, which produced the flow of great botanical expeditions to the New World, also influenced the social environment of the countries that came into contact with the new ideas. As a result of Enlightenment, a Cabinet of Natural History was founded in Guatemala in 1796, but it was an exception. In most of the republics of Central America, official interest in the natural world was not established until the end of the nineteenth century, when national governments began to pursue the goals of “order and progress”: seeing science as a powerful tool to modernize state and society. They included the need for botanical inventories and national floras in their agendas, reviving botanical gardens and natural history museums and opening the first public schools and universities in the region. The “extractive botany” practiced by foreign naturalists began to be replaced by a more concerned botanical exploration, aimed at obtaining better knowledge of the local natural resources and their possible economic uses. The scientific collector, often based at a local institution or sponsored by liberal elites, replaced the legendary orchid hunter. The Instituto Físico-Geográfico was reduced to a collection of plants and an assistant who made daily meteorological observations, under the direction of Anastasio Alfaro. In 1910 the observatory became an official division of the Museo Nacional, and the Institute eventually ceased to exist. Since the beginning of the activities carried out by the Instituto FísicoGeográfico, botanical exploration was one of the main interests of Pittier, resulting in the publication of a volume on the first flora of Costa Rica, Primitiae Florae Costaricensis, a work that unfortunately was not concluded. He was always interested in orchids and sent a number of specimens to his friend Théophile Durand in Brussels, who passed them on for identification to Rudolf Schlechter in Berlin. The fascicle of the Primitiae Florae Costaricensis, to be devoted to orchids, which Pittier expected Schlecther to write, was never prepared. Nevertheless, the German botanist described many new species based on Pittier’s collections, among them Kefersteinia costaricensis, Microstylis (= Malaxis) carpinterae, Notylia pittieri, Epidendrum cardiophorum, E. (= Prosthechea) abbreviatum, and in 1906 he dedicated the orchid genus Pittierella (= Cryptocentrum) to Pittier. In Costa Rica, the era of positivism and its associated reforms were initiated in the 1840s by President Braulio Carrillo and continued by President José Maria Castro Madriz, who fought for public education. As part of a reform aimed at secularizing education, President Bernardo Soto’s administration (18851889) hired a group of European teachers to establish public high schools in the capital, San José. The arrival of these scholars marks the beginning of a scientific renaissance in Costa Rica and the birth of a “national science,” of which the National Museum and the Instituto Físico-Geográfico (founded in 1886 and 1888 respectively) are the institutional symbols. The Museo Nacional de Costa Rica. The National Museum was the product of the visionary effort of a young, self-taught Costa Rican naturalist and archeologist, Anastasio Alfaro, who at the age of twenty-one persuaded the government to scientifically organize a systematic collection of the natural and cultural heritage of the country. On behalf of the Ministry of Development, Alfaro visited the United States to learn about the latest techniques in museum organization, and on his return, in May 1887, the government funded the creation of the National Museum and named Alfaro its first director. Alfaro had a special interest in the study of botany, which lasted throughout his life, and paid special attention to orchids, ferns, mosses, and cacti, making important discoveries in each of these groups. Harvard botanists Oakes Ames and Charles Schweinfurth dedicated Epidendrum alfaroi, Maxillaria alfaroi and Stelis alfaroi to him. Among the teachers who came to Costa Rica to take part in the new model of national education were Pablo Biolley, who was Swiss, and Henry Francois Pittier. The latter arrived in Costa Rica in 1887 and lived there until 1904, during which time he conducted a systematic exploration of the local flora In 1889 Pittier hired a young assistant who was at the time working at the botanical garden of Lausanne, Switzerland, in charge of the botanical work at the Instituto Físico-Geográfico. Adolphe Tonduz was a laborious collector, responsible for most of the specimens kept at the herbarium of the Institute under the direction of Pittier. When Pittier left Costa Rica, Tonduz accepted a position with the United Fruit Company, and from 1908 to 1911 he again held the position of curator at the National Herbarium. Tonduz contributed the type collections of Bulbophyllum vinosum, Camaridium dendrobioides, Epidendrum majale, and Stelis aemula, among others, to the orchid flora of Costa Rica. XXIII accompanied Pittier during many botanical explorations, making important contributions to the body of knowledge on Costa Rican flora. Among these orchids, he discovered Masdevallia ecaudata, Ornithidium (=Maxillaria) biolleyi and Telipogon biolleyi. Biolley was a romantic and poetic man, and he spent his last years in solitude and poverty, victim to the alcoholism that finally took his life in 1908, at the young age of forty-six. In the early years of the twentieth century, other people joined the botanists of the Museo Nacional and contributed orchid specimens to the Herbarium. The German brothers Alfred and Alexander Curt Brade collected mainly in the Central Valley, and Schlechter described more than 50 orchid species based on their exceptionally well-preserved specimens as new to science, among them Habenaria irazuensis, Lepanthes bradei, Liparis (= Crossoglossa) fratrum (“of the brothers”), Lycaste bradeorum, Osmoglossum (= Cuitlauzina) convallarioides, and Warrea costaricensis. While Alfred Brade settled permanently in Costa Rica, where he worked as a gardener and abandoned orchidology, Alexander Curt moved to Brazil in 1910 and became one of the most eminent orchidologists of that country. Guillermo Acosta Pieper, from San Ramón, also prepared specimens to be studied by Schlechter in Berlin, among which the German botanist found the new genus Acostaea, and new species in the genera Dichaea, Lepanthes, Maxillaria and Pleurothallis, dedicated to their discoverer with the specific epithet acostaei. A brilliant student and a precocious botanist, Otón Jiménez collected plants with the most renowned scientists and naturalists working in Costa Rica: Pittier and Tonduz, Donnel Smith and Britton, Lankester, Maxon, Standley, and Williams and Allen. In 1912 (when he was seventeen years old), Jiménez was appointed director of the herbarium at the National Museum, a post he held until 1914. Rudolf Schlechter described Epidendrum jimenezii, Epilyna jimenezii (a new orchid genus), Habenaria jimenezii, Lepanthes jimenezii, and Scaphyglottis jimenezii, among others, in his honor. The relationship of Karl (Carlos) Wercklé, an Alsatian, with the National Museum and the Instituto Físico-Geográfico was never very close. Nevertheless, Wercklé surely met Pittier during his first trip to Costa Rica (around 1897) to collect plants and seeds for the firm of John Lewis Child of Long Island, New York, and he was good friends with Tonduz and probably with Biolley (who often collected plants near his home in Orotina) (Gómez 1978). From 1902 on, he lived permanently in Costa Rica, and in 1911 he was hired for a few months as the curator of the National Herbarium under Alfaro’s direction. The main botanical interest of Wercklé was pteridology, and his name is permanently associated with the knowledge of Costa Rican ferns. Wercklé was a prolific writer and author of almost ninety publications, mostly devoted to economic botany, but also to cacti, gesneriads, bamboos, ferns, and fungi. In 1920 he published the first comprehensive treatise on Costa Rican phytogeography. He wrote two short papers on Costa Rican orchids and their culture for the 1913 Bulletin of the Institute for Agricultural Top, Lycaste bradeorum Schltr. Bottom, Epilyna jimenezii Schltr. Right, Epidendrum (= Oerstedella) schumannianum Schltr. All reproduced with the kind permission of the Director, Harvard University Herbaria, Harvard University. Rudolf Schlechter honored his name with the orchids Ornithocephalus tonduzii and Pleurothallis tonduzii. Tonduz left Costa Rica in 1911 to work in Guatemala, where he died, a victim of alcoholism, in 1921. Pablo Biolley came to Costa Rica in 1886 to teach at the recently founded Liceo de Costa Rica. He married a Costa Rican and obtained Costa Rican citizenship, settling permanently in the country. Although mainly interested in entomology, Biolley XXIV XXV nothing written about his intimate knowledge of Costa Rican plants. The scientific contributions made by Brenes to Costa Rican orchidology were immense, and Schlechter described more than ninety new orchid species based on his collections, dedicating to him the new genus, Brenesia, and dozens of species that honor his name: Barbosella brenesii, Campylocentrum brenesii, Notylia brenesii, Ponthieva brenesii, and Trichocentrum brenesii are only some examples. Development. However, orchids were not a primary concern of his botanical activity, and the specimens of his often unnumbered collections for the herbarium of the Instituto FísicoGeográfico were usually prepared by Otón Jiménez from plants cultivated in the garden of Mrs. Amparo Calleja de Zeledón, of whom he was a protégé until his death. On the basis of Wercklé’s collections, Rudolf Schlechter described more than eighty new orchid species, mostly collected around San José and flowering in Mrs. Zeledón’s garden from 1920 to 1922. However, Camaridium imbricatum (= Maxillaria schlechteriana) and Masdevallia ecaudata were described from specimens collected during Wercklé’s first Costa Rican journey in 1897, and a few other species [among them the beautiful Epidendrum (= Oerstedella) schumannianum] from collections made by him in the first decade of the twentieth century. The name of Carlos Wercklé is commemorated, among others, by Dichaea wercklei, Elleanthus wercklei, Epidendrum wercklei, Eriopsis wercklei, Fregea wercklei, Kefersteinia wercklei, Lepanthes wercklei,Oncidium wercklei, Pleurothallis wercklei, Stelis wercklei, and Epidendrum caroli. The Decline of the European Influence. In 1923, the greatest work ever written about the orchids of Costa Rica, Additamenta ad Orchideologiam Costaricensem, was published in the series of Repertoria of New Species, edited in Berlin by Prof. Friedrich Fedde. In the chapters “Orchidaceae Amparoanae,” “Orchidaceae Bradeanae Costaricenses,” “Orchidaceae Brenesianae,” and “Orchidaceae novae et rariores collectorum variorum in Costa Rica collectae,” Rudolf Schlechter revealed the results of the collective effort made by half a dozen extraordinary botanists of the Herbario Nacional de Costa Rica in the previous two decades to the world. Paradoxically, this work also marks the end of the privileged relationship between Costa Rican and European botanists. Through his collections Schlechter also paid homage to the grand lady of Costa Rican orchidology, Mrs. Amparo de Zeledón, with his Amparoa costaricensis, Camaridium amparoanum, Costaricaea amparoana, Cycnoches amparoanum, Dichaea amparoana, Epidendrum amparoanum, Habenaria amparoana, Isochilus amparoanus, Maxillaria amparoana, Stelis amparoana, and Trigonidium amparoanum. Like many other botanists working in Costa Rica, Wercklé died in disgrace, a victim of alcoholism in 1924. His friend doña Amparo buried him in the family chapel in San José. While European countries had to resolve the social problems and the miseries of the post-war period, facing the triumph of communism in Russia and the rapid ascent of nazism and fascism, the United States established a new economic empire in Latin America during the first three decades of the twentieth century. Under the energetic policy of President Theodore Roosevelt, the big enterprises related with the banana trade extended the range of their interests and activities in Central America, with increasing participation in the economic and political decisions of Latin American countries. Likewise, European explorers and scientists, who dominated the history of orchids in Costa Rica during the eighteenth century, were replaced by a new generation of North American botanists. From this time on, the development of Costa Rican orchidology would mainly occur in English. Alberto Manuel Brenes, born in San Ramón, Alajuela in 1870, was the youngest member of the staff associated with the National Herbarium. In 1890, after completing his high school studies in Costa Rica, Brenes moved to Europe, where he studied botany and natural history at the universities of Lausanne and Geneva. In 1898, Brenes returned to his home country to work as a teacher in San José. During his spare time, he joined the botanists working with Pittier, collecting plants for the collections of the Instituto Físico-Geográfico. In 1911, Brenes moved to his hometown, San Ramón, where he lectured in secondary schools until 1920, when Alfaro appointed him head of the Botany section at the National Museum, a position he held until 1935 (Barringer 1986). It was during this time that Brenes began a systematic collection of orchids, mainly from San Ramón and nearby areas, which would eventually reach the astonishing number of 23,000 specimens, probably the largest collection of its kind ever produced by a single botanist. Rudolf Schlechter based one third of the almost three hundred new Costa Rican orchids he described in 1923 on Brenes’ material, reflecting an affiliation and friendship with Brenes that began around 1900 and lasted until Schlechter’s death. At this time, at Paul C. Standley’s suggestion, Brenes sent his orchid specimens to Prof. Oakes Ames at Harvard University. During the last years of his life, Brenes planned to retire to Switzerland to write a book on the general flora of Costa Rica. Unfortunately this work was never written, and at his death in 1948, Brenes left Oakes Ames graduated from Harvard University in 1899 and was shortly afterwards appointed director of the Botanical Museum of the University. He was Schlechter’s main competitor during the great German scientist’s last two decades, and at the same time his friend and admirer. After Schlechter’s death, he became the world’s foremost authority in orchidology. In 1905 Ames began the publication of Orchidaceae: Illustrations and Studies of the Family Orchidaceae, in seven volumes. He published his first species of Central America in the second volume of the series(1908), only two years after Schlechter had described the first orchids from this region. His studies on the orchids of Central America were always overshadowed by his competition with Schlechter and the urgent need to receive new collections, in a tireless effort to surpass the great German in the description of new species. Numerous expressions of this rivalry can be found in the correspondence between Ames and Lankester, from which the following excerpt serves as an example: “We must work fast if we hope to keep abreast of the Germans. I was surprised to see how XXVI far-reaching their efforts have been to secure a monopoly of tropical American species” (Ames to Lankester, Sept. 17, 1922). In 1922 he began his relationship with Charles H. Lankester, an English naturalist who lived in Costa Rica, which bore many fruits and lasted until Ames’ death. Most of Lankester’s collections were described in Schedulae Orchidianae, a work that Ames published in ten fascicles between 1922 and 1930 in collaboration with Charles Schweinfurth (who was his disciple and friend for over thirty-five years). In 1937 Ames published the first formal treatment of the family Orchidaceae for the Flora of Costa Rica by Paul C. Standley, recording 979 orchid species. Several new genera and many species of orchids were dedicated to Ames, among them Amesia A. Nelson & J. F. Macbr. Amesiella Schlechter ex Garay, Oakes-amesia C. Schweinf. & P.H. Allen, Bulbophyllum amesianum J.J. Smith, Dendrobium amesianum Schltr., and Epidendrum amesianum Correll. (1879-1969), arrived at Puerto Limón in December, 1900 and went on by train to the capital of Costa Rica, arriving just in time to take part in the “Ball of the New Century” offered by Costa Rica’s President Rafael Yglesias in the National Theater of San José. Better known as “don Carlos,” Lankester was born in Southampton, England, and came to Costa Rica to occupy a position as assistant in the “Sarapiquí Coffee Estates Company.” Don Carlos Lankester arrived at the right place at the right time to join in the active biological exploration of Costa Rica, perhaps the most exciting place, biologically speaking, on our continent. He had the opportunity to meet Professor Pittier when he visited this interesting region, beginning a friendship that lasted throughout his life. When his contract expired, Lankester returned to England, but came back to Costa Rica a few months later, called by Pittier to take over the experimental station which the United Fruit Company planned to establish in Zent. In 1908 he accepted management of a coffee farm in Cachí, where he lived for nine years with his wife Dorothea Hawker and his young family. It was during those years that don Carlos began his collections, which in many cases proved to be new species, in the nearby woods. He sent his first specimens for identification to Rolfe, at Kew. One of them (Lankester 021, “1915, neighborhood of Cachí”) is probably the first new species of Orchidaceae discovered by Lankester: Pleurothallis costaricensis Rolfe. After a brief interlude in England and Africa (1920–1922), Lankester returned to Costa Rica and later moved (1924) to live at “Las Cóncavas,” a coffee farm that he had acquired in the vicinity of Cartago. The year 1922 was a turning point in Lankester’s career as an orchidologist: it first brought him in contact with Oakes Ames, with whom he would develop a deep friendship. Ames, after returning from a trip to Europe, wrote to Lankester: “At Kew I saw many specimens collected by you in Costa Rica, the greater part unnamed. As it will take some time for Kew to recover from the loss of Rolfe and as the Germans are making great efforts to assemble Costa Rican material through Wercklé, Jimenez and Tonduz, it seemed to me that you might be willing to co-operate with me by stimulating orchidological interest among your neighbors.” Lankester answered immediately and became Ames’ favorite collector for the next twenty-five years, during which time Ames discovered, among the specimens received from Las Cóncavas, more than one hundred new species. Many were dedicated to Lankester, such as: Campylocentrum lankesteri, Cranichis lankesteri, Dichaea lankesteri, Epidendrum lankesteri, Habenaria lankesteri, Stelis lankesteri, Telipogon lankesteri, and Trigonidium lankesteri. Ames also found a new genus amongst Lankester’s collections: “There seems to be a new genus among your specimens. Lankesterella would be a good name.” (Ames to Lankester, April 18, 1923). In Las Cóncavas, during the following thirty-three years and while he continued sending plants to Ames, Lankester created the orchid garden which would become the Mecca of all botanists who passed through Costa Rica, not only because of the plants, but also because of don Carlos’ vast knowledge of the country and its nature. In 1956, when Lankester could no longer manage his farm because of his age, he sold “Las Cóncavas” and moved his garden to a nearby property know as “Silvestre,” where, years On December 19, 1921, at the port city of La Libertad, El Salvador, Paul Carpenter Standley, botanist of the U. S. National Museum, arrived at Central America for the first time. He was probably the most important figure in the history of the botanical exploration of the region during the first half of the twentieth century. He was a friend of all the Central American scientists of the time and contributed more than any other to furthering study and research among the local naturalists and collectors, contributing to the development of the existing herbaria and to the creation of many new ones. Standley made extensive collecting trips to Costa Rica, a country that he visited during the first months of 1924 and then again between December, 1925 and March, 1926. Here he became acquainted with the most important naturalists of the time: Anastasio Alfaro, Alberto M. Brenes, Amparo de Zeledón, Otón Jiménez and Charles Lankester. Of special importance for the success of Standley’s excursions was the figure of Juvenal Valerio Rodríguez. Recommended initially by Otón Jiménez, Valerio was Standley’s companion during his first visit to Costa Rica during a short tour to the Bajo de la Hondura. When Standley returned in 1925, Valerio never left his side as his guide to the region of Santa María de Dota and the Cerro de las Vueltas, in an extensive tour through Guanacaste, and finally to the lowlands of the Atlantic coast. Standley and Valerio planned to publish a flora of Costa Rica in Spanish. Valerio argued to his superiors that a Spanish edition was essential so that it would be accessible to naturalists, students and the general public of Costa Rica. But Valerio’s hopes vanished after the elections in the spring of 1936, when the new government cancelled the publications of all works of general interest, including the Flora de Costa Rica. In Costa Rica, Standley collected an enormous amount of material (over 15,000 plant specimens) with no fewer than thirty orchid species that were new to science. Especially noteworthy are the following: Brachionidium pusillum Ames & Schweinf., Brachionidium valerioi Ames & Schweinf., Dichaea standleyi Ames, Lepanthes acoridilabia Ames & Schweinf., Pleurothallis standleyi Ames, Stenorrhynchos (= Coccineorchis) standleyi Ames and Telipogon standleyi Ames. At the age of only twenty-one, Charles Herbert Lankester XXVIII XXIX held a position at the Biology School of the University, lecturing on general biology and botany. In 1979, Dora Emilia was appointed director of Lankester Botanical Garden, a position she held until 2000, when she retired from the university. During more than twenty years, Mora de Retana transformed the fertile garden of Charles Lankester into a world-renowned botanical institution and the obligatory meeting point of the most prominent orchidologists from around the world: Calaway H. Dodson, Norris H. Williams, Robert L. Dressler, Carlyle A. Luer, Eric Hágsater, John T. Atwood, Rudolf Jenny, Günter Gerlach, and many others, were her friends in orchidology and in life. At Lankester Garden, she reorganized the orchid collections, introducing many new species (mainly of diminutive Pleurothallids) from all around Costa Rica and arranging them systematically in special greenhouses, and she supervised the inspired landscape design and the creation of scientifically organized outdoor collections. She played an active role in plant conservation, serving for many years as scientific authority in the Flora Committee of CITES (Morales 2001). In 1984 she offered the first course on Orchidology with the collaboration of Robert L. Dressler, who spent six months working at the University of Costa Rica as a guest professor. The orchid garden that the University of Costa Rica received as the living legacy of C.H. Lankester, and the personal friendship with Bob Dressler, were the milestones of her long, productive career, built around the “core business” of orchids. later, the Lankester Botanical Garden of the University of Costa Rica was established. However, despite his age, he continued collecting. One of his last specimens bears the number 1761, a plant of Warrea costaricensis Schltr., collected in February of 1960, when Lankester was already eighty-one years old. The Universidad de Costa Rica. The University of Costa Rica was officially founded in August, 1940, on the foundation of the former Universidad de Santo Tomás, created in 1843 and dissolved in 1887. That same year, the first courses offered by the Science School of the Universidad de Costa Rica were inaugurated. One of the students in the courses of 1942 was a brilliant, restless young man from San Ramón, a teacher of natural sciences at the Liceo de Costa Rica and blessed by the Muse of arts: Rafael Lucas Rodríguez Caballero. After concluding his academic program at the University of Costa Rica in 1945, he received a scholarship to study plant systemics at the University of California in Berkeley (Morales 2003). Since 1953 Rodríguez was incorporated as a professor at the Universidad de Costa Rica, where he was instrumental in the creation of a Department of Biology and was appointed as the first director. Under his direction, the Department assumed custody of the University Herbarium (USJ), founded in 1943, and the José María Orozco Botanical Garden. Orchids were the main botanic interest of “don Rafa” (as friends and students called him), and since the late fifties he began to illustrate, in beautiful and botanically detailed watercolors, hundreds of species native to Costa Rica and Mesoamerica, which eventually reached the impressive number of 1092 plates. Rodríguez published only a few papers on orchids, but his unpublished manuscripts reveal his great scientific interest in the systemics of the family. With visionary commitment, and thirty years in advance of the Flora Mesoamericana project, he planned a taxonomic treatment of the Orchidaceae of the Central American isthmus, for which he wrote a general key and the texts of many genera, unfortunately unpublished at his premature death. Rodríguez was a beloved, respected friend of all the naturalists and scientists working with Costa Rican orchids, among them Robert L. Dressler and Charles H. Lankester. And it was Rodríguez who made the international contacts and organized the network of institutions that eventually provided the funds to rescue Lankester’s orchid garden, when his friend died in 1969. Epidendrum rafael-lucasii, Lepanthes rafaeliana and Maxillaria rodrigueziana were dedicated to him. The advances made in our knowledge of Costa Rican orchid flora under the scrutiny of Dora Emilia and her co-workers were outstanding. Her “Lista actualizada de las orquídeas de Costa Rica,” published in 1992 in conjunction with Joaquín García Castro (her main collaborator and friend for over 25 years), added 46 genera and 467 species to the catalogue prepared by Ames in 1937. In collaboration with her scientific associates, Dora Emilia published more than twenty articles on orchids, ranging from taxonomy to pollination and fruit production, studies on the cultural requirements of threatened species, and orchid distribution and conservation. Her interaction with other botanists resulted in three hundred Costa Rican orchids illustrated under the series of Icones Plantarum Tropicarum, mostly based on the living collections of Lankester Botanical Garden (Atwood 2001). In 1999, a few months before retirement, she submitted to the press what is probably her main scientific legacy to the knowledge of Costa Rican orchids taxonomy: the treatment of the subtribes Maxillariinae and Oncidiinae for the Flora Costaricensis, prepared in collaboration with John T. Atwood. Her friends dedicated to Dora Emilia Epidendrum mora-retanae Hágsater, Kefersteinia retanae G. Gerlach ex C.O. Morales, Sobralia doremiliae Dressler, Stelis morae Luer and Telipogon retanarum Dodson & Escobar. For a long time after the death of Rafael Lucas Rodríguez, Dora Emilia Mora de Retana (1940-2001) was the only Costa Rican orchidologist with academic and scientific formation in botany. A student of Rodríguez’, Mora de Retana worked her entire career at the Universidad de Costa Rica, where she began working as a professor in 1969. From 1973 on, she Previous page: Maxillaria rodrigueziana J.T. Atwood & Mora-Ret. Watercolour by Rafael Lucas Rodríguez C., reproduced with the kind permission of the Library, University of Costa Rica. XXX
Similar documents
The glandulous Specklinia: morphological convergence versus
appear much larger than their individual differences. However, this can be misleading and such variations may not always represent the variation of a single taxon. A larger sampling of the alleged ...
More informationThe Vice-Presidency of Research is sincerely acknowledged for his
Hundreds of new species names and documents (mostly protologues), images (including high-res files), publications and other materials relative to orchid systematics, distribution and history are ad...
More information