- Thomas Frederic Cheeseman
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Thomas Frederick Cheeseman (1846 – 15 October 1923)[1] was a New Zealand botanist and also a naturalist who had a wide-ranging interest in natural history, such that he even described a few species of sea slugs, marine gastropod molluscs.
Contents
Biography
Cheeseman was born at Hull, in Yorkshire in 1846, but came to New Zealand with his parents when he was eight. He was educated at Parnell Grammar School and then at St John's College, Auckland. His father, the Rev. Thomas Cheeseman had been a member of the old Auckland Provincial Council.[1]
Cheeseman started studying the flora of New Zealand, and in 1872 he published an accurate and comprehensive account of the plant life of the Waitakere Ranges.[1]
In 1874 he was appointed Secretary of the Auckland Institute and Curator of the (at the time only fairly recently founded) Auckland Museum. Under his curatorship, the museum collections were formed. His botanical studies were valuable not just academically, but also were of importance to agriculture, horticulture, and forestry. He published papers almost every year until his death.
When Cheeseman's research began, the botany of New Zealand was quite poorly known. Cheeseman made many collecting trips including areas such as the Nelson Provincial District, the Kermadec and Three Kings Islands, and the area from Mangonui to the far north. He sometimes traveled with his friend Mr. J. Adams, of the Thames High School, after whom he named the species Senecio adamsii and Elytranthe adamsii.[1]
Cheeseman also visited Polynesia. He published in the Transactions of the Linnean Society a full account of the flora of Rarotonga, the chief island of the Cook Group.[1]
Bibliography
Out of his 101 papers and books, twenty-two are not on botany, but instead are on zoological or ethnological subjects.[1]
Many of Cheeseman's botanical publications paved the way for a complete flora of New Zealand. In 1906 he produced The Manual of the New Zealand Flora. In 1914 he and Hemsley created Illustrations of the New Zealand Flora (1914). Some of his publications were speculative in character, about the possible origins of the New Zealand sub-Antarctic flora. He also had written an early paper on the naturalized plants of the Auckland Provincial District. Some of his early papers were about the pollination of certain species.[1]
As well as his botanical research, Cheeseman developed the Auckland Museum, including what is probably the most extensive collection extant, illustrating Maori ethnology. He donated his own herbarium of the flowering plants and vascular cryptogams to the Auckland Institute.[1]
He published 79 articles in Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand including:
- Cheeseman T. F. 1878. Descriptions of three new Species of Opisthobranchiate Mollusca, from New Zealand. Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand, volume 11, page 378-380, plate XVI.
- Cheeseman T. F. 1906. Manual of the New Zealand flora. 1199 pp.
- Cheeseman T. F, Hemsley W. B. & Smith M. 1914. Illustrations of the New Zealand Flora. volume 1, volume 2.
Membership
Cheeseman was a Fellow of the Linnean Society of London, and the Zoological Society. He was made a Corresponding Membership of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh, and given the Gold Linnean Medal of the Linnean Society. The New Zealand Institute elected him President in 1911. In 1918 he was awarded the Hector Memorial Medal and Prize for his botanical researches. In 1919 he was made an original Fellow of the New Zealand Institute.[1]
References
This article incorporates public domain text from reference.[1]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Cockayne L. 1923. Thomas Frederic Cheeseman, 1846–1923. Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand, volume 54, page xvii-xix.
- ^ "Author Query". International Plant Names Index. http://www.ipni.org/ipni/authorsearchpage.do.
External links
Categories:- Botanists with author abbreviations
- New Zealand botanists
- 1846 births
- 1923 deaths
- Scientists from Kingston upon Hull
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