Graham Duncan (botanist)

Graham Dugald Duncan
Born (1959-11-28) November 28, 1959[1]
Citizenship South African
Fields Botany and horticulture
Institutions SANBI, Kirstenbosch
Alma mater University of KwaZulu-Natal
Known for South African geophytes
Influences Winsome Fanny Barker (1907–1994), curator Compton Herbarium, Kirstenbosch (W.F.Barker).
Notable awards Herbert Medal
Recht Malan Prize
Author abbrev. (botany) G.D.Duncan

Graham Dugald Duncan(born 1959) is a South African botanist and specialist bulb horticulturalist at the Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, Cape Town, South Africa.

Life

Graham Duncan was born in 1959[2] and grew up in the Western Cape region amongst its wild bulbous plants. He obtained his early education at the Cape Town Technikon with a National Diploma in horticulture,[1][3] and joined the Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, Cape Town, South Africa in 1978, where he came under the influence of Winsome Fanny Barker (1907–1994), then curator of the Compton Herbarium at Kirstenbosch and a Lachenalia specialist. He earned his MSc (cum laude) in Botany at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg in 2005.[4][5]

Work

Graham Duncan is a specialist horticulturalist for geophytes and curates the indigenous South African geophytes collection at Kirstenbosch Botanical Garden. These are displayed in the Kay Bergh Bulb House at the Kirstenbosch Conservatory.[6] He is considered an authority on the cultivation, conservation, propagation and biology of bulbs of the Cape region, and the leading expert on the Lachenalia genus.[7][8][9] His research deals with the biology and taxonomy of Cape bulbs.[5]

Other than his work on Lachenalia[10][11] he is known for his expertise on Nerine,[12] Eucomis and Agapanthus. As well as identifying a number of South African plants,[9] he has also bred cultivars such as Clivia miniata 'Kirstenbosch Splendour', which illustrates the cover of the Kirstenbosch centenary book (2013).[13][14]

He is the author of numerous books, including several titles in the Kirstenbosch Gardening Series, scientific papers and popular articles on South African bulbous plants.[4] He is also a plant collector[2] and plant photographer (see image) and his photographs illustrate his own books and have been published in The Smallest Kingdom: Plants and Plant Collectors at the Cape of Good Hope (2011).[8][9][5]

Awards

In 1989 he was awarded the Recht Malan Prize for non-fiction (1989) from the Nasionale Boekhandel for his Bulbous plants of southern Africa [15] and in 2001 he was the recipient of the International Bulb Society's Herbert Medal.[16][5]

Legacy

Plants for which Duncan is the Botanical authority include many species of Lachenalia, together with W.F.Barker. The International Plant Names Index lists 54 taxa named by him, predominantly species of Lachenalia.[17]

Selected publications

Books

Kirstenbosch Gardening Series

Articles

References

Bibliography

Books and monographs

Articles and websites

Works by Graham Duncan

External links


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