The mission of the International Association of Bryologists (IAB), as a society, is to strengthen bryology by encouraging interactions among all persons interested in byophytes.
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Friday, November 25, 2011

For Frank Cook, University of Western Ontario professor emeritus, bryology was always in his blood

Western professor leaves lifetime collection to Museum of Nature

While it was simply a hobby for Frank Cook, the Canadian Museum of Nature has cashed in with the amateur naturalist’s donation of more than 1,500 plant specimens including rare and endangered species of mosses.

The University of Western Ontario professor emeritus (botany/biology) amassed his collection over more than 35 years of fieldwork, starting around 1970. The 90-year-old Cook, who now lives on Barrie, taught plant physiology at Western for 35 years prior to retiring in 1987.

Cook

The new additions to Canada’s national plant collection include mosses and liverworts, both part of a distinctive group of small plants known as bryophytes. The specimens are mostly from locales in southern Ontario, with some from British Columbia as well as Australia and New Zealand.



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Monday, November 21, 2011

5TH MEETING ON THE BIOLOGY OF SPHAGNUM ESTONIA-LATVIA


We have the pleasure to announce that the homepage of the 5th International Meeting on the Biology of Sphagnum is now accessible at http://natmuseum.ut.ee/Sphagnum2012. The meeting will take place from 10th to 19th of August 2012 in North-Latvia and Estonia. The conference days will be on August 14-15 in Tartu, Estonia.

Everybody is welcome to participate in this meeting!

On the behalf of the organizing committee,

Nele Ingerpuu

University of Tartu

Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences

Lai 40, Tartu 51005

Estonia

Wednesday, November 9, 2011