It鈥檚 not just Furbish鈥檚 lousewort. It鈥檚 Kate Furbish鈥檚 lousewort.
Kate Furbish: tenacious botanist, gifted artist, my new role model

A Furbish鈥檚 lousewort by any other name would not be a milestone in women鈥檚 history. And the woman for whom the plant was named was well aware of that fact.

We know because on April 8, 1881, Kate Furbish wrote a letter pointing that out to Sereno Watson, the curator of Harvard University鈥檚 herbarium.

Quick backstory: Harvard鈥檚 herbarium was established by, and later named for, Asa Gray, who was something of a botanical celebrity in his day. Gray synthesized all existing knowledge about the plants of North America in his Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States, known colloquially as 鈥淕ray鈥檚 Manual.鈥 No relation to 鈥淕ray鈥檚 Anatomy.鈥

As the curator of the herbarium, Watson was responsible for processing, describing and naming new specimens that were submitted to the collection, including a never-before-seen lousewort sent in by a botanist from rural Maine.

Which brings us back to Furbish鈥檚 letter, written as a follow-up to Watson鈥檚 positive reception of her submission. After accepting Watson鈥檚 invitation to visit him in Cambridge (they eventually became friends) Furbish called him out:

鈥淢y second reason for writing is to say, that were it not for the fact that I can find no plants named for a female botanist in your manual, I should object to 鈥楶edicularis Furbishae鈥 for it is too often conferred to be any particular honor,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淚t鈥 being the naming of a plant for its discoverer.

Furbish continued, 鈥淏ut as a new species is rarely found in New England and few plants are named for women, it pleases me.鈥

So Pedicularis Furbishiae it was, and since then, this rare plant has made a name for itself.

One of a kind

Furbish鈥檚 lousewort became one of the first plants to be added to the endangered species list in 1978, and has been mythologized for its role in helping to stop the controversial Dickey-Lincoln hydroelectric dam project, which would have flooded 80 thousand acres of Maine鈥檚 north woods, including most of this plant鈥檚 native habitat. The only place in the world where Furbish鈥檚 lousewort occurs is along the Saint John River in Maine and Canada; it depends upon periodic scouring of the banks by ice to provide the right conditions for it to grow, and to keep competitive plant species at bay.

Hanging in there: Pedicularis furbishiae, also known as Furbish鈥檚 lousewort, on the banks of the Saint John River

Now the bet365下载ios is reviewing the status of Furbish鈥檚 lousewort, which has managed to persist despite threats to its habitat from erosion and development thanks to collaborative efforts by the , , the forest products industry, and private landowners who have taken voluntary measures to protect the plant on their properties.

But the botanical contributions of the woman who discovered the plant have largely been forgotten.

鈥淗istory has painted Furbish as a gifted artist, and an 鈥榓mateur鈥 botanist,鈥 said Kat Stefko, who oversees Bowdoin College鈥檚 special collections. Among them, the , which includes journals, correspondence, research materials, and sixteen bound volumes of Furbish鈥檚 masterful sketches and watercolors of flowering plants.

But Stefko added, 鈥淭he more you dig into this collection, the more you realize the sustained and significant contributions she made at a critical time in the history of field botany.鈥

All the more remarkable considering the barriers that would have kept Furbish from pursuing a career in this field along the most direct route, say through a degree in science at Harvard or Yale. She found her own way.

Budding ambition

Furbish developed a knowledge of plants at an early age thanks to her innate curiosity about the natural world and some practical training from her father, who cultivated vegetables to sell at his hardware store in Brunswick, Maine.

As a young adult, she studied art, first in Portland, then in Boston, then in Paris, using a brush to learn the fine morphological details key to field identification. 鈥淢any people would say it was the other way around, but I think she turned to art to support botany,鈥 Stefko said.

By 1870, when she was in her mid-thirties, Furbish had set her career goal. 鈥淪he determined she was going to identify all of the flowering plants in Maine and do watercolor renderings of them as aids for identification.鈥

I told Stefko that sounded ambitious.

鈥淚t was very ambitious,鈥 she confirmed. 鈥淲e know that she had an herbarium at her house that at some point numbered more than 4,000 sheets.鈥 That is, pieces of paper displaying pressed, dried plant specimens. To ensure that her watercolors would be reliable aids to identification, Furbish needed to have multiple specimens capturing every plant at every life stage.

But she wasn鈥檛 just using these sheets to inform her paintings, she was sending them to academic institutions, including Bowdoin, to inform their research. Stefko said these herbarium sheets were considered extremely valuable. 鈥淚t鈥檚 serious business what she鈥檚 doing.鈥

That鈥檚 because identifying plants was serious business. As in, life and death. At the time, most medicines were derived from plants, and training in homeopathy was a fundamental part of the curriculum at medical schools, including Bowdoin鈥檚 (which closed in 1921).

Kate Furbish鈥檚 detailed watercolor illustration of the plant she discovered.

Unstoppable

Furbish was instrumental in helping to build a network of botanical knowledge in the 19th century that connected her to scholars like Asa Gray, and scholarly institutions like Harvard, where she would not have been admitted as a student.

She helped research herbariums grow by doggedly pursuing, collecting, and identifying rare species in parts of her state where few dared venture.

Aroostook County, where Furbish found the lousewort, is still considered far afield. 鈥淭he county,鈥 as it鈥檚 known, encompasses nearly a quarter of Maine鈥檚 area, and about five percent of its population. In the late 1800s, Aroostook might as well have been the Arctic. Exploring this wilderness would have been unthinkable for most, and especially for a single woman.

Fortunately, Furbish had a mind of her own.

鈥淗ad I listened to those who discouraged me from going into that part of the state because the Flora would not be likely to repay me for the expense and fatigue, I should be as ignorant as they are of its natural beauties,鈥 she said in a speech for the Portland Society of Natural History in 1883, blithely titled, 鈥淎n Evening in the Maine Woods.鈥

To be sure, she faced challenges: riding on a mail coach 鈥渨ith no back to the seat, and no springs to the carriage,鈥 narrowly avoiding falling into a ravine at the expense of her tools (鈥淚 exclaimed in my despair, Alas! For they were borrowed!鈥)and braving 鈥渋nterminable bogs鈥 where men had ventured never to be seen again. 鈥淏ut I found no skeletons, had no misgivings, and always enjoyed surmounting every obstacle which presented itself,鈥 she said.

Stefko put it differently: 鈥淪he was unstoppable.鈥 And her resulting achievements, remarkable.

鈥淭here are other important herbarium collections, but to have an important herbarium collection and these watercolors?鈥 Stefko marveled 鈥 there are 1,326 of them. 鈥淚t is a massive, singular collection. There is nothing like it.鈥

It鈥檚 fitting then that Furbish was the one to discover the lousewort; it too is singular. Not only is the plant found only along the Saint John, 鈥淣o one really knows how it got there,鈥 said Mark McCollough, an endangered species specialist for the Service. Its closest known relative grows in the Rocky Mountains.

鈥淪omehow, this plant found a little foothold along the Saint John, where it has persisted since the last glaciers receded,鈥 McCollough said.

Neither Furbish nor her lousewort were deterred by the fact that they didn鈥檛 belong.

The effort to conserve at-risk wildlife and recover listed species like Furbish鈥檚 lousewort is led by the Service and state wildlife agencies in partnership with other government agencies, private landowners, conservation groups, tribes, businesses, utilities and others. It has drawn support for its use of incentives and flexibilities within the ESA to protect rare wildlife, reduce regulations and keep working lands working.

Story Tags

Plants