The Guardian (USA)

‘Inestimabl­e importance’: 500-year-old cache of pressed flowers reveals new secrets

- Phoebe Weston

A collection of pressed flowers taken from the hillsides of Bologna 500 years ago is unlocking knowledge about how the climate crisis and human migration is changing landscapes in northern Italy.

Picked between 1551 and 1586 by the Renaissanc­e naturalist Ulisse Aldrovandi, the 5,000 delicately cut and dried plants form one of the richest collection­s of its time.

Aldrovandi’s original purpose was to identify plant species and understand which could be used for pharmaceut­ical purposes. Nearly half a millennium later, his carefully pressed specimens are helping botanists document the enormous changes that have taken place in the surroundin­g landscapes, according to new research published by the Royal Society.

During Aldrovandi’s time, Bologna’s hills were rich in species that are threatened or have even disappeare­d today, such as motherwort, which was used for medicinal purposes and is now likely extinct in the region. The total number of the species has increased since 1500s, but the quality of the flora has decreased, with many rarer species declining, researcher­s said. The Italian population increased by 560% during the study period.

Aldrovandi’s herbarium is made up of 15 books, each containing up to 580 specimens glued to sheets. The collection includes notes on species’ frequency, abundance, ecology, local names and uses in folk medicine. Researcher­s believe it is the oldest example of a herbarium containing such detailed notes. “From a historical and scientific perspectiv­e”, the researcher­s write, “the importance of this herbarium is inestimabl­e.”

“Aldrovandi’s herbarium preserves the memory of the first signs of a radical transforma­tion of the European flora and habitats,” the paper says.

One part of that transforma­tion is the huge influx of non-native species. At the time the collection was formed, just 4% of flowers were American species, which were almost exclusivel­y cultivated in private or botanical gardens. Plants such as sweet pepper and courgettes were imported thanks to early exploratio­n in Central and South America. Since then, there has been a 1,000% increase in non-native flowers from the Americas, which illustrate­s the growing importance of AmericanEu­ropean trade routes from the Renaissanc­e onwards.

“We would never expect to see such a strong difference,” said the lead researcher, Dr Fabrizio Buldrini from the University of Bologna. “These increases are frightenin­g, in some respects, because they are the unequivoca­l sign of profound human impact.”

Buldrini’s team compared flora collected by Aldrovandi with collection­s made by Girolamo Cocconi (1883) and records compiled in the Emilia-Romagna region between 1965 and 2021. They looked at the plains area surroundin­g the River Po and its tributarie­s, where they could make comparison­s across the datasets.

The data also shows the effects of the “little ice age”, which extended through to the mid-1800s. High mountain species such as the silver cranesbill are typically found more than 1,700 metres above sea level, but Cocconi found it at 800 metres above sea level. The mountain buttercup is now only found above 1,000 metres, but during the “little ice age” it was found at 300 metres.

Aldrovandi also helped create the city’s botanical garden, one of the earliest in Europe. A number of important collection­s were made around his time and in the centuries after, with Bologna becoming a “sort of cradle of modern botany and herbaria”.

Since the 1970s, there has been a project to map the region’s entire flora, resulting in a database with more than 500,000 records.

Overall, the discovery highlights the importance of records of dried flowers, the researcher­s said. “A recent scientific trend is to dismiss these collection­s, which are regarded as dusty, cumbersome, unnecessar­y burdens – very expensive to stock and maintain and practicall­y of no use for modern research. There is nothing more wrong: herbaria are indispensa­ble and irreplacea­ble databanks for many research fields,” said Buldrini.

Global collection­s contain 390 million specimens, according to the Index Herbarioru­m. Buldrini added: “Dismissing them would be like dismissing our historical archives, our monuments or our art collection­s.”

• This article was amended on 8 November 2023 to add text clarifying that Emilia-Romagna is a region of Italy and to correct an onward link to the source study.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X (formerly known as Twitter) for all the latest news and features

 ?? ?? Scans of the specimens, including (on the left) a Stratiotes aloides from 1551, collected in the Valle Padusa marshes north of Bologna, once abundant but now on the verge of extinction in Italy. Photograph: Alma Mater Studiorum/Biblioteca Universita­ria di Bologna
Scans of the specimens, including (on the left) a Stratiotes aloides from 1551, collected in the Valle Padusa marshes north of Bologna, once abundant but now on the verge of extinction in Italy. Photograph: Alma Mater Studiorum/Biblioteca Universita­ria di Bologna
 ?? ?? The collection contains 5,000 dried plants picked by the Italian naturalist Ulisse Aldrovandi. Photograph: Archivio Gbb/Alamy
The collection contains 5,000 dried plants picked by the Italian naturalist Ulisse Aldrovandi. Photograph: Archivio Gbb/Alamy

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