The Scotsman

George Argent

Rhododendr­on expert nicknamed ‘Edinburgh’s Indiana Jones of botany’

- DR PETER WILKIE Head of Sapotaceae Research, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

Graham Charles George Argent, botanist. Born: 15 May 1941 in Hertfordsh­ire. Died: 24 April 2019 in Ullapool, aged 78.

Gra ham Charles George Argent, known as George to the botanical community, was appointed Tropical Botanist on the staff of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) in 1974.

After earning an undergradu­ate degree in bot any at the University of Leicester (1963), he obtained a PHD on the taxonomy of West African mosses from the University of Wales, Bangor (1969), while working as a research assistant to Professor Paul Richards. He subsequent­ly secured a position as Research Fellow for the New Guinea Biological Foundation from 1969 to 1973, to collect and study the genetic diversity of bananas.

During this period, he travelled widely in Papua New Guinea and collected more than 200 cult iv ars, which he subsequent­ly propagated and studied at the experiment­al station of the Institute of Technology, Lae. He also made collection­s of artefacts from the many indigenous groups he met. This formed the basis of an exhibition in a large department store in Japan and much of this material was later donated to the National Museum of Scotland.

On appointmen­t to RB GE, George commenced his research on the plant family Ericaceae, which includes the heathers, blueberrie­s and his own speciality, the genus Rhododendr­on. His focus was on the tropical ‘Vireya’ Rhododendr­ons from South East Asia. Over the next 40 years, he authored more than 130 new species and varieties from a range of plant families, and published over 100 scientific papers, culminatin­g in his seminal book Rhododen

drons of Subgenus Vireya, first published in 2006, with a second edition in 2015.

During his time at RB GE he under took more than 50 expedition­s across the trop - ics, bringing back thousands of preserved her barium collection­s and introducin­g over 2000 living plants. It is perhaps for these living collection­s, recognised as the largest and best-curated collection of ‘Vireya’ Rhododendr­ons anywhere in the world, that he will be best remembered.

Although George took part in large expedition­s, such as the Royal Geographic­al Society’s Mulu expedition­s (197778), Brunei Rainforest Expedition (1991-2), the Royal Society and Royal Geographic­al Society Brazil (Mato Grosso) expedition (1967-69) and an expedition to Los Tayos, Ecuador, in 1976 – in which the astronaut Neil Armstrong took part– most of his field work was undertaken in small groups.

He particular­ly enjoyed being in the field with promising young researcher­s, many of whom he helped and supported as they became significan­t botanists and conser - vationists in their own countries. Unusually for the time, he was also notable for including Edinburgh horticultu­rists on many of his expedition­s, so they could experience the natural environmen­ts in which species occurred, in order to reproduce these in cultivatio­n.

Eight species, in seven plant families, have been named in his honour (Acalypha argentii Sagun & G.A. Levin, Aeschynant­hus argentii M. Mendum, Callicarpa argentii, Bramley, Musa argentii Gogoi & Borah, Nepenthes argent ii J ebb& Cheek and Globba argentiana R.M. Smith, Begonia argentii Kiew & S.julia, Begonia georgei Coyle).

In 1997 he was awarded the Royal Horticultu­ral Society’s LoderC up for his major contributi­on to rhododendr­on research, in 2002 he received the American Rhododendr­on Society’ s Gold Medal for a major contributi­on to internatio­nal rhododendr­on research and in 2013 the David Fairchild medal for plant exploratio­n.

After official retirement from RBGE in 2004, his research on the Ericaceae and Musaceae of South East Asia continued unabated. He gave a keynote speech on the scientific importance of living collection­s at the Flora Malesiana Symposium (Edinburgh) in 2016, and a keynote presentati­on on New Guinea Musaceae at the internatio­nal Zingiberal­es conference in Singapore in 2018. He continued to cu rate the Ericaceae of SouthEast Asia in the Herbarium and the Living Collection. His last expedition was to Northern Luzon with the National Museum Manila in 2017, although he was planning an expedition to New Guinea for 2020.

It was in retirement that he published the second edition of his acclaimed monograph on ‘Vireya’ rho do dendrons, containing over300spe­cies. In the past year he pub - lished and submitted scientific papers describing new species from the Philippine­s, Laos and Indonesia, a checklist of Musaceae & Ericaceae of New Guinea and a major paper on theVacci ni um( blue berry relatives) of Borneo covering 42 species, ten of which are described as new to science.

George was renowned for his kindness and generosity. He had a mischievou­s sense of humour and at times enjoyed testing institutio­nal boundaries. He never seemed to lose his enthusiasm for foreign travel; his expedition­s to some of the remotest places on Ear th – often carried out on a shoestring – were a rich source of anecdotes which amused his contempora­ries and inspired younger generation­s of researcher­s.

He is remembered with great fondness by the many botanists with whom he freely shared his immense taxo - nomic knowledge and by the numerous horticultu­rists given the opportunit­y to see species in their natural habitats.

He is also remembered by a succession of talented botanical artist she nurtured, for whom he secured funding and who drew and painted some of his most interestin­g discoverie­s, both from living plants in the Glasshouse­s, and dried specimens in the Herbarium.

George was the quintessen­tial botanist, with the wide variety of skills and knowledge needed to thrive in a botanic garden research community and with a range of experience that would be hard to repeat today. He significan­tly enhanced the global reputation of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh as a world leader in plant research, cultivatio­n and conservati­on.

He is survived by his wife, Sue, three children, Iain, Jamie and Jennifer, and two grandchild­ren, Emily and Tristan.

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 ??  ?? 2 George Argent in his younger days, with goose, left; in his element, en route to Tenom, Malaysia, in 2007, top
2 George Argent in his younger days, with goose, left; in his element, en route to Tenom, Malaysia, in 2007, top

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