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Botanical garden, also called botanic garden, originally, a collection of living plants

designed chiefly to illustrate relationships within plant groups. In modern times, most
botanical gardens are concerned primarily with exhibiting ornamental plants, insofar as
possible in a scheme that emphasizes natural relationships. Thus, the two functions are
blended: eye appeal and taxonomic order. Plants that were once of medicinal value and
extremely important in early botanical gardens are now chiefly of historical interest and
are not particularly represented in contemporary collections. A display garden that
concentrates on woody plants (shrubs and trees) is often referred to as an arboretum. It
may be a collection in its own right or a part of a botanical garden.

A major contemporary objective of botanical gardens is to maintain extensive collections of


plants, labeled with common and scientific names and regions of origin. Plant collections in such
gardens vary in number from a few hundred to several thousand different kinds, depending on
the land area available and the financial and scholarly resources of the institution.
As world populations become more urbanized, botanical gardens are increasingly recognized as
among the important cultural resources of industrialized nations. Botanical gardens offer the city
dweller part of the natural environment that he no longer has access to; furthermore, they offer a
mental escape from population pressure and suggest new interests and hobbies having to do with
the natural world.
History
What can be called the roots of the botanical garden as an institution are traceable to ancient
China and many of the countries bordering the Mediterranean. These actually were often centres
for the raising of fruit trees, vegetables, and herbs used for food and in making the crude
medicines of the time. After the discovery of printing, manuscripts on plants, which had been in
existence for centuries, became more widely circulated, and these stimulated further publication
of descriptive works called herbals. The herbalists and their herbals, in turn, stimulated the
founding of botanical gardens. By the end of the 16th century there were five such gardens in
Europe, and by the mid-20th century several hundred. The first two were in Italy, at Pisa (1543)

and at Padua (1545). At first, such gardens were associated with the medical schools of
universities. Professors of medicine were mainly the botanists of that time, and their physic
gardens served for the training of students as well as for growing plants to make medicines. But
they served in other ways as well. Carolus Clusius, a noted botanist of the 16th century, for
example, brought together an extensive collection of flowering bulbs at the botanical garden in
Leiden, Neth., which proved to be the beginning of the Dutch bulb industry.
In the early 1800s Jean Gesner, a Swiss physician and botanist, noted that by the end of the 18th
century there were 1,600 botanical gardens in Europe. During the 18th and 19th centuries, the
science of botany took form, and many of the important botanists of the period were directors of
the botanical gardens of their day. Since that time, the classical botanical garden as a teaching
and medicinal garden declined, to be replaced by gardens devoted mainly to plant culture and the
display of ornamental plants and plant groups of special interest.
The larger collections of living plants constitute a formidable resource for professional scholars;
but, more importantly, they provide a rich opportunity for the general public to learn more about
plants and how to grow them. Some gardens offer popular-level short courses on plants and plant
cultivation each year, both for adults and for children.
Botanical gardens constitute reservoirs of valuable heritable characteristics, potentially important
in the breeding of new varieties of plants. Longwood Gardens, in Kennett Square, Pa., in
collaboration with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has in recent years sent out several
expeditions to collect species that have promise as breeding stock or, in some instances, are
already attractive ornamental plants. Historically, Englands Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew are
most famous for their collecting expeditions and the distribution of economic plants to parts of
the world where they could be grown most successfully. Kew is responsible for the wide
popularity and spread of such plants as the rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis), pineapple, banana,
tea, coffee, cacao, various timbers, and cinchona (yielding quinine) and other drug producers.
Still another function of botanical gardens is the training of gardeners. Canada has long had such
a program at the Niagara Falls Parks Commissions School of Horticulture. Such training
programs at Kew, Edinburgh, Dublin, and the Royal Horticultural Societys garden at Wisley
have produced many able gardeners for supervisory positions in many countries.
Layouts and facilities

Botanical gardens and arboretums differ from parks in that they are generally laid out
according to the scientific relationships of their plant collections, rather than exclusively
for landscape effect or for playing fields or other essentially recreational endeavours.
The traditional practice in laying out a botanical garden is, for example, to gather the
trees and shrubs together in an arboretum section of the garden. Oftentimes, though,
trees and shrubs are used to enhance landscape effects by interspersing them
throughout the garden, in their respective taxonomic groups, with herbaceous
collections.

Botanical gardens, or parts of them, are sometimes planned according to the


geographic origin of plants. Not infrequently the layout is based on small, special
gardens within the greater garden, such as rose, iris, rock, wildflower, and Japanese
landscape gardens. Botanical gardens may range in size from a few hectares to as
many as 1,000.
Although the layouts mentioned heretofore often preclude the possibility of arranging
plants strictly according to their taxonomic relationships, this is still possible for certain
groups. The genus Rosa, for example, includes a great many species and hundreds of
named man-made hybrids. In addition to the genus Rosa, there are many other genera
in the rose family (Rosaceae), with their species and innumerable cultivars. The rose
family would be a typical taxonomic grouping for a botanical garden, though the tree
species would be grown separately from the rose bushes. The same general principle of
taxonomic groupings holds for other plant families and genera.
Usually associated with botanical gardens are the service or display greenhouses in
which to propagate plants or to grow those that may not survive seasonal changes. In
temperate climates, where the winters are cold, for example, tropical orchids must be
greenhouse grown. The same is true of tropical ferns, bromeliads, economic plants of
the tropics or near-tropics, many cacti and other succulents, African violets, and

begonias. Hotbeds as well as greenhouses serve for starting seedling plants that are to
be set outdoors as soon as the weather is warm enough.
A botanical garden that aspires to large plant collections must also have storage areas
that provide temperature conditions favourable to certain species at particular seasons.
Cold frames may serve this purpose for many kinds of plants and for the wintering over
of younger plants that need a cold period but will not tolerate freezing temperatures.
Houses built of lathing may also be important for the temporary storage of some species
in semishade or even for the growing of certain plants that are intolerant of the hot
summer sun.
Many gardens possess herbaria, or collections of a few to many thousands of dried
plant specimens mounted on sheets of paper. The species thus mounted have been
identified by experts and labeled by their proper scientific names, together with
information on where they were collected, how they grew, and so on. They are filed in
cases according to families and genera, always available for ready reference. Herbaria,
like living plant collections, are the dictionaries of the plant kingdom, the reference
specimens essential to the proper naming of unknown plants.
Many botanical gardens associated with universities possess extensive libraries,
herbaria, and laboratory research facilities. Such gardens offer essential services for the
professional plant taxonomist. Some large urban botanical gardens provide classroom
and greenhouse workshop facilities for the novice gardener, and the trend for popularlevel instruction is growing.
Most large botanical gardens publish technical journals and popular brochures. Books
of general appeal and films are produced by some of the larger botanical gardens.
Professional considerations
The prime consideration in maintaining plant collections is, of course, good plant-culture
practices. Skilled lawn maintenance is particularly important for botanical gardens in
cities; the discerning citizen judges a garden more by its general appearance than by

the excellence of its plant collections. Tree and shrub collections require systematic
pruning, and no important tree should go for more than two years without such
attention. Older trees require special pruning attention and care of wounds so that
decay does not set in. Spraying for control of pests and diseases is often necessary.

In the early years of botanical gardens, new kinds of plants could be secured only by
sending out knowledgeable collectors on expeditions, often to distant places. They
would seek out new species growing in the wild and bring back samples of the plants
desired. But the nursery industry has now become so great that many smaller firms
specialize in particular groups of plants; thus, numerous species and cultivars can be
purchased directly from nursery firms, ready for planting. Exchanges of seeds as well as
rare plants are often carried out between botanical gardens. Some gardens issue seedexchange lists annually.
Equipment for the care of plant collections depends upon the size of the operation.
Aside from a building adequate to take care of physical needs of the gardening staff and
housing space for tools and equipment, attractive and efficient classroom space is
essential for gardens with an educational program. A section of a greenhouse arranged
for practical work by students (i.e., a greenhouse classroom) is also desirable.
Staff needs depend upon the specific objectives of a botanical garden as well as upon
the resources available, the climate, and the area to be cared for. At least one gardener
should be a skilled propagator or nurseryman. The head gardener, with advanced
horticultural training and experience, supervises the entire operation. If the physical
plant is of sufficient size, a combination of skilled craftsmen and a superintendent is
required to look after all structures and oversee the cleaning, heating, and other routine
services.
Professional staff needs also depend upon an institutions objectives as well as financial
resources. A general botanist is essential. A taxonomist is basic for the herbarium, as is
a librarian, if the book and journal collection is of any size. The taxonomist usually has

supervision over the making and placing of plant labels. A plant pathologist, or specialist
in plant diseases, is desirable if the plant collections are large. If a teaching program for
adults and children is part of the educational pattern of the institution, at least a skeleton
force of teachers or part-time instructors who come in and conduct classes is
necessary. The total botanical garden program, from gardening through professional
staff, is coordinated by a director, who, in turn, is responsible to a board of trustees if the
garden is a private corporation. A garden that is part of a university is generally the
primary responsibility of a professor of botany or horticulture and is operated as an
adjunct of his particular department. Gardens that are government supported usually
operate under a director and advisory group.
Some botanical gardens are independently established and financially provided for
through endowments set up by wealthy persons. Gardens directly operated by
government agencies are usually supported by tax monies. Private colleges and
universities with botanical gardens are privately supported and often receive financial
assistance by organized, dues-paying-membership groups or by endowment funds
established in their behalf.

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