My memories of Peter Taylor Dr. Ray M. Harley • Honorary Research Fellow • Royal Botanic Gardens • Kew • and Visiting Professor • Federal University • Feira de Santana • Bahia • Brazil • [email protected] I first met PeterTaylor when I was at Oxford University, reading Botany and attending lectures onplantsystematicsgivenbyE.F. (Heff)Warburg, one oftheleadingauthorities ontheBritishflora. I had been selected for a University expedition to East Africa, to the Mahali Mountains, by Lake Tanganyika. Tropical EastAfrican Botany was at that time the principal flora project at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, which was why I arrived there in 1959, as a young student still wet behind the ears, to be given a crash course in collecting plants in EastAfrica. One ofthe most memorable activities was a long session going through a newly arrived collection ofdried specimens and sort- ing them into the correct families andproviding provisional determinations, where possible. These occasions, known as “family sorts”, were popular events and involved most ofthe botanists in the Kew Herbarium who studied tropicalAfrican flora. It was on one ofthese occasions that I first met Peter. Iwas meeting a lot ofnew people at Kew, and so my memories are somewhat unclear at this juncture, butIrememberhimasbeingveryapproachable, extremelyhelpfulwithgoodadvice anda goodsenseofhumour. Itwaslater, onmyreturnfromtheexpeditiontoAfricathatIgottoknowhim better, when I was studying some ofthe plants we had collected, and was occasionally invited on localfieldtripstotheEnglishcountrysidewithmembers ofKew staff. Peterwas originallymuchin- terestedinferns andgaveme goodadvice onrecognizinghybridhorsetails (Equisetum) inthe field. It was some years later, after a period as lecturer at Bristol University, that I applied and gained apost at RBG Kew, enabling me to study the flora ofBrazil. At this time, Peterwas much involved in the study of Utricularia, and encouraged me to make detailed collections, including material in spirit to include the traps, which were taxonomically important. In 1971, joined a group from the 1 NewYork Botanical Garden, led by Dr. Howard Irwin, and spent several months in Minas Gerais, Goias, and Bahia States, collecting a fascinating range offlora, boththe Lamiaceae, whichwas my own particular interest, but also a whole range ofspecies of Utricularia. It was the first time that some ofthese had been collected with traps, as most collections are made only ofthe aerial parts. When subsequently I organized a series ofexpeditions to Bahia, to study its rich flora, I made sure to continuemy Utricularia activities. Peterwas alwayspleasedto seethismaterial, andoccasionally jokingly said that he was going to name a species after me. At this time, he had a rather beautiful young ladyassistant, originallyfrom Sweden, andhe enjoyedteasingme aboutwhathethoughtwas my obvious interest in her. Among the plants I had collected in Bahia was a small terrestrial spe- cies with small white or palest lilac flowers, growing in the Chapada Diamantina. One day, to my surprise, he said “Oh, by the way, I have named that species after you”. I looked it up, but it had a name that meant nothing to me! When I asked him what Utriculariaparthenopipes referred to, he said, with a wicked smile, it was fromthe Greek, meaning “oglingyoungvirgins”. I have dined out onthat story quite a bit! Apart from his botanical activities, Peterwas also a brilliant cabinet makerinhis spare time, se- lecting andmaturingthe timberthathe used. He made awhole range ofbeautiful objects, including aharpsichord and, forme, rebuilding in oakthe body ofan antique grandfatherclock. The lastproject, thatweworkedontogether, was afterhisretirement, whenIwas studying anew genus of Scrophulariaceae, which we had recently collected in Bahia. It was a strange little plant growing in an area resembling an inland dune, with the tiny peltate leaves sitting on the surface ofthe sand. The petioles and stems were all buried below the surface and there was a lilac haze 52 Carnivorous Plant Newsletter ofmany inflorescences ofsmall flowers, covering a large area. At the time, we thought it might be Lentibulariaceae. While I was engaged in preparing text for a paper in which this plant would be described as a new genus of Scrophulariaceae, Peter came into my room, saying that he had been clearing outhis desk, and handed me a folder. Inside was a small specimen withtiny peltate leaves whichhadbeensenttohiminthe 1970s as a Utricularia, collectedbyHowardIrwin, inGoias State. I am almost certain that, at this point, myjaw dropped! The specimen had been annotated by Peter as anew genus ofScrophulariaceae: Philcoxia, commemorating DavidPhilcox fromKew who had workedextensivelyonthe family. Peterhadnevergotroundto publishing it. I was able to showhim aplate ofthe new but different species, whichwe had collected in Bahia. This hadbeen drawn and sent to me by Dr. Ana Maria Giulietti, with whom I was collaborating, from the University ofSao Paulo and who was working with her studentVinicius Souza, specialist ofBrazilian Scrophularia- ceae. We four agreed to write ajoint paper, and I was given the task ofpreparing the various texts and concerting any differences of opinion. Finally we had our paper, on Philcoxia, a new genus ofScrophulariaceae, accepted for publication in Kew Bulletin, and including a third species from Minas Gerais State, which Vinicius brought to our attention. It is most unusual to be able to pub- lish simultaneously a new genus composed ofthree new species! That it has recently been shown to be carnivorous, is another fortuitous discovery, linking it even more closely to PeterTaylor and his magnum opus on bladderworts. Long will he be remembered by many ofus as a distinguished botanist and a great friend. THE ORIGINAL VENUS FLYTRAP • Mail order and Internet U.S. sales • Dionaea, Sarracenia, Nepenthes, Drosera, Pinguicula, books, supplies, and much more We • stock multiple sizes of most plants • Terrarium kits with live plants (no seeds) • Rare nursery-grown, imported lowland/intermediate Nepenthes • Most plants shipped potted and ready to grow! m www. petflytrap co . [email protected] 281 -433-3286 Volume 41 June 2012 53