Ivan Murray Johnston
Ivan Murray Johnston was an American botanist who spent most of his career at Harvard University and the Arnold Arboretum.
Life and career
Johnston was born in Los Angeles to physician William M. Johnston and Dora Etta Johnston. He studied botany at Pomona College and received his AB from University of California at Berkeley in 1920, his MA from Berkeley in 1922, and his PhD from Harvard University in 1925. After graduation, he conducted field work in Chile on a Sheldon Travelling Fellowship from Harvard and received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1932. He spent most of his career at Harvard University, starting out as an assistant in the Gray Herbarium from 1922 to 1931 and gaining promotions to research associate at the Arnold Arboretum in 1931 and associate professor of botany in 1938. From 1948 to 1953 he also worked as associate director of the Arnold Arboretum. He died suddenly at home in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, on May 31, 1960.Johnston was considered a leading authority on the family Boraginaceae. He collected algae, pteridophytes and spermatophytes and traveled widely to collect specimens in the Andes, Panama, the southwestern United States, and northern Mexico. His plant collections are housed in the California Botanic Garden and the Harvard University Herbaria. He published extensively in Fieldiana, Journal of the Arnold Arboretum, Revista Chilena de Historia Natural, and other scientific journals.
Honors
In 1925, German botanist August Brand named a genus of flowering plants from South America and the southern United States, as Johnstonella in Johnston's honour. Then in 1933, German botanist Otto Eugen Schulz named a genus of flowering plants from Chile as Ivania. In 1936, Chinese botanist Hsen Hsu Hu published Sinojohnstonia, which is a genus of flowering plants from China, belonging to the family Boraginaceae. In 1975, Somali-Pakistani botanist Syed Muhammad Anwar Kazmi named a monotypic genus of flowering plants, from the Western Himalayas as Ivanjohnstonia in his honour.Johnston was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Society of Plant Taxonomists, the Botanical Society of America, the American Society of Naturalists, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the New England Botanical Club, and Sigma Xi. He was a corresponding member of the National Academies of Sciences of Argentina and Chile.