International Phytogeographic Excursion
The International Phytogeographic Excursions was a series of international meetings in plant geography that significantly contributed to exchange of scientific ideas across national and linguistic barriers and also to the rise of Anglo-American plant ecology. The initiative was taken by the British botanist Arthur Tansley at the International Geographic Congress in Geneva in 1908. Tansley and another early key figure, Henry C. Cowles, were both much-inspired by the new 'ecological plant geography' introduced by Eugenius Warming and its quest for answering why-questions about plant distribution, as opposed to the traditional, merely descriptive 'floristic plant geography'.
The First International Phytogeographic Excursion was held in the British Isles in 1911. It was organized by Arthur Tansley and went through parts of England, Scotland and Ireland.
The participants were:
- Eduard Rübel, Switzerland
- Carl Schroeter, Switzerland
- Oscar Drude, Germany
- Paul Graebner, Germany
- C.A.M. Lindman, Sweden
- G. Claridge Druce, England
- Jean Massart, Belgium
- C.H. Ostenfeld, Denmark
- Frederic Clements, U.S.A.
- Henry C. Cowles, U.S.A., who gave a brief report in Science in 1913.
- Henry C. Cowles, U.S.A.
- Frederic Clements, U.S.A.
- Edith S. Clements, U.S.A.
- Alfred Dachnowsky, U.S.A.
- George Fuller, U.S.A.
- George E. Nichols, U.S.A.
- Willis Linn Jepson, U.S.A.
- Heinrich Brockmann-Jerosch, Switzerland
- Marie Charlotte Brockmann-Jerosch, Switzerland
- Ove Paulsen, Denmark
- Carl Skottsberg, Sweden
- Eduard Rübel, Switzerland
- Karl von Tubeuf, Germany
- Carl Schroeter, Switzerland
- Theodoor J. Stomps, Netherlands
- Arthur Tansley, England
- Adolf Engler, Germany
- Cecil Crampton, Scotland.
The participants were, among others:
- Gustaf Einar Du Rietz, Sweden
- John William Harshberger, U.S.A.
- Jens Holmboe, Norway
- Huguet del Villar, Spain
- Kaarlo Linkola, Finland
- Hugo Osvald, Sweden
- Ove Paulsen, Denmark
- Robert Lloyd Praeger, Ireland
- Constantin von Regel, Lithuania
- Edward Salisbury, England
- Carl Skottsberg, Sweden
- Władysław Szafer, Poland
- Heinrich Brockmann-Jerosch, Switzerland
- Marie Charlotte Brockmann-Jerosch, Switzerland
- Eduard Rübel, Switzerland
- Carl Schroeter, Switzerland
- Josias Braun-Blanquet, Switzerland
- Paul Jaccard, Switzerland
By this time, Warmings 'ecological plant geography' had developed into plant ecology and the excursion programme returned to 'floristic plant geography'. Through the 1930s and after the Second World War, the International Phytogeographic Excursions continued at regular intervals, but now outside the mainstream of ecology. At the same time, scientific exchange between plant ecologists had found other means.
The Fifth International Phytogeographic Excursion was held in Czechoslovakia in 1928. It was organized by Karel Domin.
The Sixth International Phytogeographic Excursion was held in Romania in 1931.
The Seventh International Phytogeographic Excursion was held in Italy in 1934.
The Eighth International Phytogeographic Excursion went to Morocco and western Algeria in 1936.