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John B. NelsonChief Curator, A. C. Moore HerbariumPh.D., 1982, Florida State University 803-777-8196 nelson@biol.sc.edu
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Dr. Nelson has investigated the relationships of eastern North American representatives of the genus Stachys, a member of the mint family. Within this group, a number are problematic, forming complicated species groups with overlapping morphologies. Various features of ecological and anatomical specialization have proven useful in understanding this enigmatic group. Both herbarium studies and field work have been crucial to this understanding.
We are also involved in projects concerning landscape history of our area. Involvement in floristic studies on a state-wide basis have elucidated some of these distributions, and have helped fill in the existing botanical gaps. At the same time, new questions have emerged concerning puzzling range distributions not before thought to exist. Recently, an enormous population of the federally endangered "rough-leaved loosestrife" (Lysimachia asperulaefolia) was discovered in a bog at Fort Jackson, near Columbia: this plant, although recorded from South Carolina about 1880, had not been seen anywhere in the state since then.
Nelson, John B. 1986. The Natural Communities of South Carolina: Initial Classification and Description. SC Wildlife and Marine Resources Department. Columbia, SC.
Nelson, John B. "The Vanishing Blackjacks." South Carolina Wildlife Magazine, March-April 1992.
Nelson, John B. 1993. Noteworthy Collections: South Carolina. Castanea 58: 59-63.