Hannah Medford – 2018 Charles T. Mohr Intern
…the School for Field Studies in Australia and studied the distribution of Wet Sclerophyll forests. Upon returning to Carolina Hannah took Local Flora (Biology 272) with Dr. Alan Weakley and…
…the School for Field Studies in Australia and studied the distribution of Wet Sclerophyll forests. Upon returning to Carolina Hannah took Local Flora (Biology 272) with Dr. Alan Weakley and…
…the 1994 Field Year. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 76(9):1549-1577. Wickland, D. 1994. Terrestrial Ecology Interests in a Brazilian Study. Revista Brasileira de Geofisica 12(1): 29-31. Bolle, H.-J., J.-C….
…the Southeast (and their garden uses). He has traveled extensively in the United States, and has made trips to see unusual plants in Costa Rica, South Africa, Borneo, China, Australia…
By Angelica Edwards, NCBG Communications Intern The annual Spring Native Plant Sale will return to the North Carolina Botanical Garden on Saturday, May 7 from 10:30 a.m.- 4 p.m. Visitors…
Register Here with Arvis Boughman, Author, Lumbee Indian Tribe Member Date: Thursday, March 7, 2024 Time: 6:30 – 7:30 PM ET Location: Virtual Fee: Free; preregistration required During this talk,…
…are in order; monitoring whether or not it is an appropriate time to pursue accreditation through the Land Trust Alliance and assisting the NCBG Conservation Department with that process; and…
…periods. Beautyberry typically grows 4-6 feet tall and wide, but in favorable conditions it can grow up to 9 feet tall. In order to keep a more compact form, it…
…Carl Linnaeus, a famous 18th-century botanist who developed the modern method of assigning species scientific names, dubbed flytraps “against the order of nature as willed by God.” But Charles Darwin…
…“A taxonomic study of the Mucorales in the southeastern United States”. Pilobolus crystallinus in the fungi order Mucorales Image was created by Sava Krstic at Mushroom Observer Published in…
(8 November 1851- 18 December 1892) “Earth is so full of things to know and see From Northern Lights to animanculae” The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill…