Lowell Fitz Randolph

Summary

Lowell Fitz Randolph (7 October 1894 – 28 May 1980) was an American scientist, in the field of genetics, botany and horticulture. He was a Cornell University graduate who became Professor of Botany and was also employed as an associate cytologist for the United States Department of Agriculture. He was also an avid iris collector and wrote a book on the Iris genus. He carried out research into plant chromosomes of iris, orchid genus and corn plants (such as maize). He was sometimes known as "Fitz" by his friends and associates.[citation needed]

Lowell Fitz Randolph
Botanist Lowell Fitz Randolph and Fannie (his wife) in the 1920s
Born7 October 1894
Died28 May 1980
Ithaca, Tompkins County, New York State
NationalityAmerican
Alma materAlfred University Cornell University
Known forgenetics of plants, (Chromosomes)
AwardsVaughn Award for outstanding contributions to horticulture from the American Society for Horticultural Science (1944),
Distinguished Service Medal from the American Iris Society (1951),
Sir Michael Foster Plaque of the British Iris Society (1955),
a citation for distinguished contributions to horticulture from the American Horticultural Society (1962),
Bronze medal from the Internationale Gartenbauaustellung show, Hamburg, West Germany (1963),
Gold medal from the American Iris Society in 1970.
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
InstitutionsOffice of Cereal Investigations, United States Department of Agriculture
Academic advisorsRollins A. Emerson and Lester W. Sharp
Notable studentsBarbara McClintock
Author abbrev. (botany)Randolph

Education and early life edit

Lowell Fitz Randolph, was born on 7 October 1894 in Alfred, New York. Lowell's family had over 200 years of history of being deeply involved in the Seventh Day Baptist Church community, and that Lowell and his sister Vida were the first to break with that community and strong tradition and follow independent, secular paths pursuing their passion for science.[1][2][failed verification]

In 1918, he then went to Cornell University to complete his Ph.D. and work as an assistant in botany under Rollins A. Emerson and Lester W. Sharp.[1] He then studied cytology with Lester in the Botany Department and minored in Plant Breeding with Emerson.[3][4]

In 1920, he attend the meetings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Chicago, and presented a paper to the American Naturalist Division on 'A case of maternal inheritance in Maize: Cytological Relations'. He is a member of the Association and of the Botanical Society of America.[2]

In 1907, Herbert J. Webber started the Synapsis Club, a student/faculty organization at Cornell, Emerson continued the club and encouraged his students to become members, including Randolph.[5] He also became a member of the Gamma Alpha Graduate Scientific Fraternity and of the Cornell Biological Society.[2]

In 1921, he obtained his Ph.D. degree,[6] in the botany department.[4]

Career edit

Randolph began working as a teaching assistant under Sharp in the winter term of 1922.[4] He also was an instructor in botany until 1923.[2][3]

In September 1924, Barbara McClintock (a 2nd year graduate),[4] started worked as a research assistant to Randolph, as well as a working as a teaching assistant to Sharp.[7]: 99 [8] They then started to apply the smear technique to pollen cells of corn and hypothesized the origin of polyploidy in Maize.[citation needed] Randolph and McClintock's study techniques were very different. Randolph was very careful, cautious and meticulous, where as McClintock liked to try out and modify new techniques.[7][failed verification] This resulted in friction between the two that would eventually result in the end of their working relationship.[9] Randolph ended their collaboration and McClintock began to work under Sharp, who gave her more freedom.[8] In 1926, he reported their findings at the 1926 International Botanical Congress at Cornell.[4]

In the early 1930s, 2 technical assistants to Randolph were paid by the USDA, to maintain the stock collecting of the maize fields and assist in hand pollination.[7]: 99 [failed verification] He and his students at Cornell started following up on the work on chromosome studies of garden irises by Marc Simonet at the Genetic Institute at Versailles, France in 1930s.[10]

But he stilled carried on his maize research, and in 1932, he published 'Some effects of high temperature on polyploidy and other variations in Maize', in Genetics Vol.18 on page 222–229.[7](page656) Then in 1936, he published 'Developmental morphology of the caryopsis in maize' in J. Agric. Res. Vol.53 (pages 881–916).[11]

Randolph and his wife Fannie made several trips to Europe collecting irises.[12] They travelled to England (between 1936 and 1939, also in 1950 and 1959), France (in 1950 and 1954), Denmark (in 1950), and Sweden (in 1950).[13] He also led expeditions in search of new forms of iris, including Iris pumila.[14][unreliable source?]

In a complaint letter to Marcus Morton Rhoades (Editor of Genetics journal) in 1942, he criticised Barbara McClintock's editing the work of a pupil of Randolph's. Calling her a prima donna, who wants to be the goddess of science and godmother to aspiring young scientists everywhere.[9]

After World War II, he began to study corn seed that had been exposed to atomic radiation at Bikini Atoll, in the Pacific Ocean.[1] he then published the results in the Science Journal.[15][16]

He was appointed chairman of the Scientific Committee of the American Iris Society, between 1945,[17] and 1946. He started the counting of chromosomes of iris, growing seeds in vitro and classification of the genus.[14][unreliable source?]

He was still president of the Cornell University chapters of Phi Kappa Phi (between 1947 and 1948) and Sigma Xi (between 1953 and 1954).[1]

He also collected with Efraim Ildefonso Hernández-Xolocotzi Guzman (1913–1991) in Mexico for the Natural History Museum and Grey Herbarium.[18] Finding and publishing Tripsacum zopilotense Hernandez-Xolocotzi, E. & Randolph, L.F. in 1950, in Guerrero, Mexico.[19]

In 1954, he went to Europe and the Middle East on an iris hunting field trip, which included Switzerland, France, Italy, Yugoslavia, Germany, Austria, Cypress, Turkey, Lebanon, and Egypt.[13]

During 1956 and 1959, he was made Membership Chairman for American Iris Society (AIS).[20]

He then spent six months in 1957–58 at Aligarh Muslim University in India with a Fulbright Award,[1] as a consultant on embryo culture.[21]

In 1959, he wrote and had published Garden Irises,[22] which has 575 pages.[23] Within the book, the chapter, 'Chromosomes of Garden varieties of Bearded Iris',(pages315-324) showed his academic interest.[24] He also re-organised the William Dykes classification of irises, by moving certain irises into different sections and subgenra. This classification is still used by the American Iris Society.[25]

He served as the vice president and then became the 9th,[14][unreliable source?] President of the American Iris Society from 1960 to 1962.[26][27] Randolph and his wife, kept an extensive collection of iris in his garden at their home in Ithaca, which attracted many visitors.[1]

He was not only interested in irises but also orchids, specifically the genus Dendrobium.[original research?] In 1960, T. Vajrabhaya and Randolph published 'Chromosome studies in Dendrobium' in Amer. Orchid Soc. Bull. Vol.29 (pages 507–517).[28]

After nearly 40 years at Cornell, he retired in 1961, but started working part-time during the winters, at the Fairchild Tropical Garden,[13][29] in Miami, Florida as a research collaborator. Including work on Tripsacum grasses,[29] which he imported from Mexico and Guatemala.[30] He then spent his summers back home at Ithaca.[1] He also started working on the evolutionary history of maize.[1]

In 1966, Iris nelsonii was first published and described by Randolph in 'Baileya' (a Quarterly Journal of Horticultural Taxonomy of Ithaca, NY) 14: 150 in 1966.[31][32] The species was named after Ira S. "Ike" Nelson, professor of horticulture at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette, and one of the founders, and early show managers, of the Society for Louisiana Irises. Nelson collaborated with Randolph, and together they identified Iris nelsonii, and Randolph named it after Nelson.[33]

In 1967, Randolph, I.S. Nelson and R.L. Plaisted published 'Negative evidence of introgression affecting the stability of Louisiana Iris species' Cornell Univ Ag. Exp. Station Mem. Vol.398 (pages 1–56).[34] This paper reviewed the morphological and pollen fertility data collected for Iris fulva, Iris brevicaulis and Iris hexagona and other hybrid iris populations. He concluded that between the Louisiana iris species was localized hybridization.[35]

In 1976, he published 'Contributions of wild relatives of maize to the evolutionary history of domesticated maize: a synthesis of divergent hypotheses in Economic Botany, Vol.30 (pages321-345), which discounted the role of teosinte as an ancestor of maize.[36]

Lowell died in Ithaca in 1980.

Awards and honours edit

He was award many honours including;

  • The Randolph-Perry Medal, this is the highest award given by the American Iris Society, started in 2000 and is restricted to species hybrid Irises. It was named after Dr Randolph and Amos Perry (1871-1953), (Father-in-law of Frances Perry) and a British nurserymen and iris hybridizer, and the winner of the first ever Dykes Medal, named after William Rickatson Dykes.[20]

Personal life edit

He married a fellow Cornell graduate student in botany, Fannie C. Rane in 1922. She got her MS degree in botany in 1923.

They settled in Ithaca, and brought up three children. Robert Fitz Randolph (later of Manlius[1]), on 20 December 1927,[37] Elizabeth Jane (Randolph) DeMott (later of Herndon, Virginia,[1]) and Rane Fitz Randolph.[1]

They also had nine grandchildren.[1]

His daughter, Elizabeth Jane DeMott died on 16 March 2009, after her brother Rane had died.[37][non-primary source needed]

Selected publications about Irises edit

  • Randolph, L. F., (1934), Bulletin of the American Iris Society 52: 61–66.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1947), Bulletin of the American Iris Society 107: 67–78.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1955), The Geographic Distribution of European and Eastern Mediterranean Species of Bearded Iris, The Iris Year Book 1955, p. 35-46.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1956), Crossability of bearded iris species. Bulletin of the American Iris Society No. 140: p. 24-31. 50–60.
  • Randolph, L. F., (editor), Garden Irises (1959), American Iris Society.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1957), "More medans". Bulletin of the American Iris Society No. 144: p. 10-24. January, 1957. Illustrations of I. rubromarginata, I. aphylla, I. bosniaca, I. chamaeiris.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1957), Cytogenetics of Median bearded Irises. Bulletin of the American Iris Society No. 145: p. 1-8. April, 1957. I. attica 'Parnes'.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1959), "Karyotypes of Iris species." American Journal of Botany 46, 2.
  • Randolph, L. F., (1966),'Iris nelsonii' in Baileya 14:143 (1966), New York.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Fannie Randolph, (1959), Collecting Irises Abroad, Bulletin of the American Iris Society No. 155, p5-11, July, 1961.
  • Randolph, L. F., & F. Randolph, (1961), Collecting Iris Species in Europe, Bulletin of the American Iris Society No. 162, p37-39, July, 1961.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Katherine Heinig, (1953), Chromosome Studies of Dwarf Iris Species and Hybrids, The Iris Year Book 1953. P. 45–52.
  • Randolph, L. F., & G. H. Lawrence, (1958), Classification of Eupogon Irises, Bulletin of the American Iris Society No. 148, p. 9-17. January, 1958.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Mitra, Jyotirmay, (1956), Chromosome numbers of Iris species. Bulletin of the American Iris Society, No. 140, p. 50-60.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Mitra, J., (1959), 'Karyotypes of Iris pumila and related species' in American Journal of Botany 46::93-102. Baltimore.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Mitra, J., (1959), Iris Chromosome Numbers, Bulletin of the American Iris Society, No. 152, p. 5-9, January 1959.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Mitra, J., (1960), Chromosomes of Aril and Arilbred Irises, Bulletin of the American Iris Society, No. 157, p. 41-60.April 1960.
  • Randolph, L. F., & Mitra, J., (1961), 'Karyotypes of Iris species indigenous to the USSR . American Journal of Botany. 48, 10.[38]
  • Randolph, L. F., & Mitra, J., (1962), The dwarf bearded Iris hybrids of Goos and Koeneman. Caryolog. 15, 3: 477–483.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Banks, Harlan P.; Srb, Adrian M.; Uhl, Charles H. "Lowell Fitz Randolph (Cornell University Faculty Memorial Statement)" (PDF). ecommons.library.cornell.edu. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d "An Alfred graduate honoured by a place on program of american association for advancement of science" (PDF). The Alfred Sun. 29 December 1920. Retrieved 11 November 2015.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ a b Jean-Paul Gaudillière and Hans-Jörg Rheinberge (Editors)Classical Genetic Research and Its Legacy: The Mapping Cultures of Twentieth Century Genetics (2004) at Google Books
  4. ^ a b c d e Kass, Lee B. (2003). "Records and Recollections: A New Look at Barbara McClintock, Nobel-Prize-Winning Geneticist". Genetics. 164 (4). Genetics Society of America: 1251–1260. doi:10.1093/genetics/164.4.1251. PMC 1462672. PMID 12930736.
  5. ^ Kass, Lee B.; Bonneuil, Christopher; Coe Jr., Edward H. (2005). "The Origins and Beginnings of the Maize Genetics Cooperation News Letter". Genetics. 169 (4): 1787–1797. doi:10.1093/genetics/169.4.1787. PMC 1449575. PMID 15879515. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  6. ^ "Issue list" (PDF). Plant Science Bulletin. 60 (3). Botanical Society of America: 152. Fall 2014. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d Jeff L. Bennetzen and Sarah C. Hake (Editors)Handbook of Maize: Genetics and Genomics (2009) at Google Books
  8. ^ a b "Barbara McClintock". encyclopedia.com (Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography, 2008). Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  9. ^ a b Nathaniel C. Comfort The Tangled Field: Barbara McClintock's search for the patterns of genetic control (2003) at Google Books
  10. ^ Donald Wyman Wyman's Gardening Encyclopedia, p. 578, at Google Books
  11. ^ "L F Randolph". science.report. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  12. ^ Black, John (21 March 2014). "Hybridizer". wiki.irises.org (American Iris Society). Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  13. ^ a b c "Guide to the Lowell Fitz Randolph Papers, 1936-1979". rmc.library.cornell.edu. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  14. ^ a b c "Fitz". irisenligne.blogspot.co.uk. 5 October 2013. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  15. ^ Randolph, Lowell Fitz; Longley, A. E.; Li, C. H. (2 July 1948). "Cytogenetic Effects In Corn Exposed To Atomic Bomb Ionizing Radiation At Bikini". Science. 108 (2792): 13–15. Bibcode:1948Sci...108...13R. doi:10.1126/science.108.2792.13. PMID 17809286.
  16. ^ Alexander Hollaender (Editor) Radiation Protection and Recovery: International Series of Monographs (1960), p. 209, at Google Books
  17. ^ The Bulletin of American Iris Society 1970, p. 96, at Google Books
  18. ^ "Randolph, Lowell Fitz". plants.jstor.org. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  19. ^ "Isotype of Tripsacum zopilotense Hernandez-Xolocotzi, E. & Randolph, L.F. 1950 [family POACEAE]". plants.jstor.org. Retrieved 10 November 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ a b Messer, Wayne (23 August 2015). "The Randolph-Perry Medal". wiki.irises.org. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  21. ^ Cobb, Edward D. (October 1959). "Cornell University Celebrates its Botanical Roots". Plant Science Bulletin. 5 (4). Botanical Society of America. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  22. ^ Randolph, Lowell Fitz (1959). Gardener Irises. American Iris Society.
  23. ^ A. K. Singh Garden Irises at Google Books
  24. ^ Simonet, Marc; Werckmeister, Peter (1965). "A Cytogenetic and Descriptive Study of the Trispecific Iris Hybrid 'Stolorine' Werckmeister (Iris Stolonifera Maxim. ♀ × Iris Intermedia Cv. 'Ivorine', Goos & Koenemann". Caryologia. 18 (2): 291–303. doi:10.1080/00087114.1965.10796173.
  25. ^ A. K. Singh Flower Crops: Cultivation and Management (2006), p. 180, at Google Books
  26. ^ "Region 2 of the American Iris Society Newsletter" (PDF). missoulairis.com. Spring 2015. p. 24. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  27. ^ "Tall bearded Iris EXOTIC BLUE". historiciris.blogspot.co.uk. December 2013. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  28. ^ Haruyuki Kamemoto, Teresita D. Amore and Adelheid R. Kuehnle Breeding Dendrobium Orchids in Hawaii (1999), p. 153, at Google Books
  29. ^ a b Randolph, L. F. (October 1970). "Variation Among Tripsacum Populations of Mexico and Guatemala". Brittonia. 22 (4). New York Botanical Garden Press: 305–337. Bibcode:1970Britt..22..305R. doi:10.2307/2805679. JSTOR 2805679. S2CID 3556999.
  30. ^ Seymour, CP; Miller, JW (1974). "The Eradication of 2 potentially dangerous rusts, Physopella pallescens and P. Zeae from Florida" (PDF). fshs.org (Florida State Horiticultural Society). Retrieved 12 November 2015.
  31. ^ "Iridaceae Iris nelsonii Randolph". ipni.org. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  32. ^ "Randolph, Lowell Fitz (1894-1980)". ipni.org (International Plant Names Index). Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  33. ^ "PlantFiles: Louisiana Iris, Abbeville Red Iris, Abbeville Swamp Iris, Iris x nelsonii". davesgarden.com. 24 November 2003. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  34. ^ Negative evidence of introgression affecting the stability of Louisiana iris species (Cornell Experiment Station memoir). amazon.co.uk. 1967. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  35. ^ Charles W. Fox and Jason B. Wolf (Editors) Evolutionary Genetics : Concepts and Case Studies: Concepts and Case Studies (2006), p. 406, at Google Books
  36. ^ Duccio Bonavia Maize: Origin, Domestication, and Its Role in the Development of Culture (2008) at Google Books
  37. ^ a b "Jane Randolph DeMott, 1927 - 2009, Obituary". Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  38. ^ Randolph, Lowell Fritz; Mitra, Jyotirmay (November 1961). "Karyotypes of Iris Species Indigenous to the USSR". American Journal of Botany. 48 (10). Botanical Society of America: 862–870. doi:10.2307/2439526. JSTOR 2439526.
  39. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Randolph.