INDEX
New AHS Award in 2000
Plant a Row for the Hungry
AHS Encyclopedia Honored
Southern Gardening School
Plant Kingdom Overthrown?
Member Focus
New AHS Award in 2000
In recognition of her pioneering
contributions to the field of youth gardening, Michigan State
University horticulturist Jane L. Taylor has been honored as the
namesake for a new AHS Great American Gardeners Award that will
recognize excellence in youth gardening. Appropriately, Taylor
has also been declared the award's first winner. In 1987, Taylor
founded and served as first curator of the Michigan 4-H
Children's Garden, located on the Michigan State University
campus in East Lansing. The first of its kind-and a hit since
its inception-the 4-H Children's Garden has served as the design
model for youth gardens at public garden sites nationwide.
Although now retired from her curatorial duties, Taylor
continues to serve as an adjunct faculty member in the
university's Department of Horticulture and is at work on a book
about designing interactive gardens for children and families.
"There is a desperate need for public gardens to present plants
in a special child's area in a creative, fun way, to emphasize
the importance of plants in a child's everyday life," she says.
Taylor, who also serves on the AHS National Children and Youth
Garden Advisory Panel, will receive her award during the opening
banquet at this year's AHS National Youth Garden Symposium, June
8 to 10 in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. For more on the symposium,
or visit the
youth gardening section of the AHS Web site .

Plant a Row for the Hungry
As you start preparing your
vegetable garden this spring, think about joining gardeners
around the country in supporting the Plant A Row For the Hungry
campaign. This nationwide program, initiated and sponsored by
the Garden Writers Association of America (GWAA), encourages
gardeners to set aside space in their garden to grow fresh
vegetables and fruit to be donated to soup kitchens, homeless
shelters, and other community-based organizations that feed the
hungry. Vegetables harvested from the Plant A Row (PAR) garden
at River Farm last year benefited a local soup kitchen in the
Alexandria, Virginia, area. Our staff, interns, and volunteers
are already planting early spring crops for this year. Before
planting, it's a good idea to discuss your plans with the group
to which you will be donating the food to find out what produce
is most useful. If you are not sure where to donate produce,
contact your local chamber of commerce or community service
organization, or call PAR's toll-free number, (877) GWAA-PAR.
For more information about the Plant a Row program, visit the
GWAA Web site at www.gwaa.org.

AHS Encyclopedia Honored
The American Horticultural
Society A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants, published in 1997 by
Dorling Kindersley in New York, has been named the official
plant reference guide for the internationally acclaimed
Philadelphia Flower Show. The encyclopedia will be used as the
official general standard for all horticultural entries at the
show, hosted annually by the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society.
This year's flower show is being held March 5 to 12 at the
Pennsylvania Convention Center.

Southern Gardening School
This spring, AHS and Southern
Living magazine are once again co-sponsoring a series of
gardening schools at prominent garden destinations in the
Southeast and South. Taught by Southern Living gardening
experts, the schools are hour-long lectures on topics such as
landscape design, use of color in the garden, and plant
selection. A complete listing of garden schools--including dates
and ticket information for individual schools-can be found in
the ad on the back cover of
the
American Gardener
magazine.

Plant Kingdom Overthrown?
Based on a better understanding
of the genetic makeup of plants, an international group of
researchers has proposed radically altering the structure of the
plant family tree, splitting the plant kingdom into three
parts.
Five years ago the Green Plant
Phylogeny Research Coordination Group-better known as "Deep
Green"-set out to examine the evolutionary relationships among
green plants. Two hundred scientists from 12 countries
contributed to this effort to develop an accurate family tree
for green plants, merging molecular, fossil, and morphological
data.
The initial findings of the
project were presented last August at the 16th International
Botanical Congress held at the Missouri Botanical Garden in St.
Louis. The project's findings challenge long accepted notions
about the relationships among plant species. Limited by the
information available to him 250 years ago, Carolus Linnaeus
based his classification system for plant groups primarily on
the number and arrangement of reproductive organs.
In contrast, Deep Green delved
into the genetic make-up and microscopic internal structures of
plants to better understand how they are related. Employing
recent advances in cladistics-comparing evolutionarily relevant
traits among organisms-and genomics-tracking genetic changes
over time-the project made some surprising discoveries.
Among the most important of these
is that relationships among organisms should be viewed as
"nested" according to their genetic similarities rather than
"ranked" according to an artificial, superimposed order. Based
on this new analysis, the Deep Green team proposes that plants
should no longer be considered as a single kingdom. Instead,
they should be divided into three kingdoms: green plants
including all land plants, red plants, and brown plants-the last
two representing primarily algae and seaweeds.
Research indicates that each
kingdom developed independently, descending from a different
single-celled organism. Investigations also revealed that fungi,
formerly classified as part of the plant kingdom, are more
closely related to animals. The evolution of flowering plants
has long baffled scientists. In an effort to throw some light on
the conundrum, Deep Green researchers studied three common,
rapidly mutating DNA sequences in chloroplasts-cells in leaf and
green stem tissue that are the sites of photosynthesis-that
serve as useful tools for differentiating species.
According to Brent Mishler,
professor of integrative biology at the University of California
at Berkeley and co-principal investigator of the project, this
research identified a little-known shrub from New Caledonia in
the South Pacific called amborella as the closest living
relative of the first flowering plant. Working independently,
three other research teams confirmed this finding.
Understanding the genetic
relationships among organisms provides researchers with clues
that are helpful in locating useful products in unknown
organisms. "It's like a roadmap to biodiversity," explains
Mishler. Potential applications include identifying likely
sources of new medical compounds in plants, engineering for
useful traits such as drought tolerance, identifying
disease-causing organisms, and controlling invasive species.
Deep Green's findings may soon
change the way taxonomy is taught in the classroom. Mishler has
already adopted the phylogenic approach to classification in
courses he teaches at Berkeley. He reports that response to this
taxonomic revolution has in general been quite positive.
For more information about the
Deep Green Project visit its Web page at
http://ucjeps.herb.berkeley.edu/bryolab/greenplantpage.html

Member
in Focus
Frank Cabot: AHS Award Winner
by Margaret T. Baird
On paper, he describes himself
simply as "a horticultural enthusiast who has gardened in Cold
Spring, New York, and La Malbaie, Quebec." Period. If you aren't
acquainted with Frank Cabot, that modest assessment of his
botanical career might conjure up a vision of the average
weekend gardener puttering about his backyard. And when we tell
you that Frank Cabot has been honored as the 2000 recipient of
the American Horticultural Society's Liberty Hyde Bailey Award,
given for all-around horticultural excellence, it might really
set you to wondering: What could make the gardening
accomplishments of this "horticultural enthusiast" so
noteworthy?
Not-so-average
gardener
It's a good thing Frank Cabot's
deeds have been recorded by other than his own hand, for Cabot
is no mere enthusiast, and he's certainly no average gardener.
While Cabot's interest in gardening developed from his family
background-two of his uncles were landscape architects-he
received no formal training in horticulture.
Besides his long-held leadership
positions in horticultural organizations in both the United
States and Canada-the U.S. National Arboretum, the New York
Botanical Garden, Wave Hill, and the Royal Botanic Gardens among
them-both of the places Cabot has "gardened" are also
private-turned-public gardens: Stonecrop Gardens in Cold Spring,
and Les Quatre Vents in Quebec.
In addition, he's the founder and
chairman of The Garden Conservancy, a non-profit organization
devoted to the preservation of exceptional private gardens in
North America. In that role, Cabot has championed the
conservation of eighteen historic, private landscapes in eleven
states-all of which now open their gates to visitors at various
times throughout the year.
The site of Cabot's original
brainstorm-and what became the Garden Conservancy's flagship
project-is the Ruth Bancroft Garden, an extraordinary, four-acre
private collection of succulents and cacti in Walnut Creek,
California.
Cabot's introduction to the
garden was an impromptu visit on the way to a plant society
meeting. What Cabot found there was most unexpected. "It's a dry
garden-mostly cactus, and I'm not a cactus person at all-but I
found it terribly exciting," he says. "The way it all fit
together was so beautiful! I'd never seen anything like it, and
I literally felt shivers run up my spine as we walked through."
On inquiry, Cabot realized that
the garden's elderly owner, Ruth Bancroft, had no one to help
with its upkeep. "I thought: I've got to figure out a way to
help her preserve this poetry, this artwork, before it's lost
forever." That was back in 1988. Now 6,000 members strong and
entering its eleventh year, the Garden Conservancy,
headquartered in Cold Spring, continues its mission of locating
and preserving fine American gardens. "Frank thinks large," says
colleague Richard Lighty, the 1999 winner of the Liberty Hyde
Bailey Award and former director of the Mt. Cuba Center for the
study of Piedmont Flora in Greenville, Delaware. "Many people,
myself included, were skeptical of the Garden Conservancy at
first-wondering if it could ever go national. It's clear now
it's really a movement that's continuing to expand." A
ccording to another long-time
Cabot colleague, Marco Polo Stufano-director of horticulture at
New York City's Wave Hill and also a 1999 AHS award winner-Cabot
"is the consummate plantsman. He's so respected in horticulture
in this country," says Stufano. "I can't think of any single
person anywhere who has influenced American gardening more-in a
hands-on, down-to-earth sort of way. And he's a bit of a madman,
really! Everyone wonders when he's going to stop, but thank
goodness he hasn't yet."
Forging
ahead
The 75-year-old Cabot continues
to travel extensively, satisfying his penchant for alpine flora
and checking in on pet projects. "I'm just a promoter by
nature," he explains. He's in the process of writing a book
about Les Quatre Vents, his garden in Canada, and he is involved
in a new garden rescue across the Atlantic.
He and his wife, Anne, have been
the catalysts in saving the gardens at Aberglasney, a
16th-century estate in Llangathen, Wales. "We've got Graham
Rankin, the best gardener in Britain, taking care of the
eight-acre garden and its two acres of walls," says Cabot.
Previously abandoned for 75 years, the historic garden's
infrastructure-and popularity-has now been restored after a
four-year effort and is the subject of both a recent BBC
documentary and a book co-written by Penelope Hobhouse. Just
another feather in Cabot's already crowded cap of achievements.
"Frank is certainly one of 20th-century America's greatest and
most generous gardeners," Lighty states unequivocally. "And," he
adds, "he should be one of the most celebrated."
Margaret T.
Baird is communications assistant for The American Gardener.