Edit History
Ragonese, Ana Maria (1928-1999)
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
First name(s)
Ana Maria
Last name
Ragonese
Initials
A.M.
Life Dates
1928 - 1999
Collecting Dates
1967 - 1981
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Fossil plants
Spermatophytes
Organisation(s)
BAA, SI
Countries
Temperate South America: Argentina
Associate(s)
Guaglianone, Encarnación Rosa (1932-) (co-collector)
Nicora, Elisa Gernaela Juana Raquel (1912-2001) (co-collector)
Nicora, Elisa Gernaela Juana Raquel (1912-2001) (co-collector)
Biography
Argentine botanist, Ana Maria Ragonese was born in Buenos Aires and studied at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), gaining her doctorate in Natural Sciences from the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences (UBA) in 1960. She began to teach in the same faculty, giving courses in plant anatomy and directing theses. Here she began as an assistant to the chief of practical work and later became an adjunct professor, a role she filled until 1974. At this time Ragonese was also the technical secretary of the Miguel Lillo Institute and a researcher at the Institute of Agricultural Botany. In 1962 she became a researcher for the Council for Research in Science and Technology (CONICET) and the Faculty of Agronomy at UBA Ragonese was awarded a scholarship from CONICET in 1971 that allowed her to travel to the U.K. to research at the Jodrell Laboratory of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. She also researched in the palaeobotany division of the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences 'Bernardino Rivadavia' in Buenos Aires before finally settling in the Darwinion Institute of Botany until her retirement in 1990. A member of the Argentine Society of Botany and the International Association of Wood Anatomists, her research focused on foliar and fruit anatomy of the Frankeniaceae and the genera Adesmia, Dimorphandra and Mora (Fabaceae) Pterocaulon (Asteraceae) and Rhynchospora (Cyperaceae). In the field of wood anatomy she studied the Araliaceae, Myrtaceae, Asteraceae and fossil wood morphology and was also involved in the taxonomic revision of some groups, publishing numerous articles in each of these fields.
Sources:
Bacigalupo, N. M. and Guaglianone, E. R., 1999, "Ana Maria Ragonese (1928-1999) ", Darwiniana 37(3-4): 341.
Sources:
Bacigalupo, N. M. and Guaglianone, E. R., 1999, "Ana Maria Ragonese (1928-1999) ", Darwiniana 37(3-4): 341.
References
Brummitt, R.K. & Powell, C.E., Authors Pl. Names (1992): 516;
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
First name(s)
Ana Maria
Last name
Ragonese
Initials
A.M.
Life Dates
1928 - 1999
Collecting Dates
1967 - 1981
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Fossil plants
Spermatophytes
Organisation(s)
BAA, SI
Countries
Temperate South America: Argentina
Associate(s)
Guaglianone, Encarnación Rosa (1932-) (co-collector)
Nicora, Elisa Gernaela Juana Raquel (1912-2001) (co-collector)
Nicora, Elisa Gernaela Juana Raquel (1912-2001) (co-collector)
Biography
Argentine botanist, Ana Maria Ragonese was born in Buenos Aires and studied at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), gaining her doctorate in Natural Sciences from the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences (UBA) in 1960. She began to teach in the same faculty, giving courses in plant anatomy and directing theses. Here she began as an assistant to the chief of practical work and later became an adjunct professor, a role she filled until 1974. At this time Ragonese was also the technical secretary of the Miguel Lillo Institute and a researcher at the Institute of Agricultural Botany. In 1962 she became a researcher for the Council for Research in Science and Technology (CONICET) and the Faculty of Agronomy at UBA Ragonese was awarded a scholarship from CONICET in 1971 that allowed her to travel to the U.K. to research at the Jodrell Laboratory of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. She also researched in the palaeobotany division of the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences 'Bernardino Rivadavia' in Buenos Aires before finally settling in the Darwinion Institute of Botany until her retirement in 1990. A member of the Argentine Society of Botany and the International Association of Wood Anatomists, her research focused on foliar and fruit anatomy of the Frankeniaceae and the genera Adesmia, Dimorphandra and Mora (Fabaceae) Pterocaulon (Asteraceae) and Rhynchospora (Cyperaceae). In the field of wood anatomy she studied the Araliaceae, Myrtaceae, Asteraceae and fossil wood morphology and was also involved in the taxonomic revision of some groups, publishing numerous articles in each of these fields.
Sources:
Bacigalupo, N. M. and Guaglianone, E. R., 1999, "Ana Maria Ragonese (1928-1999) ", Darwiniana 37(3-4): 341.
Sources:
Bacigalupo, N. M. and Guaglianone, E. R., 1999, "Ana Maria Ragonese (1928-1999) ", Darwiniana 37(3-4): 341.
References
Brummitt, R.K. & Powell, C.E., Authors Pl. Names (1992): 516;
Date Updated: 19 April 2013
Herbarium
Natural History Museum (BM)
Collection
Plant Collectors
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Contributor
Natural History Museum (BM)
First name(s)
Ana Maria
Last name
Ragonese
Initials
A.M.
Life Dates
1928 - 1999
Collecting Dates
1967 - 1981
Specification
Plant collector
Groups collected
Fossil plants
Spermatophytes
Organisation(s)
BAA, SI
Countries
Temperate South America: Argentina
Associate(s)
Guaglianone, Encarnación Rosa (1932-) (co-collector)
Nicora, Elisa Gernaela Juana Raquel (1912-2001) (co-collector)
Nicora, Elisa Gernaela Juana Raquel (1912-2001) (co-collector)
Biography
Argentine botanist, Ana Maria Ragonese was born in Buenos Aires and studied at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), gaining her doctorate in Natural Sciences from the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences (UBA) in 1960. She began to teach in the same faculty, giving courses in plant anatomy and directing theses. Here she began as an assistant to the chief of practical work and later became an adjunct professor, a role she filled until 1974. At this time Ragonese was also the technical secretary of the Miguel Lillo Institute and a researcher at the Institute of Agricultural Botany. In 1962 she became a researcher for the Council for Research in Science and Technology (CONICET) and the Faculty of Agronomy at UBA Ragonese was awarded a scholarship from CONICET in 1971 that allowed her to travel to the U.K. to research at the Jodrell Laboratory of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. She also researched in the palaeobotany division of the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences 'Bernardino Rivadavia' in Buenos Aires before finally settling in the Darwinion Institute of Botany until her retirement in 1990. A member of the Argentine Society of Botany and the International Association of Wood Anatomists, her research focused on foliar and fruit anatomy of the Frankeniaceae and the genera Adesmia, Dimorphandra and Mora (Fabaceae) Pterocaulon (Asteraceae) and Rhynchospora (Cyperaceae). In the field of wood anatomy she studied the Araliaceae, Myrtaceae, Asteraceae and fossil wood morphology and was also involved in the taxonomic revision of some groups, publishing numerous articles in each of these fields.
Sources:
Bacigalupo, N. M. and Guaglianone, E. R., 1999, "Ana Maria Ragonese (1928-1999) ", Darwiniana 37(3-4): 341.
Sources:
Bacigalupo, N. M. and Guaglianone, E. R., 1999, "Ana Maria Ragonese (1928-1999) ", Darwiniana 37(3-4): 341.
References
Brummitt, R.K. & Powell, C.E., Authors Pl. Names (1992): 516;
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