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Jeanne Baret, botanist and first female circumnavigator, finally commemorated in name of new species

Date:
January 3, 2012
Source:
Pensoft Publishers
Summary:
In 1766, Frenchwoman Jeanne Baret disguised herself as a man to work as assistant botanist on the first French circumnavigation of the globe. Though Baret helped to collect over 6,000 specimens, she was left without anything in the natural world to commemorate her name. That is now to change as a biologist names his newly discovered species -- a relative of the potato, Solanum baretiae.
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In 1766, Frenchwoman Jeanne Baret disguised herself as a man to work as assistant to renowned botanist Philibert Commerson on the first French circumnavigation of the globe. The expedition consisted of two ships under the command of Louis Antoine de Bougainville and was expected to take three years. A royal ordinance forbade women from being on French naval vessels; prejudice and custom prevented their participation in science. Nevertheless, Baret maintained her disguise all the time she was on board ship, and collected plants with Commerson in locations including Rio de Janeiro, the Strait of Magellan, Tahiti, Mauritius, and Madagascar.

Baret was Commerson's lover, but also an accomplished botanist in her own right. When Commerson's ill health prevented him from fieldwork, Baret was responsible for all collections, including the most famous botanical specimen from the expedition: the vine that would be named in honor of its commander, Bougainvillea Comm. ex Juss.

The couple collected over six thousand specimens, now incorporated into the French National Herbarium at the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle. In the course of the expedition and the years after its successful completion, over seventy species would be named in honor of Commerson using the specific epithet commersonii. But Commerson died before he could publish many designations proposed in his notes, which reveal his intention to name the Malagasy genus Baretia. The species concerned are now placed in the genus Turraea of the family Meliaceae. Baret has therefore been left without anything in the natural world to commemorate her name. That is now to change as University of Utah and University of Cincinnati biologist Eric Tepe has named a new species in honor of Baret: Solanum baretiae.

Tepe learned of Baret when he heard an NPR interview with Baret's biographer, Glynis Ridley, author of The Discovery of Jeanne Baret (Crown, 2010).

S. baretiae is a vine endemic to the Amotape-Huancabamba zone of southern Ecuador and northern Peru and grows in the understory of montane forests and disturbed roadside and pasture vegetation. Its flower petals have been seen in shades of violet, yellow, or white. The leaves of S. baretiae are highly variable in shape, as are the leaves of the species that Commerson originally intended to name after Baret. Then, as now, this seems a fitting tribute to a botanist uniting seemingly contradictory qualities: a woman dressed as a man, a female botanist in a male-dominated field, and a working class woman who travelled farther than most aristocrats of her time.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Pensoft Publishers. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Eric Tepe, Glynis Ridley, Lynn Bohs. A new species of Solanum named for Jeanne Baret, an overlooked contributor to the history of botany. PhytoKeys, 2012; 8 (0): 37 DOI: 10.3897/phytokeys.8.2101

Cite This Page:

Pensoft Publishers. "Jeanne Baret, botanist and first female circumnavigator, finally commemorated in name of new species." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 3 January 2012. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120103135133.htm>.
Pensoft Publishers. (2012, January 3). Jeanne Baret, botanist and first female circumnavigator, finally commemorated in name of new species. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 29, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120103135133.htm
Pensoft Publishers. "Jeanne Baret, botanist and first female circumnavigator, finally commemorated in name of new species." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120103135133.htm (accessed March 29, 2024).

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