Land of Plants in Motion: Japanese Botany and the World

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Land of Plants in Motion is the first in any language to examine two companion stories: (1) the rise of an East Asian floristic zone and how the Japanese islands evolved an astonishing wealth of plant species, and (2) the growth of Japanese botanical sciences.

The majority of plant species regarded as “Japanese” trace their origins to western China and the eastern Himalaya but are so indigenized that they often seem native today. Early modern scientists in Japan drew on knowledge of Chinese herbal medicine but achieved distinctive insights into plant life commensurate with but separate from their European counterparts. Scholars at the University of Tokyo pioneered Japanese plant biology in the late nineteenth century. They incorporated Western botanical methods but sought a degree of difference in taxonomy while also gaining international legitimacy through publications in English. Japan’s age of empire (1895–1945) was less about plant exploration and more about plant collection, for both scientific and economic benefits. Displays of species from throughout the empire made Japan’s sphere of colonization and conquest visible at home. The infrastructure for research and instruction expanded slowly after World War Two: new laboratories, botanical gardens, scholarly societies, and publications eventually allowed for great diversity of specialized study, especially with the growth of molecular biology in the 1970s and DNA research in the 1980s. Basic research was harmed by cuts in government funding during 2012–2017, but Japanese plant biologists continue to enjoy international esteem in many fields of scholarship.

Author(s): Thomas R. H. Havens
Series: Perspectives on the Global Past
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 294
City: Honolulu

Contents
Preface
Introduction
From Alpine to Subtropical
Natives and Invasives
One
East Asia’s Plants in Geological Time
The Slow Progression of Plants in Japan
How Japanese and Eastern North American Plants Came to Look Like Each Other
Two
Plants in Early Modern Japan
Chinese Herbal Medicine in Japan
Europeans Embrace Japanese Plants
Natural History and Indigenous Plants
Scientific Illustrations
European Visitors Popularize Linnaeus
Horticulture Spreads throughout Japan
Late Edo-Period Plant Scientists
Three
Seeking Japanese Plants in Europe and North America
“Plants and Seeds Wanted from China and Japan”
European Plant Collectors in Japan
Japanese Plants Arrive in America
Plants and Commerce
Plant Exports to the United States since the Late Nineteenth Century
Four
Foundations of Plant Biology in Modern Japan
Botanical Beginnings
“A Revolution in East Asian Botany”
Infrastructure for Research
Diversification and Specialization
Five
Plant Biology in Japan’s Age of Empire
Makino and Minakata on Studying Nature
Japanese Plant Biology in the Early Twentieth Century
The Botany of Empire
Six
Plant Biologists in an Era of Specialization
Enhanced Infrastructure for Research
Plant Ecology in Postwar Japan
Further Diversity and Specialization
Afterword
Japanese Plant Biology and the World
Notes
Sources Cited
Index
About the Author
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