Wan-Chun Cheng
Wan Chun Cheng or Zheng Wanjun (simplified Chinese: 郑万钧; traditional Chinese: 鄭萬鈞; pinyin: Zhèng Wànjūn; Wade–Giles: Wan Chung Cheng, 24 June 1908–25 July 1987)[1] was a Chinese botanist. Initially one of the Chinese plant collectors who followed in the wake of the Europeans after 1920, he became one of the world's leading authorities on the taxonomy of gymnosperms. Working at the National Central University in Nanjing, he was instrumental, along with H.H.Hu, in the identification in 1944 of the dawn redwood, Metasequoia glyptostroboides, previously known only from fossils and was long thought extinct.[2] The plant Juniperus chengii is named in his honour.
References
[edit]- ^ "中国数字植物标本馆 - 植物名称作者数据库". Archived from the original on 2015-02-10. Retrieved 2015-02-10.
- ^ Roy Lancaster (2013). "Helping a fossil live on". The Garden. 138 (1). Royal Horticultural Society: 45.
- ^ International Plant Names Index. W.C.Cheng.