Adolph Daniel Edward Elmer (June 14, 1870 – 1942) was an American botanist and plant collector.[1] He was mostly active in the Philippines, his collections being described as new species by both himself and other botanists. The Japanese sent him into Santo Tomas Internment Camp during the Philippines campaign and he died there.
Adolph Daniel Edward Elmer | |
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Born | June 14, 1870 Van Dyne, Wisconsin, United States |
Died | April 17 or July, 1942 (aged 71–72) Santo Tomas Internment Camp, Manila, Philippines |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Washington State University Stanford University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Botany |
Author abbrev. (botany) | Elmer |
Elmer was born on June 14, 1870 in Van Dyne, Wisconsin, United States,[2][1] to Jacob Van Dyne and Alvina Elmer.[2] He was educated at Washington State College in 1899,[3][4] married Emma Osterman in 1902[2] and earned an A.M. from Stanford University in 1903[4] (or 1904).[3] Between 1896 and the year of the earning of his A.M., he collected numerous plants in Western United States (especially California)[5][notes 1] then began describing new plant species, his name appearing in earlier numbers of Botanical Gazette [de][4] (e.g. Festuca idahoensis in 1903).[7] In 1904, he went to the Philippines (an unincorporated territory of the United States at that time), where he consequently made his home through the life.[3] He made extensive plant collections in the Philippines from 1904 to 1927, and also in Borneo.[1] According to Albert William Christian Theodore Herre, Elmer Drew Merrill regarded Adolph Daniel Edward Elmer as the best plant collector working in the Philippines and Southwestern Asia until the beginning of WWII.[4] Merrill gave such reputation with a proof, i.e. Merrill (1929).[4] He was editor of Leaflets of Philippine Botany [species],[1] where he published more than 1,500 new taxa.[5]
Elmer and his wife, Emma, had once planned to leave American-controlled Manila and return to their homeland shortly before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor occurred.[8] The Japanese invasion succeeded it in no time and involved the couple, too. Elmer died on April 17[1][4] (or in July), 1942 in the Santo Tomas Internment Camp in the Manila, Philippines,[3] of natural causes.[5] His private type collection, held in the Philippine National Herbarium, was destroyed about that time.[5] Emma Osterman Elmer survived internment.[8]
Many taxa are named in honor of Elmer, including Zeuxine elmeri [species] (Ames) Ames (syn. Adenostylis elmeri Ames[9]), Begonia elmeri [species] Merr. (syn. B. peltata Elmer, nom. illeg.),[10][11] Castilleja elmeri Fernald,[12] Cynometra elmeri [species] Merr.[13] (note that at least all of these four examples are based on Elmer's type specimens), and so on.
The genera Adelmeria (Zingiberaceae),[14] Elmera (Saxifragaceae),[15] Elmerinula (Dothideomycetes), and Elmerobryum (Hypnaceae) are also named after him.[citation needed]
Word was received indirectly through other relatives, that Mrs. Emma Osterman Elmer, at one time a resident of Arlington, is alive and seemingly well in the Philippines. It has been over a year since last hearing from her, and it was feared she was dead. Mrs. Elmer and her husband, a professor in the University of the Philippines for many years, planning to return shortly before Pearl Harbor. Later, Professor Elmer died in a concentration camp, and since that, no word had been received. Mrs. Elmer wrote that she was living in an apartment, but was under close watch at all times, she had good food and kind treatment.
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