UC creates living tribute to Ohio botanist

A University of Cincinnati biologist helped organize a fitting tribute to one of America's legendary conservationists and botanists, E. Lucy Braun.

Denis Conover, a professor of biology in UC's College of Arts and Sciences, collaborated with Cincinnati's Spring Grove Cemetery and Arboretum to replace the nonnative plants adorning her grave with native ones found in southwest Ohio.

No doubt, Braun would have approved.

"Lucy Braun was a great botanist, plant ecologist and conservationist," Conover said. "For years I thought it was too bad that she had English ivy, a nonnative species, growing on her grave. I thought how nice it would be if they could replace it with native plants."

Conover and David Gressley, the cemetery's director of horticulture, carefully selected a mix of native ground cover that would be suitable for her plot, which sits in the shade of a pretty American holly tree near one of Ohio's oldest and most impressive white oak trees. Instead of English ivy, which can spread like a blanket across the forest floor, they chose a mix of creeping mint, golden star and Allegheny spurge, all flowering plants that are native to deciduous forests in Eastern North America.

Conover wrote about the living tribute in the journal Ecological Restoration.

A man wearing  face mask and a ballcap stands over green plants on a grave.

UC biology professor Denis Conover stands at the grave of famed UC botanist E. Lucy Braun to point out the creeping mint, golden star and Allegheny spurge that replaced English ivy. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Spring Grove ended its practice of introducing nonnative ground cover on new cemetery plots, Gressley said.

"The evergreen ground cover signifies everlasting life, which was the intent when it was planted," he said.

Today, the cemetery grows native plants for that purpose, he said.

The tribute to Braun was overdue, he said.

"She was a pioneer. She gave definition to what today is known as the field botanist," he said. "Her work remains extremely influential. People have built on her work, but she provided the foundation."

Like Amur honeysuckle, invasive ground covers such as English ivy and wintercreeper (Euonymus fortunei) have spread far beyond their intended garden plots into forests across the United States where they often outcompete native plants.

"Much of my career has been dedicated to controlling nonnative invasive plants and restoring native plants," Conover said.

For a second article also published in the September edition of Ecological Restoration with his co-authors, UC geography professor Richard Beck and UC graduate Bridget Taylor, Conover found that satellite imagery can be used to identify invasive honeysuckle from space. The Landsat-8 satellite could measure the reflection of wavelength energy in the red and near infrared bands. The ratio of the two wavelengths can help scientists identify foliage of different plants from orbit.

UC found that the method was 82% accurate in detecting honeysuckle, according to the study.

Denis Conover wearing a face mask holds a thorny branch.

UC botanist Denis Conover leads regular interpretive hikes to help people appreciate Ohio's biodiversity. Here he holds thorny devil's walking stick. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Braun mentioned Amur honeysuckle, imported as an ornamental shrub from Asia, in her 1961 book "The Woody Plants of Ohio." At that time, honeysuckle was just beginning to show up in Ohio as an exotic plant in Hamilton County. Today, it's the bane of foresters and backyard gardeners all over Ohio and other parts of Eastern North America.

Two people wearing face masks stand in the shade of a forest.

Bob Bergstein, left, and UC graduate Samantha Al-Bayer point out native plants on a walk through Spring Grove Cemetery & Arboretum. Bergstein is a board member for the Cincinnati Wild Flower Preservation Society that E. Lucy Braun co-founded. Al-Bayer studied biology at UC and works as a botanist for Spring Grove. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Braun (1889-1971) was a pioneer in so many ways. Author of 180 published articles and reference books, she was the first female president of the Ecological Society of America.

Her sister, Annette, in 1911 was the first woman to earn a doctoral degree at UC and became a renowned expert on moths. Lucy Braun followed, earning a master's degree in geology in 1912 and a doctorate in botany in 1914. The two sisters were daughters of academics who taught them to appreciate the natural world through the prism of science.

Her masterwork, "Deciduous Forests of Eastern North America," was hugely influential in the study of botany, Conover said. A 1970 hardcover copy sells on Amazon for $1,500.

"Dr. Braun's work is one of the few textbooks that reads like a novel. It is a must for all lovers of forests," reviewer Ronald S. Jackson wrote on Amazon.

She inspired generations of students at UC to pursue science careers, including Margaret H. Fulford, namesake of UC's herbarium.

"Lucy could not be fooled about the many native plants, for her knowledge was encyclopedic," wrote former student Lucile Durrell in a 1981 memoir for the Ohio Biological Survey.

Upon their deaths, Durrell and her husband, Richard, a longtime UC geologist, left a bequest that helped expand and protect the Edge of Appalachia Nature Preserve that Bruan so treasured.

A butterfly on a flower.

A tiger swallowtail alights on purple coneflower at the Richard and Lucile Durrell Edge of Appalachia Preserve. E. Lucy Braun was instrumental in conserving the first of its 20,000 acres of prairies, woods and marshes. Photo/Michael Miller

The Braun sisters made regular road trips to Kentucky, exploring its woods and marshes from the Cumberland Gap to Daniel Boone National Forest, always careful to dodge moonshiner stills on their long field surveys.

But it wasn't enough for her to study the region's flora. She wanted to save it. She led the effort to preserve the biologically rich habitats of southern Ohio, now known as the Edge of Appalachia Nature Preserve. At the time of her death, she was fighting to protect Red River Gorge from a proposed federal dam. The conservation effort was successful.

Conover is working with UC's Tepe and Rick Gardner, chief botanist for Ohio's Department of Natural Resources, on a botanical survey in Greater Cincinnati which will be a follow-up to Braun's 1934 publication "The Lea Herbarium and the Flora of Cincinnati."

Conover said he thinks it would be great if UC were to dedicate a native wildflower and butterfly garden to the memory of the Braun sisters.

Braun didn't have to contend with invasive plants the way modern botanists do, Conover said. But she surely would have supported the effort.

"The only way to keep native plants is by controlling invasive plants. That can be quite labor intensive. But those areas have to be managed or they'll be overrun by the likes of English ivy, wintercreeper and honeysuckle," Conover said.

Replacing invasive plants with some of Ohio's prettiest ground cover is a fitting homage to a woman who devoted her life to promoting the state's rich natural heritage, Bergstein said.

"They found some justice for her," Bergstein said.

Featured image at top: UC biology professor Denis Conover examines the ground cover on E. Lucy Braun's grave. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

A man in a ballcap and face mask kneels over green plants at a cemetery.

UC biology professor Denis Conover kneels over the grave of E. Lucy Braun at Spring Grove Cemetery & Arboretum. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Three people stand stand apart under a tree canopy.

Bob Bergstein, left, Samantha Al-Bayer and Denis Conover stand in the shade of an enormous white oak believed to be 400 years old at Spring Grove Cemetery & Arboretum. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Denis Conover stands in the shade of a forest.

UC biology professor Denis Conover has conducted extensive research on the ecological restoration of wetlands, forests and prairies and how to protect natural areas from invasive species. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Two people in face masks look at a green plant in the shade of a forest.

UC graduate Samantha Al-Bayer, a botanist at Spring Grove Cemetery & Arboretum, examines smartweed with her former professor, UC biologist Denis Conover. She took Conover's Classification of Flowering Plants and Plant Ecology courses at UC. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

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