People

Gasson, Peter E.

Job Title Plant Anatomy Researcher
Department Jodrell
Section Micromorphology
Science Teams Drylands: Tropical America
Malpighiales
Leguminosae
Myrtaceae
Large-Scale Syntheses
Drylands: Africa
Joined Kew 1979
Foreign Language(s)

Qualifications & Appointments

BSc (Hons), Agricultural Botany, Univ. Reading, 1979

PhD, Botany (Timber Technology), Imperial College, 1985

DIC, Imperial College, 1985.

Council, International Association of Wood Anatomists, IAWA (1994-99)

Hardwood Committee, IAWA (1988-89)

Softwood Committee, IAWA (1998-2004).

Role

Systematic and comparative plant anatomy, especially of wood (secondary xylem).

Research focused on plant anatomy, especially hardwoods (Dicotyledons, particularly Leguminosae, Malpighiales, Myrtaceae and CITES listed species) and softwoods (gymnosperms), in the context of systematics and conservation and often in collaboration with curators and researchers worldwide. Identification of fragmentary plant material for user groups such as archaeologists, palaeontologists, antique dealers, customs and police. Collaboration on an interactive wood identification database with colleagues at North Carolina State University. Some aspects of studies are applied to specific problems of conservation, including sustainable utilization of fuelwoods in arid regions and urban development, such as the influence of urban trees on nearby buildings.

Projects

Anatomical Identification of Plant Material

Anatomy of the Dicotyledons

Authentication and Chemical Fingerprinting of Economically Important Species

CITES Capacity Building

CITES-Listed Timbers

CITES: UK Scientific Authority

Fuelwoods: Structure and Sustainability

New Phylogeny of the Caesalpinioideae, Leguminosae

Sustainable Management of Fuelwood Trees in the Caatinga of Northeast Brazil

Systematics of Neotropical Acacia (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae)

Systematics of the Tropical African Genus Berlinia (Detarieae: Caesalpinioideae: Leguminosae)

Wood Anatomy of Leguminosae

Wood Anatomy of Malpighiales

Wood Anatomy of Myrtaceae

Xylem Function and Evolution

Selected Publications 2001-2005

Lavin, M., Pennington, R.T., Klitgaard, B.B., Sprent, J.I., Cavalcante de Lima, H., & Gasson, P.E. (2001). The Dalbergioid legumes (Fabaceae): delimitation of a pantropical monophyletic clade. American Journal of Botany 88(3): 503-533.

Gasson, P., Trafford, C. & Matthews, B. (2003). Wood anatomy of Caesalpinioideae. In Klitgaard, B. & Bruneau, A. (eds). Advances in legume systematics Part 10, Higher level systematics. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 63-93.

Gasson, P., Wray, E. & Schrire, B.D. (2004). Wood anatomy of the tribe Millettieae with comments on related papilionoid legumes. IAWA Journal 25: 485-545.

Jansen, S., Baas, P., Gasson, P., Lens, F. & Smets, E. (2004). Variation in xylem structure from tropics to tundra: evidence from vestured pits. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: Biological Sciences, Plant Biology. 101: 8833-8837.

Richter, H.G., Grosser, D., Heinz, I. & Gasson, P.E. (eds) (2004). IAWA list of microscopic features for softwood identification. IAWA Journal 25: 1-70.

Selected Publications pre-2001

Cutler, D.F., Rudall, P., Gasson, P.E. & Gale, R.M.O. (1987). Root identification manual of trees and shrubs. A guide to the anatomy of roots of trees and shrubs hardy in Britain and northern Europe. Chapman & Hall. 245 pp.

Wheeler, E.A., Baas, P. & Gasson, P.E. (eds) (1989). IAWA List of Microscopic Features for Hardwood Identification. IAWA Bulletin ns 10: 219-332.

Gasson, P.E. & Cutler, D.F. (1998). Can we live with trees in our towns and cities? Arboricultural Journal 22: 1-9.

Hepper, N., Gasson, P., Gale, R. & Killen, G. (2000). Wood Chapter 15. In Nicholson, P.T. & Shaw, I. (eds) Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 334-371.

Gasson, P. (2000). Does wood anatomy support tribal and generic classification in Papilionoid Leguminosae? In Herendeen, P.S. & Bruneau, A. (eds) Advances in Legume Systematics Part 9. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 201-215.