About Mary DeDecker
Who Was Mary DeDecker?
Native Plant Garden in honor of Mary DeDecker
2008 Mary DeDecker Botanical Grant Awards
Prior Year Awards
Botanist,
mother, author, environmental leader, avid outdoorswoman, homemaker, visionary,
grandmother, educator, respected friend. These are just a few of the words
that could be used to describe Mary DeDecker. She was born in Oklahoma
(1909), then moved to Southern California during her childhood. In 1935,
Mary, her husband Paul, and two young daughters moved to Independence.
The family delighted in exploring the mountains and valleys of their vast and
wild new home. Marys long interest in plants drew her to closer
inspection of the flora of the region. She became a self-taught botanist
and began sending specimens to botanists at academic institutions throughout
the country who were eager to receive plants from this remote region.
On her own, Mary collected, keyed, and preserved thousands of plant specimens
in a private herbarium in Pauls well-kept garage. She became the
undisputed authority on the flora of the eastern Sierra and northern Mojave.
She discovered more than one plant species new to scientists and she and her
daughters created the common names for many of the local wildflowers.
One important desert foray led to her discovery of a shrub in the buckwheat
family (Polygonaceae) that had not been previously described. The shrub
turned out to be a new genus and was named in her honor, Dedeckera
eurekensis (July gold); in fact, the canyon in which it was discovered was
officially named DeDeckera Canyon! As important as her discovery and cataloguing
of the numerous species, Mary also worked tirelessly to preserve the unique
habitats in which the plants were found. She served on committees and
commissions, wrote informed letters and comments to government agencies, authored
books and newspaper articles, influenced legislation, fought to save the ecological
integrity of the Owens Valley from Los Angeles groundwater pumping activities,
founded the Bristlecone Chapter of the California Native Plant Society, and
ultimately helped not only to raise the publics awareness of the value
of native plant species but also to preserve those species in their natural
habitats. In September 2000, Mary DeDecker passed away, but her work will
continue through the efforts of the many people she inspired.
Bristlecone Chapter, CNPS
PO Box 364
Bishop, CA 93515
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| Page last updated February 10, 2008 |