Abstract

Perhaps no one has had a greater influence on the development of hybridization theory than Dr. Ledyard Stebbins. However, his contributions have not been restricted to his writings or lectures alone. Many of you have marveled at the great authority with which Dr. Stebbins identified the hybrid status, parentage, and ploidal level of plants in the field or on herbarium sheets. He didn't seem to need all the modern techniques that the current generation of botanists is both blessed and burdened with. For example, I remember a short field trip with Dr. Stebbins in the fall of 1984 to look at some sunflower hybrids near Davis. The plants were dead, only a few dried leaves, stalks, and floral heads remained, yet he confidently identified parental, hybrid, and backcrossed generations. Ironically, after 2 yr of careful molecular studies, I essentially confirmed his initial observations (Rieseberg, Soltis, and Palmer, 1988). Thus, I came to the conclusion that he was able to see things in plants that escaped less careful or less knowledgeable observers such as myself.

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