Skip to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
Sign out
Sign in
to online tools
UVic
Search
UVic home
COVID-19
Admissions
Academics
Research
Library
Students
Faculty & staff
Online tools
Return to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
University
of Victoria
UVic News
Search
Search
Search
Search
Search UVic News
Search UVic
Search for people
Search for departments
Search for experts
Search for news
Search for resources
Navigation
Home
Topics
Academic areas
Research
Student life
Media
Publications
Search
home
topics
Fiona Hamersley Chambers
Rare plant thrives in campus teaching garden
The Ring
A cluster of rare pink star-shaped blossoms will soon be blooming in UVic’s David Turpin Native Plant garden— planted earlier this spring by ethnobotanist Fiona Hamersley Chambers and her environmental studies students. The Pink Sand Verbena, a federally red-listed endangered species, was considered extinct in Canada until it was rediscovered in 2000 along a beach on the BC West Coast Trail.
Ethnobotany class revives plant on campus
The Ring
Following in the footsteps of world-renowned ethnobotanist Nancy Turner, ethnobotany PhD candidate Fiona Hamersley Chambers has led environmental studies students across the campus since 1999, using it as a living classroom as they study the relationship between people and plants.
< Newer
1
Older >
Navigation
Content
Quick links
Return to
global menu
.
Return to
primary navigation
.
Return to
secondary navigation
.
Return to
page content
.