
Profile of Dr. Donald Pinkava
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| Opuntia Leptocaulis |
X |
Opuntia spinosior |
| Desert Christmas Cholla |
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Cane Cholla |
Between Species Hybrid
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Words to know before you read
- specimen- sample
- botanist- one who studies plants
- chromosomes part of a cell that determines hereditary characteristics
- nurseries- where plants are grown
- grazing- land used for feeding cattle
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Sometimes the police visit Professor Donald Pinkava. But they're not looking for
him. They just have plant fragments that they found in cars or homes where a crime was
committed. They need to identify the plant. So they come to Pinkava, who is director of
the Arizona State University Herbarium.
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The herbarium has 210,000 plants from all over the world. The plants have been
dried and preserved and put in order of plant families. The police can ask Pinkava to go
through the rows and rows of 7-foot-tall metal cabinets that contain plant specimens and
compare those to what they found at the crime scene. Plant researchers from Arizona and
all over the world have stopped by to study specimens.
Pinkava is a botanist who specializes in the study of cacti. Growing up in Ohio, he
didn't have much experience with the spiny plant. But after he started teaching at ASU in
1964, his students kept bringing him samples of cacti and eventually he began his
research on those plants.
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| Opuntia Leptocaulis |
X |
Opuntia versicolor |
| Desert Christmas Cholla |
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Staghorn Cholla |
Between Species Hybrid
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His area of research is natural hybridization, that is, when two species of plants
produce a new type that combines characteristics of both parents. He studies the
chromosomes and pollen of cacti. The hybrids, or new plants, seem to be weaker than
either of the parent plants, but nurseries sell some of the hybrids that look attractive.
His research involves going into the desert in the southwestern United States or
northern Mexico. He must get permits from either the U.S. or Mexican governments to take
plants back to his laboratory at ASU.
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Grazing, pollution and wildfires have all changed the way cacti grow. Pinkava
serves on a state board that recommends changes in laws that affect plants.
For further reading, Dr. Pinkava recommends Lyman Benson's The Cacti of the
United States and Canada (1982, Stanford University Press)
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Article by Gail Maiorana | Photos Courtesy of Dr. Pinkava
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