Revision of B.K.Simon cv from Fri, 2014-02-07 10:51

CURRICULUM VITAE OF BRYAN KENNETH SIMON            
Date of Birth:           14 April 1943

Place of Birth:          Witbank, South Africa

Nationality:              Australian

Marital Status:          Married Pamela Nan Nicol  19/12/70

DoB of Children:       Douglas Norman 28/2/74, Patrick James 23/6/76, David Alexander 14/10/80, Mary-Anne Joy Louise 13/12/82, Caroline Elizabeth Margaret 23/4/86

    Emails Bryan.Simon@science.dsitia.qld.gov.au                            bksimon43@gmail.com

PROFESSIONAL DETAILS

Designation:     Research Associate, Queensland Herbarium, QUT; Senior Fellow, University of Queensland

Education:        Milton High School, Bulawayo, 1956-1961

                      University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, B.Sc. (Lond.),  1962-1964

                      University of Reading, M.Sc. (Plant Taxonomy), 1970-1971

Work History:    National Herbarium of Rhodesia

                                   Systematic Botanist Feb.1965-May 1974

Botanist Div. I ‑ 18.6.1974

                                   Senior Botanist ‑  1.9.1978

                                   Principal Botanist I-13 (PO5) - 3.4.1990

                                   Senior Principal Botanist 1992

                                   Principal Botanist  2005

                                   Research Associate 2012

                      University of Queensland

                                Senior Fellow, QAAFI 2012

                      Queensland University of Technology

                                Research Associate 2012

Overview of Botanical Career
Achievements in Research
Current and proposed research programs
Presentations of seminars and attendance at
conferences, workshops and symposia
Professional Societies
Field Work
Publications

1. Overview of Botanical Career
Interest in grasses was stimulated in the Bulawayo and Matopos area of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) as a Boy Scout, in the process of collecting 20 grasses for a Collectors Badge,  part of the requirements for the Queens Scout Award; I soon realised my fascination with these plants did not stop at 20. My examiner for this badge was J.M.Rattray (author of The Grass Cover  of Africa (1960)) based at the Matopos Research Station, south of Bulawayo.  The interest in grasses was further enhanced as a schoolboy member of the Matabeleland Branch of the Rhodesian Schools Exploration Society's 1961 expedition to Buffalo Bend on the Nuanetsi River in the south east part of Rhodesia, presently part of the Gonarezhou National Park, Zimbabwe. I was a member of the botany section, led by R.B.Drummond from the National Herbarium in Salisbury (Harare). This society created an awareness of natural sciences for a number of future biologists and I assisted in the leading of the botanical sections of two further expeditions to other remote regions of the country (Charama Plateau 1965 and Mt. Bukwa 1971).

My professional career of 47 years has been almost entirely dedicated to the study of the Poaceae. My first nine years (1965-1974) were spent in the position of Systematic Botanist at the National Herbarium of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), after graduating with a B.Sc. (Lond.) in Botany and Zoology from the University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland (now the University of Zimbabwe), while on a scholarship from the Tobacco Research Board of Rhodesia. The herbarium had a rich grass collection from the Flora Zambesiaca countries due to the good curation and collections by previous agrostologists K.E. Bennett (née Sturgeon), J.B.Phipps and L.K.A. Crook (née Chippindall) under the direction of Dr. (later Professor) Hiram Wild.

As the national agrostologist I specialised in the taxonomic research of the grasses of the Flora Zambesiaca area (Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Botswana and Mozambique). During this time I compiled a definitive check-list of the grasses of Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) and Zambia, undertook extensive field work in three FZ countries (Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi) and published a taxonomic revision of the genus Sacciolepis for the FZ area. Duplicates of herbarium specimens were sent mainly to  K, BM and PRE and 256 of them, some types of new species, have been cited in the Flora Zambesiaca grass volumes published from 1971-1999.  In 1968 I visited Kew for three months to further my research and in 1970-71 I undertook a M.Sc. degree in  Plant Taxonomy at the University of Reading (under Prof. Vernon Heywood), in association with Kew. While at Kew I had a close working relationship with the  agrostologists Derek Clayton, Steve Renvoize, Charles Hubbard and Norman Bor and at the Natural History Museum with Edmund Launert. In 1972 I presented  taxomony lectures to the M.Sc. Tropical Resource Ecology course at the University of Rhodesia (now UZ) on my return to Africa.

In 1974, after the death of Dr S.T. Blake, I applied for and was successful in acquiring the position of grass taxonomist at the Queensland Herbarium. In an attempt to familiarise myself with Australian grasses I made contact with the Australian agrostologists Surrey Jacobs (NSW) and Mike Lazarides (CANB) and published a preliminary checklist of Australian grasses in 1978, the first national census of the family since 1882. This was followed by other publications of national and state significance (including Key to Queensland Grasses (1980, 1987), A Key to Australian Grasses (three editions 1990, 1993, 2002), an account of Australian grass genera in Morley and Toelken’s Flowering Plants in Australia (1983), accounts of 23 genera of the Flora of the Kimberley (1992), Key to Genera of Australian Grasses in Flora of Australia 43 (2002) and AusGrass (2002), a co-authored CD on Australian grasses that incorporates an interactive key and information system that has been referred to as the largest and most comprehensive account of any plant group published in this format.

I have also published taxonomic revisions of large and difficult genera in Africa (Sacciolepis 1981) and Australia (Aristida 1991 and Sporobolus 1999) - and the Flora of Australia accounts of the latter two genera (2005). I am currently working on the 93 genera of the tribes Andropogoneae and Paniceae for future grass volumes of the Flora of Australia. I have resolved a large number of taxonomic and nomenclatural problems in the grass family (see Publications).

I have attended all the major International Symposia on Grasses - Washington, DC (1986), Sydney (1998), Claremont (2003), Copenhagen (2008) and three International Botanic Congresses  - Sydney (1982), St Louis (1999) and Melbourne (2011) and have been involved in an official capacity at most of these meetings, either as a presenter or an organiser. I have also attended other international meetings in Munich, Manchester, Pretoria, London, Yogyakarta, Canberra, San Antonio, Leiden and Bariloche and presented at some of them.

I currently having good working relationship with many agrostologists internationally - in the US with Travis Columbus, Gerrit Davidse, Toby Kellogg, Mary Barkworth, Lynn Clark, Paul Peterson, Rob Soreng and Neil Snow, in Canada with Lynn Gillespie and Jeff Saarela, in Mexico with Gabriel Sanchez-Ken, in Argentina with Fernando Zuloaga, in UK (Kew) with Derek Clayton, Tom Cope, Sylvia Phillips, Steve Renvoize and Maria Vorontsova, in Australia with Terry Macfarlane, Neville Walsh, John Thompson and Trevor Clifford, in New Zealand with Henry Connor, in South Africa with Lyn Fish and Nigel Barker, in the Netherlands with JeF Veldkamp and in Switzerland with Peter Linder.

I have a good understanding of the DELTA sytem for coding taxonomic data and in this regard I have had  collaboration with Mike Dallwitz, Les Watson and Robert Webster.  I also understand the basics of the Lucid software, which was used for the presentation of the AusGrass CD with Donovan Sharp, following transition of the data from a DELTA editor. The Scratchpad sites GrassWorld and AusGrass2, hosted at the Natural History Museum, London have been built up from DELTA databases through the encouragement of Keehan Harman in the early stages and constant assistance from Irina Brake. The very tedious work of coding the data into DELTA and subsequent entry to the Scratchpads has been done and continues to be entered by Yucely Alfonso and Daniel Healy. The foreign language character sets and descriptions of GrassWorld could not have been assembled without the extremely generous assistance of Philip Sharp and Hildemar Scholz (German), Philippe Morat (French) and Gilberto Ocampo (Spanish).

2. Research Achievements
My research career as a taxonomist has necessitated that I have a working knowledge of the literature of the grass family.  To this end I have complied an extensive Endnote bibliography of the Poaceae and general theoretical taxonomic and phylogenetic literature (included in the GrassWorld Scratchpad).

I have consulted some of the older literature on the grasses relevant to my work at other botanical institutions with larger and older holdings than the Queensland Herbarium library, in particular the libraries at Kew, the Natural History Museum, Missouri Botanical Garden and the Smithsonian Institution.

I have worked in the herbarium environment for almost 47 years, with almost 10 years at the National Herbarium
of Zimbabwe (SRGH) and 37 years at the Queensland Herbarium (BRI).  During this time I have also had experience at other herbaria during working visits.  These include many visits to Kew and the Natural History Museum while studying for a M.Sc. at the University of Reading and on separate occasions since then.  I have examined type specimens at the Linnean Herbarium (LINN) in London on a couple of occasions.

During my working life in Africa I undertook working visits to the Botanical Research Institute, Pretoria (PRE), the Botany Dept of the University of Cape Town (BOL), and several smaller herbaria in Zambia and Zimbabwe. In the U.S. I have worked at the herbarium and library of the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Gardens (RSA), the Missouri Botanical Gardens (MO) on four occasions, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC (US) on three visits and had one visit to the herbarium of the New York Botanic Gardens (NY).  In Europe I have had brief visits to 6 of the most noteworthy botanical institutions in Paris (P), Leiden (L), Berlin (B), Munich (M), Geneva (G) and Vienna (W)

In Australia I have had working visits to the Australian National Herbarium (CANB), the Research School of Biological Sciences at the ANU and all the main State herbaria (NSW, MEL, HO, AD, DNA, NT and PERTH) as well as smaller regional herbaria (UNE, Beauglehole herbarium (Portland), Kunanurra, Carnarvon, MBA and CNS).  In New Zealand I visited the Allan Herbarium, Lincoln (CHR) during field work in the South Island while collecting species of the Danthonioideae with Mike Pirie and Aelys Humphreys (from Z at the time). In Asia I have visited herbaria at the Singapore Botanical Gardens (SING) on three occasions and the herbarium of the Bogor Botanical Gardens (BO) in Indonesia. In all these institutions the reasons for my visits varied from general interest to locating type material and literature on the grass family.

I have researched and published revisions of two of the most difficult grass genera in Australia, Aristida and Sporobolus. This involved considerable effort in teasing out the morphological variation of both groups and the subsequent publication of many new species (15 in Aristida and 4 in Sporobolus).  Sporobolus includes the weedy Rats Tail Grasses of the Sporobolus indicus complex and I have had input to meetings and committees in relation the taxonomy of this group of weedy grasses that are a current great focus of concern to the pastoral industry.

I have also published on many other taxa of Poaceae (see Publication list), with publication of almost 80 new species and infra-specific taxa as well as five new genera. I am currently working on the Flora of Australia accounts the large tropical subfamily Panicoideae, which includes the tribes Paniceae and Andropogoneae.

The CD AusGrass – Grasses of Australia (D. Sharp and B.K.Simon, 2002) was well received by the botanical and general community (see review in Taxon  52: 398-400(2003)).  It represented the culmination of three years intensive and collaborative work with Donovan Sharp on the IT and presentation side of the CD and myself on the taxonomic and content side, including preparation of descriptions of genera and species using a natural language module of the DELTA package of computer automation and an update (3rd edition) of the Key to Australian Grasses.

Fieldwork and grass photography has taken me to many countries (all states of Australia, six countries in southern Africa, Hawaii, Mexico, USA, Canada, Indonesia, South Korea, New Zealand and Argentina) and my collections are cited in the botanical literature of Africa (in particular the 4 grass volumes of the Flora Zambesiaca) and Australia (revisions of Eriachne, Triodia, Eragrostis by Lazarides; my revisions of Aristida, Sporobolus and revisionary work on Paniceae and Andropogoneae in Austrobaileya) with many of these being type specimens.

While the bulk of my taxonomic work has been based on morphological data and traditional taxonomic methods I am well aware of modern phylogenetic methods of investigation and have a basic understanding of cladistic software programs. Moreover I also have a good appreciation of the use of molecular data in the widely used phylogenetic investigations as they apply to grass classification. I have presented a poster on the conflict of morphological and molecular data as it applies to grass phylogeny and classification at conferences at the University of Vienna in 2001 and at the Monocots 3 Symposium in Ontario, California, 2003. A paper on this subject was published in the proceedings of this conference (2007).

  3. Current and proposed research programs
I am currently preparing the Flora of Australia accounts of the 93 genera of the Paniceae and Andropogoneae This is being done with the morphological data being coded and modified using the software of the DELTA programs.

At the 2003 Monocots 3 symposium in Claremont, California a special meeting was convened by a group of international agrostologists titled “Web-based resources for 21st century agrostology” (see http://herbarium.usu.edu/GrassManual/Web21.pdf). I was one of three speakers at this meeting and presented a short demonstration of AusGrass and how it could be extended to a world coverage. There was support for such a collaborative international initiative. A major source of data vital to such a project is the Kew world grasses database of morphology in DELTA format (the primary source of data for AusGrass). As well as morphology the Kew database includes broad (levels 1 and 2) distributional categories defined by the International Working Group on Taxonomic Databases (TDWG) and I am currently adding the finer distributional categories (levels 3 and 4). Geographic delimiters have been shown to be extremely useful and powerful in AusGrass and a similar situation would apply to an interactive key to World grasses. The name GrassWorld wasapplied to the global key and information system and in 2005 I presented talks on this project in Singapore, South Africa (two venues) and at an international meeting in London convened by the Linnean Society of London and the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew. I have  presented the same talk in Argentina, Australia, Japan, Singapore, South Africa, the Netherlands, the UK and the US.

4. Presentation of seminars and attendance at conferences, workshops and symposia

I have presented numerous presentations, both at the Queensland Herbarium, and at national and international conferences, workshops and symposia.

I have refereed many papers to national and international journals and have organised and chaired sessions at two International Symposia on Grass Systematics and Evolution (1986 in Washington DC and 1997 in Sydney). I was a technical advisor for the Queensland Herbarium journal Austrobaileya for a number of years.

List of seminars, conferences and workshops attended
7th Plenary Meeting of A.E.T.F.A.T. (Association pour l’Etude Taxonomique de la Flore d’Afrique Tropicale) 7-12 Sep 1970 – Botanische Institut der Universitat, Munich

Taxonomy, Phytogeography and Evolution  9-11 Sep1971 -  University of Manchester

Linnean Soc. London, B.S.B.I and  I.O.P.B.

Native Pasture Resources of Queensland – 2-5 Dec 1975 ‑ Emerald

            Agriculture Branch, QDPI

Genetic Resources of Forage Plants – 6 –11 May 1979 ‑ Townsville

            CSIRO ‑ I.B.P.G.R.

Evolution of Flora and Fauna in Arid Australia ‑ 7 –9 May 1980 -Adelaide

            Australian Systematic Botany Society

Poaceae Workshop for Flora of Australia ‑
March 1981 ‑ Canberra

            A.B.R.S.

XIII International Botanical Congress ‑ 21‑28.Aug 1981 ‑ Sydney

            Australian Academy of Sciences

International Savanna Symposium – 28-‑31.May 1984 ‑ Brisbane

            Australian Academy of Sciences and C.A.B.

Native Pastures in Queensland
– 10-13.July 1984 ‑ Gympie

            Arranged: Agriculture Branch, Q.D.P.I.

DELTA System Tuition Workshop – 15 - 19.Apr 1985 Canberra

            A.B.R.S.

International Symposium of Grass Systematics and Evolution –
27-31. Apr 1986 -  Washington DC., U.S.A.

            Smithsonian Institute, American Institute of Biological
Sciences, National Science  Foundation

Poster Presentation: The biogeography of the genera and major groups of grasses

            Chairperson of Final Session

From Glumes to Culms and Nucleotides – 22 Nov 1988 - CSIRO, Australian  National Herbarium, Canberra

            Australian National Herbarium, Canberra

Plant Systematics in the Age of Molecular Biology and Gondwanan Elements
in the Australian Flora -  28-30
June 1989 - University of Sydney

            Australian Systematic Botany Society Inc.

Flora Malesiana Symposium – 20-25.Aug 1989 - Leiden, The Netherlands

                 Rijksherbarium and Hortus Botanicus of Leiden University

Geomorphology of the Kimberley -
13.Sep 1989 - Royal Geographical Society, London, U.K.

               
Royal Geographical Society

The Living World of the Australian Kimberley – 14-
15 Sep 1989 - Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London, U.K.

                 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

                 Linnean Society of London

            Talk: Grasses of the Kimberley

Systematics and biogeography of the Austral biota -9th Meeting of the Willi Hennig Society – 23-27 Aug.1990         

            Australian National University, Canberra, A.C.T.

            Willi Hennig Society

Indo-Pacific Biogeography at the crossroads (A.S.B.S. Symposium) – 29-
30 Aug 1990 - Australian National University, Canberra, A.C.T.

            A.S.B.S.

            Talk: Gondwanan Grasses in the Australian Flora

Australian Native Grass Workshop – 15-17 Oct 1990 - Country
Comfort Resort Motel, Dubbo, N.S.W.

            Australian Wool Board

Grasses of the New World – 3 Aug 1991 - La Espada Room, Hilton Hotel, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.A.

            Smithsononian Institution, Washington
D.C, Missouri Botanical Garden

2nd Flora Malesiana Symposium - Sep 1992 - Gadja Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

            L.I.P.I., Indonesia

            Poster Presention: The biogeography of Indo-Pacific grasses

Giant Rats Tail Grass Co-ordinating Group -
Meetings March, April, June, August, 1993 - Gympie

Systematics, Evolution and Conservation of the Western Australian Biota - University of Western
Australia, Nedlands, Perth,  Sept 1993

            Australian Systematic Botany Society

            Poster Presentation: The
distribution and biogeography of Western Australian grasses.

Taxonomic Database Workshop - Dept. of Conservation and Land Management, Western Australia,  Como, Oct 1993

            Western Australian Herbarium

The Origin and Evolution of the Flora of the Monsoon Tropics -
Kuranda Rainforest Resort,  Kuranda, July 1994

            Australian Systematic Botany Society

            Poster Presentation: Australian monsoonal grasses

Workshop on Cladistic Analysis: Morphological and Molecular -
Australian National University, Canberra, Sept 1995

Monocots II and Third International Symposium on Grass Systematics and Evolution – University of New South Wales, Sep –
Oct 1998

            Talk: Intkey interactive key to the grasses of Queensland

            Talk: Lucid Interactive key to the grasses ot the Moreton Pastoral District, Queensland

            Chairperson and Organizer of 3 Sessions

XVI International Botanical Congress – St. Louis, U.S.A. Aug 1999

            Poster Presentation: Interactive key to the grasses of Australia

Historical Biogeography Workshop – Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Sep 2000

Deep Morphology: Toward a Renaissance of Morphology in Plant Systematics. Institute of Botany, University of Vienna. Oct 2001

            Poster Presentation: Grass Phylogeny and Classification: Conflict of Morphology and Molecules

International conference celebrating Robert Brown's time in New South Wales and his contribution to science.  Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, May 2002

3rd International Conference on
the Comparative Biology of the Monocotyledons and 4th International Symposium on Grass Systematics and Evolution – Rancho Santa Ana
Botanic Garden.  Ontario Convention Centre, California, Mar-Apr 2003.

            Poster Presentation: Grass Phylogeny and Classification: Conflict of Morphology and Molecules

Presentation “GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given at  Singapore Botanical Garden Herbarium, in August, 2005.

Presentation “GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given to  Botany Dept, University of Cape Town, in August, 2005.

Presentation “GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given to  National Herbarium,  SANBI, Pretoria, in August, 2005.

A Celebration of Grasses. The Linnean Society of London & The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Linnean Society, London. Sep  2005.

                   Talk: GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses.

Presentation “GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given to  Missouri Botanical Gardens, St Louis,
July, 2006.

Presentation “GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given to  Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC,  July, 2006

Presentation “GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given to  Department of
Botany, National Science Museum, Tsukuba, Japan, in August, 2007.

Presentation  “GrassWorld – Update”  given to Australian Systematic Botany Society, Darwin, September 2007
(Talk and Poster, B.K.Simon and D.V. Healy)

Presentation “GrassWorld - Update” given to  Botany Dept, University of Berkeley, California, USA in July 2008.

Presentation  “Taxonomy of Oryza with a focus on Australian species” given at First  Symposium on Australian Wild Rice, Southern Cross University, Lismore, July 2008

Presentation  “GrassWorld – Update”  given to 5th International Symposium on Grass Systematics and Evolution, Copenhagen, Denmark,  August 2008.

Presentation  “GrassWorld – Current Position” .  Poster presentation at Australian Systematic Botany Society 2008 National Conference, Adelaide, September 2008.

Presentation “Taxonomy or Systematics – Overview of 5th International Symposium on Grass Systematics and Evolution (Grasses 5) given in Queensland Herbarium Seminar Series, October 2008.

Presentation  “GrassWorld – Current Position” given in Queensland Herbarium Seminar Series, November 2008.

Presentation “ GrassWorld -  Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given at Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, California  Feb 2010

Presentation “ GrassWorld - Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given at Peabody Museum, Yale University, Feb 2010

Presentation “ GrassWorld -  Interactive Key and Information System of World Grasses” given at Darwinion Institution, San Isidro, Argentina, Feb 2010.

Presentation “Biogeography of Gondwanan Grasses” given at VI Southern Connection Congress, Bariloche, Argentina,
Feb 2010

Presentation with Maria Vorontsova, RBG, Kew “Grassbase and GrassWorld: an international data repository for the evolving classification of grasses” 18th International Botanical Congress, Melbourne, July 2011

Presentation with Maria Vorontsova, RBG, Kew “Grassbase and GrassWorld: an international data repository for the evolving classification of grasses” given in Queensland Herbarium Seminar Series, Aug 2011.

Second  Symposium on Australian Wild Rice,  University of Queensland, St. Lucia, July 2012

Presentation "Grasses online _ Scratchpads for Poaceae"  Queensland Herbarium Seminar Series, Jul. 2012.

Presentation "Grasses online _ Scratchpads for Poaceae"  Australian Systematic Botany Conference, Perth, 24-26 September, 2012.




Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith