Indigen

In general usage the word indigen is treated as a variant of the word indigene, meaning a native.

Usage in botany

However, it was used in a strictly botanical sense for the first time in 1918 by Liberty Hyde Bailey ((1858–1954) an American horticulturist, botanist and cofounder of the American Society for Horticultural Science) and described as a plant

" of known habitat ".[1]

Later, in 1923, Bailey formally defined the indigen as:

Botanical definition

" ... a species of which we know the nativity, - one that is somewhere recorded as indigenous. "

The term was coined to contrast with cultigen which he defined in the 1923 paper as:

" ... the species, or its equivalent, that has appeared under domestication, - the plant is cultigenous."

[2]

The definition and usage of the word cultigen has undergone subsequent change (see entry under cultigen).

See also

References

  1. Bailey, L.H. 1918. The indigen and the cultigen. Science ser. 2, 47:306-308.
  2. Bailey, L.H. 1923. Various cultigens, and transfers in nomenclature. Gentes Herb. 1: 13-136.


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