October 14, 2012

Governments gone wild

Talk about going off half cocked -- from the New Zealand Herald:
'Plant Nazis' hunt for outlawed trees
Biosecurity officers have raided the Auckland Botanic Gardens, apparently looking for an exotic relation to the kauri tree that may have been illegally introduced to the country.

The homes of the gardens' curator, Jack Hobbs, and veteran Albany ecologist Graeme Platt were also targeted by Ministry of Primary Industries staff in simultaneous raids just after dawn on Thursday.

Officers were believed to be looking for evidence of agathis silbae, an exotic member of the kauri tree family native to several Pacific islands.

Hobbs said he had been told by an Auckland Council lawyer not to speak to the media. A council spokeswoman also refused to comment.

Platt said those behind the raids were "plant Nazis" influenced by an "idiot New Yorker".

The raids were so extreme he first thought a family member had been in an accident, said Platt, who runs the New Zealand Botanical Research Institute on his property.

"I was sitting at my computer in my undies and the next thing a police car came roaring down the driveway, followed by five more cars.
And the idiot New Yorker?
Officers would not tell him what they were looking for, but Platt, 71, believed it was evidence of agathis silbae. The tree cannot be brought into New Zealand because it was not in the country before a 1997 law banned new plant imports.

But Platt said the tree was here before 1997 under a different name, agathis macrophylla.

It had two names because New York botanist John Silba mistakenly thought he had discovered a new species and named it after himself.

"This clown has named it after himself, but it's the same as the agathis macrophylla. (The ministry) have even called the raids Operation Silbae, for a non-existent tree due to one idiot in New York."

The tree was no threat and fears it could cross with native kauri were wrong because a hybrid could never wipe out the original, Platt said.
What an inexact scientist. Not only to mis-classify a plant but to have the gall to name it after yourself. The only reference to Mr. Silba I can find on the web is that he is with the State University of New York at their Farmingdale campus but neither the Farmingdale nor the SUNY faculty search engines pulled up his name. There is a reference to him at that institution in the Jan-Mar 2001 issue of the Long Island Botanical Society newsletter. Let us hope that he is in a place where he cannot do more damage... Posted by DaveH at October 14, 2012 11:46 AM
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