C.T. Rogerson was born on October 2, 1918, in Ogden, Utah.[1] Upon graduating from high school in 1936, he enrolled in Weber Junior College (since renamed to Weber State University) for the following two years. Rogerson then attended Utah State University, where he had hoped to work under the supervision of botanist Bassett Maguire, but settled instead for the only available studentship with plant pathologist B.L. Richards.[2] Rogerson received his Bachelor of Science from Utah State University in 1940. Soon after, he was drafted into the army, and spent three years (1942–1945) in the Pacific Theater of World War II. He served as a technical sergeant in laboratory and pharmacy at an army evacuation hospital, and cared for internees released in the Philippines near the war's end. During his war years, Rogerson made collections of plants, fungi, slime molds, and butterflies that he sent to Cornell or to the Smithsonian Institution.[1]
After the war finished, Rogerson continued studying fungal systematics and started a doctoral program with Harry Morton Fitzpatrick at Cornell University; noted mycologist Richard Korf was another of Fitzpatrick's graduate students at the time. Under Fitzpatrick, Rogerson studied Hypomyces fungi and their anamorphs. Fitzpatrick committed suicide in 1950, and Donald S. Welch replaced him as Rogerson's advisor for the last few months of his doctoral program. Rogerson received his doctorate from Cornell in 1950. That year, he joined the faculty of Kansas State University as an assistant professor, but he would ultimately advance to associate professor. While at Kansas, he worked on the identification of fungi, and published nearly 20 papers on fungal taxonomic novelties, aeromycology (the fungal flora of air), and plant diseases caused by fungi.[1][2]
In 1958, the director of The New York Botanical Garden, William Jacob Robbins, recruited Rogerson for the position of Curator of Cryptogamic Botany. Rogerson became Senior Curator in 1967 and Senior Curator Emeritus at his retirement in 1990. As curator of cryptogamic botany, Rogerson "was directly responsible for all accessions and loans of ferns and mosses, as well as of fungi and lichens, until about 1965 when, first a bryologist and later a pteridologist were added to the cryptogamic staff." At the Garden, he also continued his study on the taxonomy of the Ascomycetes, especially of Hypomyces, a genus of fungi that parasitize other fungi, and the fungal diversity of New York and Utah. Additionally, he served as editor of the Garden's publications: Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden (1963–88), North American Flora (1963–88), and Flora Neotropica (1969–83). While at the Garden, Rogerson was also an adjunct professor of biology at Columbia University and at the Herbert H. Lehman College of the City University of New York.[1][2]
During his tenure at the Garden, Rogerson was also a deeply involved member of the Mycological Society of America (MSA). He served as managing editor (1958–89) and editor-in-chief (1960–65) of the scientific journal Mycologia. He was vice-president (1967), president elect (1968), and president of the MSA (1969), and secretary-treasurer of the society from 1973 to 1974. He has served as historian of the Mycological Society of America from 1960 to 1990. Rogerson was a generous donor to MSA student travel awards.[1][2] He died in Ogden on September 7, 2001.[2]
Mycological contributions
Rogerson added many thousands of records of fungi, mainly from Utah, to the Garden herbarium, where his specimens are available for study by systematists.[2] Rogerson assisted in the formation of the three major amateur mushroom groups in the New York City area: the New York Mycological Association, the New Jersey Mycological Association, and the Connecticut-Westchester Mycological Association (COMA). He helped amateur mycologists correctly identify fungal specimens during his weekends. "In return, amateur mycologists provided him with many specimens of fungicolousHypomyces."[1][2] In 1994 he started to issue an exsiccata, namely Fungi Boreali-Americani with Stanley Jay Smith and John H. Haines as co-editors.[3]
In 1970, Rogerson presented a detailed history of the Hypocreales and reviewed changes in the circumscription of the order up to that time. His publication included keys to the genera of both the Hypocreales and Clavicipitales, followed by a list of genera, each with the literature citation of the original descriptions and type species. He included 115 genera in the Hypocreales.[4][5]
Clark T. Rogerson belongs to the Dudley mycological lineage, which can be traced back to Anton De Bary, a famous German mycologist. William Russell Dudley was Assistant Professor of Cryptogamic Botany at Cornell University from 1883 to 1892, and received mycological training from De Bary in 1887. Joseph Charles Arthur, George Francis Atkinson, and Mason B. Thomas studied under Dudley. Thomas went to Wabash College, where he would influence Harry Morton Fitzpatrick to study mycology. Fitzpatrick received his Ph.D. in 1913 at Cornell under tutelage of Atkinson. Rogerson studied under Fitzpatrick at Cornell from 1946 to 1950. Contemporary to Rogerson was fellow student Richard P. Korf, another prominent mycologist. Students of Rogerson include Robert L. Shaffer (Kansas State; M.A.), Susan Carey Canham (Columbia University; Ph.D.), Anna F. Doyle (Columbia University; Ph.D.), Gary J. Samuels (Columbia University; Ph.D.), and Rosalind Lowen (Lehman College; Ph.D.). Katia F. Rodrigues and Priscila Chaverri (Penn State; Ph.D.) studied under Samuels. The Rogerson sublineage continues to expand under Chaverri at the University of Maryland.[1][2][6][7][8]
Honors and memberships
Rogerson received several awards and honors during his career:[1][2]
1969: President of the Mycological Society of America
1981: Award from the Mycological Society of America in appreciation for service to the Society as Historian, Secretary-Treasurer, Vice-President, and President and as Managing Editor and Editor-in-Chief of Mycologia
1981: The Connecticut-Westchester Mycological Association (COMA) named their annual four-day mushroom foray after C.T. Rogerson in appreciation of his commitment to education and the development of amateur mycology.
1984: New York Botanical Garden Distinguished Service Award for outstanding contribution to the advancement of Horticulture and Botany
1985: COMAndation for outstanding service to COMA
1989: A commemorative publication celebrating the 70th birthday of C.T. Rogerson (Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden 49: 1–375).
2004: The Mycological Society of America established the Clark T. Rogerson student research and travel award.
1952. Shaffer RL, Rogerson CT. "Notes on the fleshy fungi of Kansas". Trans Kansas Acad Sci55:282–286.
1952. Walker EA, Rogerson CT, Jenkins AE. "Additional collections of plantain scab and violet scab from several North Central states". Plant Dis Rep36: 331–332.
1953. Elmer OM, Shields IJ, Rogerson CT. "Oak wilt in seven Kansas counties". Plant Dis Rep37:44.
1953. Rogerson CT. "Kansas mycological notes: 1951". Trans Kansas Acad56:53–57.
1954. Rogerson CT, King CL. "Stem rust of Merion bluegrass in Kansas". Pl Dis Reporter38:57.
1954. Rogerson CT. "Kansas mycological notes: 1952". Trans Kansas Acad57:280–284.
1954. Slagg CM, Rogerson CT. "A tuckahoe found in Kansas". Trans Kansas Acad57:66–68.
1956. Rogerson CT. "Kansas mycological notes: 1953–54". Trans Kansas Acad59:39–48.
1957. Pady SM, Johnston CO, Rogerson CT. "Stipe rust of wheat in Kansas in 1957". Plant Dis Rep41: 959–961.
1957. Rogerson CT. "Diseases of grasses in Kansas: 1953–55". Plant Dis Rep40:388–397.
1957. ———. "Verticillium-wilt in Kansas". Plant Dis Rep41:1053–1054.
1958. ———. "Diseases of grasses in Kansas: 1956–1957". Plant Dis Rep42:346–353.
1958. ———. "Kansas aeromycology I. Comparison of media". Trans Kansas Acad61:155–162.
1958. ———. "Kansas mycological notes: 1955–1956". Trans Kansas Acad60:370–375.
1958. ———. "Kansas mycological notes: 1957". Trans Kansas Acad61:262–272.
1959. Willis WW, Rogerson CT, Carpenter WJ. "An evaluation of several fungicides for control of root rot of croft lilies". Plant Dis Rep43:745–749.
1960. Hall CV, Dutta SK, Kalia HR, Rogerson CT. "Inheritance of resistance to the fungus Colletotrichum lagenarium in watermelons". Proc Am Soc Hort Sci15:638–643.
1960. Kramer CL, Pady SM, Rogerson CT. "Kansas aeromycology IV. Alternaria". Trans Kansas Acad62: 252–256.
1973. ———. "New names and new taxa of fungi proposed by Fred Jay Seaver (1877–1970). 1–42". Unpublished manuscript. The New York Botanical Garden.
1973. ———. "Publications of Fred Jay Seaver, 1877–1970. 1–21". Unpublished manuscript, The New York Botanical Garden.
1976 [5 Jan 1977]. Carey ST, Rogerson CT. "Taxonomy and morphology of a new species of Hypocrea on Marasmius". Brittonia 28:381–389.
1976. Rogerson CT, ed. "Commemorating the 70th Birthday of Dr. Josiah L. Lowe". Mem New York Bot Gard28:24.
1977. Hervey A, Rogerson CT, Leong I. "Studies of fungi cultivated by ants". Brittonia29:226–236.
1977. Malloch D, Rogerson CT. "Pulveria, a new genus of Xylariaceae (Ascomycetes)". Can J Bot55:1505–1509.
1978. ———, ———. "Fungi of the Canadian boreal forest region: Catulus aquilonius gen. et sp. nov., a hyperparasite on Seuratia millardetii". Can J Bot56: 2344–2347.
1978. Rogerson CT. "Bibliography and index (Compositae tribe Mutisiae, tribe Senecioneae, tribe Vernoniaea)". N Am Flora II, 10:203–245.
1984 [May 1986]. Samuels GJ, Rogerson CT. "New ascomycetes from Amazonas". Acta Amazonica14(1/2 Suppl.):81–93.
1984. Buck WR, Rogerson CT. "Bibliography. Sphagnopsida, Sphagnaceae". N Am Flora II11:161–175.
1984. Rogerson CT, Thiers BM. "Fungi from the A.O. Garrett Herbarium, University of Utah (UT)". Brittonia36:293–296.
1984. Samuels GJ, Rogerson CT, Rossman AY, Smith JD. "Nectria tuberculariformis, Nectriella muelleri, Nectriella sp., and Hyponectria sceptri: low-temperature tolerant, alpine-boreal fungal antagonists". Can J Bot62:1896–1903.
1984. ———, ———. "Nectria atrofusca and its anamorph, Fusarium staphyeae, a parasite of Staphylea trifolia in Eastern North America". Brittonia36:81–895.
1986. Barr ME, Rogerson CT, Smith SJ, Haines JH. "An annotated catalog of the pyrenomycetes described by Charles H. Peck". Bull New York State Mus Nat Hist459:1–74.
1986. Rogerson CT. "[Review of] Microfungi on land plants. An identification handbook, by Martin B. Ellis and J. Pamela Ellis". Bull Torrey Club113:61.
1988. Samuels GJ, Barr ME, Rogerson CT. "Xenomeris saccifolii and Gibbera sphyrospermi, new tropical species of the Venturiaceae (Fungi, Pleosporales)". Brittonia40:392–397.
1989. Samuels GJ, Rogerson CT. "Endocreas lasiacidis and Sinosphaeria lasiacidis, new tropical ascomycetes". Stud Mycol31:145–149.
1990. Rogerson CT, Harris RC, Samuels GJ. "Fungi collected by Bassett Maguire and Collaborators in the Guayana Highland, 1944–1983". Mem New York Bot Gard64:130–164.
1990. Samuels GJ, Doi Y, Rogerson CT. "Hypocreales". Mem New York Bot Gard59:6–108.
^ abcdefghSamuels, Gary J. (1989). "Mycological contributions celebrating the 70th birthday of Clark T. Rogerson". Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden. 49: 1–375.
^Maguire, B.; Boom, B.M. (1989). The Botany of the Guayana Highland—Part XII. Memoirs of The New York Botanical Garden. Vol. 51. p. 8. ISBN978-0-89327-331-6.
^Samuels, G.J.; Lodge, D.J. (1996). "Rogersonia, a new genus of the Hypocreales". Sydowia. 48: 250–254.
^Schroers, H.J. (2001). "A monograph of Bionectria (Ascomycota, Hypocreales, Bionectriaceae) and its Clonostachys anamorphs". Studies in Mycology. 46: 1–214 (see p. 109).
^Herrera, C. S.; Rossman, A. Y.; Samuels, G. J.; Chaverri, P. (6 August 2013). "Pseudocosmospora, a new genus to accommodate Cosmospora vilior and related species". Mycologia. 105 (5): 1287–1305. doi:10.3852/12-395. PMID23921243. S2CID848762.