Denis Christopher Lindsay (born 1943/1944) is a British botanist who made contributions to the field of Antarctic lichenology as part of the British Antarctic Survey. He was among the first professional botanists to perform floristic surveys on several Antarctic islands. His seminal work, The Macrolichens of South Georgia, was one of only three treatments of Antarctic lichens published before the 21st-century.
In 1965, Lindsay left England with the British Antarctic Survey to study lichen growth rates. The aim of the study was to determine how long the Antarctic islands have been free from a permanent ice cap.[1] From 1965 to 1967, he was stationed on the South Shetland Islands and Signy Island. Here Lindsay furthered the work of lichenologist Elke Mackenzie through the documentation of species and the collection of herbarium specimens.[3] During the austral summer of 1965 to 1966, Lindsay became the first botanist to survey King George Island. He studied the floristics of both lichens and moss.[4] While on Signy Island, he was upset after unexpectedly having to serve as meteorologist for the mission.[5]
After the end of his first tour, Lindsay brough back living lichen specimens to Winterbourne in Birmingham. He noted their high survivorship despite the urban environment.[6] In 1971, Lindsay published Vegetation of the South Shetland Islands, and in doing so was the first professional botanist to report on the flora of Half Moon Island and King George Island.[4][7]
Lindsay returned to the Antarctic with the BAS from 1971 to 1972. He made botanical collections on the island of South Georgia, where he focused his attention on the genus Cladonia.[8] In 1974, Lindsay published his seminal monograph The Macrolichens of South Georgia.[3] It was one of only three treatments of Antarctic lichens published before the start of the 21st-century, the other two being Carroll William Dodge's discredited Lichen Flora of the Antarctic Continent and Adjacent Islands (1973) and Jorge Redón Figueroa's Liquenes Antarticos (1985).[9]
The lichen Parmelia lindsayana, first discovered on Signy Island, is named in Lindsay's honor. The holotype was collected by him in 1966.[12]Ryszard Ochyra considered Lindsay "a good English lichenologist and effective collector".[13]
Many of Lindsay's herbarium specimens are housed at the British Antarctic Survey Herbarium (AAS) in Cambridge.[14] Others are held at the Leicestershire Museum Service Herbarium (LSR) in Leicester.[10]
In addition to his solo works, Lindsay contributed chapters to publications including Mark Seaward's Lichen Ecology (1977)[15] and M. C. Clark's A Fungus Flora of Warwickshire (1981).[16]
^Edwards, John (May 2015). ""Non Oral" or written Histories: John Arthur Edwards ('Percy')"(PDF). BAS Club Magazine. 73. British Antarctic Survey Club. Retrieved 23 August 2024. I was left very much on my own, except for lichenologist Denis Lindsay who had just returned from Signy, rather embittered by the fact that he had been forced to serve as a meteorologist, when he had understood from Martin Holdgate that he would be going south as a scientist.
^Øvstedal, D. O.; Elix, J. A.; Lewis Smith, R. I. (1996). "A new species of Parmelia (lichenized Ascomycotina) from the Antarctic". Mycotaxon. 57: 151–153.
^Ochyra, Ryszard (2002). "Book Review"(PDF). Polish Polar Research. 23 (3–4): 297. Retrieved 24 August 2024.