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The wardian case: Environmental histories of a box for moving plants

journal contribution
posted on 2019-05-01, 00:00 authored by Luke KeoghLuke Keogh
The Wardian case was a simple box that had major ecological impacts. It was invented in 1829 and allowed for the successful shipping of live plants between many countries and continents. In the nineteenth and early twentieth century, humans using Wardian cases facilitated major plant
migrations across the globe. As a result humans have overtaken earth processes as the largest mover of vascular plants on the planet. Boxes and cases have largely been neglected as important movers of species and ecologies; with a focus on the Wardian case this essay offers a unique contribution
to the field of environmental history. It also positions the importance of the case in contemporary discussions about the movement of plants in the Anthropocene.

History

Journal

Environment and History

Volume

25

Issue

2

Pagination

219 - 244

Publisher

White Horse Press

Location

Winwick, England

ISSN

0967-3407

eISSN

1752-7023

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal