TRIARCH "Botanical Images" Student Travel Award

Established by Dr. Paul Conant, and supported by TRIARCH INCORPORATED, this award provides acknowledgement and travel support to BSA meetings for outstanding student work in the area of creating botanical digital images.

2009 Award Recipients - (view all submissions)


First Place, Mauricio Diazgranados, Saint Louis University
Nature Games

$500 Botany 2009 Student Travel Award



Second Place, Julia Nowak, University of British Columbia
Canola vascular bundles

$250 Botany 2009 Student Travel Award



Third Place, James ohen, Cornell University
Apocynaceae flower close up

$150 Botany 2009 Student Travel Award


 

2008 Award Recipients - (view all submissions)


First Place, John Schenk, Washington State University
Seed surface patterns of Mentzelia laciniata

$500 Botany 2008 Student Travel Award



Second Place, Matthew Valente, University of Tennessee
Los Pantalones

$250 Botany 2008 Student Travel Award



Third Place, Mauricio Diazgranados, Saint Louis University
Singular plants of the top of the neotropical Andes

$150 Botany 2008 Student Travel Award


 

2007 Award Recipients - (view all submissions)


First Place, C. Matt Guilliams, San Diego State University
Inflorescence of sandfood (Pholisma sonorae), a root parasite of the Algodones Dunes, Imperial County, California

$500 Botany 2007 Student Travel Award



Second Place, Jessica Budke, University of Connecticut
Colored scanning electron micrograph of the moss peristome of Timmia megapolitana

$250 Botany 2007 Student Travel Award



Third Place, Nicole M. Hughes, Wake Forest University
Tip-down anthocyanin in developing leaves of Ailanthus altissima

$100 Botany 2007 Student Travel Award


 

2006 Award Recipients - (view all submissions)


Frist Place, Jay F. Bolin, Old Dominion University
Flower of Hydnora africana (foreground) parasitizing its host Euphorbia mauritanica

$500 Botany 2006 Student Travel Award



Second Place, Anna Jacobsen, Michigan State University
A hover fly uses its vacuum-like mouth to remove pollen from an anther of a Phacelia (Hydrophyllaceae) flower in the Antelope Valley California Poppy Preserve

$250 Botany 2006 Student Travel Award



Third Place, Ryan McMillen, Southern Illinois University
Equisetum arvense stem with stomata and silica protrusions

$100 Botany 2006 Student Travel Award