{"id":11721,"date":"2022-02-22T17:23:46","date_gmt":"2022-02-22T17:23:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/now\/?p=11721"},"modified":"2025-06-03T21:38:39","modified_gmt":"2025-06-03T21:38:39","slug":"how-a-minnesota-greenhouse-acquired-a-diverse-plant-collection-from-around-the-globe-and-how-it-all-thrives-under-one-roof","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/now\/2022\/02\/22\/how-a-minnesota-greenhouse-acquired-a-diverse-plant-collection-from-around-the-globe-and-how-it-all-thrives-under-one-roof\/","title":{"rendered":"How a Minnesota greenhouse acquired a diverse plant collection from around the globe\u2014and how it all thrives under one roof"},"content":{"rendered":"

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\"Portrait<\/a>
Assistant Professor Leon Van Eck<\/strong> (Photo by Courtney Perry)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Perched atop Â̲èÖ±²¥\u2019s newest and largest academic building\u2014the Norman and Evangeline Hagfors Center for Science, Business, and Religion\u2014a greenhouse fosters a diverse collection of plants whose origins span the globe.<\/p>\n

Sustaining such a vibrant space filled with hundreds of plant species requires attentive eyes and careful hands. Between teaching biology courses and managing the Biology Department Plant Growth Facilities (including the greenhouse), Assistant Professor Leon Van Eck<\/strong> discussed Augsburg\u2019s diverse greenhouse collection, noteworthy specimens, and the challenges he and student-workers experience while cultivating so many plants. Plus, don\u2019t miss his advice for plant care at home.<\/p>\n

Q: What is the origin story of Augsburg\u2019s greenhouse? How did you get involved?<\/strong><\/p>\n

A: The rooftop greenhouse was already envisioned in the early designs for the Hagfors Center. I was not involved in designing or building these facilities, as I started my position at Augsburg in January 2018, right when the Hagfors Center officially opened. The completed Plant Growth Facilities of the biology department include the 500-square-foot rooftop greenhouse, a headhouse used as general plant maintenance space, as well as two climate-controlled walk-in plant growth rooms and four reach-in plant growth chambers.<\/p>\n

It was my vision that the greenhouse be used to support a permanent plant collection, while the growth rooms and chambers be used for labs, research experiments, and plant tissue culture requiring more precise control of growing conditions. The growth chambers also house my plant-pest interaction research program’s aphid colony, so you might say that we also manage the largest animal collection on the Augsburg campus as well!<\/p>\n

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Biology major Caityana Hanson \u201922<\/b> is a student worker in Augsburg’s Plant Growth Facilities. She waters and fertilizes plants and helps with pruning, planting, potting, pest control, and other greenhouse tasks. (Photo by Courtney Perry)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Q: What are some of the most remarkable plants in the greenhouse? How did they come to be at Augsburg?<\/strong><\/p>\n

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The jewel orchid (Ludisia discolor<\/em>) is part of the greenhouse plant collection. (Photo by Courtney Perry)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

A: The majority of the plant collection has been acquired through purchase from specialist growers, using funds from Augsburg donors or from our annual plant sale in collaboration with the Augsburg chapter of the TriBeta Biology Honor Society. I’ve also managed to leverage my connections at botanical institutions for some important additions to the collection. For example, in 2021, the United States Botanic Garden in Washington, D.C., kindly gifted us two specimens of the titanarum (Amorphophallus titanum<\/em>), also sometimes called the corpse flower. This endangered aroid from the island of Sumatra is famous for producing an enormous and strikingly foul-smelling inflorescence that has people lining up at conservatories and botanical institutions around the world during a blooming event. Our specimens are still a few years away from producing their first flowers, but they have adjusted to life in Minnesota and are growing rapidly.<\/p>\n

We also recently acquired five rare and endangered species of Central American cycad, thanks to the kind horticulturalists at the Amazon Spheres in Seattle. A colleague who specializes in the study of African carnivorous plants sent me a very nice specimen of Roridula gorgonias<\/em>, the flycatcher bush. Incidentally, I just returned from a trip to South Africa, where I was able to visit a large colony of these remarkable plants in their marshy habitat, high in the coastal mountains of the Western Cape province.<\/p>\n

Q: What are the most challenging plants or issues to deal with when managing a greenhouse\u2019s collection and environment?<\/strong><\/p>\n

A: Even though the greenhouse has computer-controlled climate systems, getting a diverse plant collection to thrive under a single roof remains a challenge. How do the student workers and I maintain tender ferns and arid-adapted succulents all in one place? The answer lies in micro-climates. By carefully observing seasonal variation and individual plant responses, we’ve dialed in the best positions in the greenhouse to give sun-loving species the most light, and protect denizens of the forest floor under a shady canopy of larger plants. Pest outbreaks are unfortunately also a reality when you have a greenhouse in the sky, but we’ve developed a tight rotation of various organic controls to good effect.<\/p>\n

As for challenging plants, thus far, the majority of the 400 species grow pretty well for us. Some stapeliads from Somalia succumbed to over-enthusiastic watering early on, so now I caution student workers to keep that group of plants on the dry side. What remains a challenge is to coax some species, such as certain cacti and many of our pelargoniums, into bloom. These plants require significant drops in nighttime temperatures to stimulate flower development, but for the protection of our most tropical species, we keep greenhouse temperatures pretty toasty.<\/p>\n