Madame Jeanne M. Borle (occasionally known as Johanna Louise Borle,[1] Lydia Borle,[2] or by the honorific Kokwana[1][2]) (1880 - ca. 1979)[1] was a Swiss missionary and collector of botanicals. Born in
Saint-Imier,
Bernese Jura, Switzerland with the maiden name Mühlemann,[3] she married the missionary physician Dr. James Borle.[4] Along with other Swiss missionaries that were heading to South Africa at the time, the Borles travelled to
Elim, Western Cape to assist in the running of a hospital there.[1] After her husband’s death in 1918 during the global influenza pandemic, she worked at the American Methodist Mission (now the
Chicuque Rural Hospital) in Mozambique, and lived in the Polana district of
Maputo.[5][1][6]
It is around this time, after the death of her husband, and on the eastern coast of southern Africa, that Borle appears to have developed an interest in plant collecting. She wrote to the
National Herbarium of Pretoria in April 1919, from Maputo, requesting a pamphlet with information about collecting and drying flowers, and soon was sending many specimens that she had collected to the Pretoria herbarium.[4]
At first, she collected the plants she found in and around Maputo, but soon started to send specimens from Bulawayo in Zimbabwe, Sesheke in Zambia, Grootfontein in Namibia, and Gqeberha in South Africa.[7] She was the first collector to send specimens from western Zambia to the Pretoria herbarium.[8] The plants that she collected were then distributed from Pretoria to other
herbaria, including Meise, Coimbra,
The New York Botanical Garden, Uppsala,
Universität Wien[4] and the
National Herbarium of VictoriaRoyal Botanic Gardens Victoria.[9]
Borle returned to the Elim mission in the 1950s, where she continued to work until the age of 97.[10] She died aged 99, in Elim.[1]
Botanical legacy
The plant Vachellia borleae (Burtt Davy) Kyal. & Boatwr (syn. Acacia borleae Burtt Davy) was named in her honour, after a specimen that she had collected in 1920 in Maputo.[11]
Borle also collected the type specimens of Hymenocardia capensis,[12][13]Barleria lateralis,[14][15] and Acacia chariessa.[16][17]
^Anonymous (1922), Departmental Activities: Herbarium Notes., vol. 4, Pretoria: Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Union of South Africa., p. 307
^"The Australasian Virtual Herbarium". The Australasian Virtual Herbarium. Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria (CHAH). 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
^C. Plug (2021).
"Borle, Mrs Jeanne M (plant collection)". S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science. Southern Africa Association for the Advancement of Science. Retrieved 2 November 2021.