A very bad week for Philippine science
Leonardo Co was the country’s premiere field botanist, a real Indiana Jones of the plant world.
He inspired and trained legions of Filipino scientists at the University of the Philippines, and is regarded worldwide as the expert on Philippine flora. His students, now PhDs and teachers at universities across the globe, returned to the Philippines every year to join him on his collecting expeditions. Leonardo Co was beloved by his students and colleagues, who did not complain even when they had to carry heavier bags on their treks because he insisted on cooking good, hearty meals for them in the middle of the jungle. (He would have their menus all planned out.)
Leonardo Co was on an expedition in Leyte when he was gunned down last week. The official explanation is that he was caught in a firefight between soldiers and NPA rebels, but a witness heard him begging for his life.
The following day the country’s other premiere botanist, Dan Lagunzad, died of liver cancer.
It was a very bad week for Philippine science. For science, period.
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Jeanmaire Molina, now at New York University, was one of Leonardo Co’s research assistants when he first set up the biodiversity project in Palanan, Isabela, in 2001. She and several other UP biology grads who trained under him and saw his work up close in the forests have been coming back each year during breaks in post-graduate work abroad to follow up on their projects. Here is her eulogy for the eminent botanist, whose death by what the military called a “crossfire” in Leyte last week has sparked outrage here and abroad. It was published today in the Business Mirror.
Leonard, the ‘plant philanderer,’ lies among the national treasures he loved
By Jeanmaire E. Molina, Ph.D.
“I FIRST met Sir Leonard almost 10 years ago through Chico, who was my plant taxonomy instructor. Sir Leonard, who was then botanist for Conservation International-Philippines, was recruiting volunteers to help with field work out in the remote jungles of Palanan, Isabela, which entailed a 10-hour bus ride from Manila to Cauayan, and then a 30-minute Cessna ride over the Northern Sierra Madres. My mom was worried about the trip so we decided to ask him what it was really like being out there, especially the malaria situation. Sir Leonard replied matter-of-factly, “Ah, wag po kyo mag-alala. Lahat naman po ng field biologists may malaria [Don’t worry, all field biologists have malaria].” Hearing this, we immediately drove to Mercury Drug so that I can start my dose of Aralen, a malaria prophylactic.
“This was Sir Leonard. So dedicated was he, that malaria did not deter him. He took pride in having two strains of it in his system. Nothing stopped him–a throng of wasps, a turbulent ride on the 6-seater Cessna aka the flying coffin, signal no. 5 typhoons, even a shotgun to his face by an NPA rebel. Just to give you a sense of how intense this person was: One time he slipped while wading in the Palanan stream, hit his back so bad, but instead of squealing in pain, he shouted, “Yung Eugenia ko. May flowers yon!”, to alert us to save his collected plant from drifting away with the stream currents. When he had it back in his hand, only then he did he shout, “aray!”
“As a young boy, Sir Leonard already knew what he wanted to do with his life. A natural historian at heart, he was collecting anything he could, from stones, bugs to plants. At 12 he had transformed part of his room into a makeshift herbarium to house one of his first plant collections, Oryza sativa, better known to nonbotanists as rice. He was always fascinated by the diversity of life, and he knew plants were the scaffold that held it all together. He studied botany in college because he knew this was the only way he could get out into the woods, even joining the UP mountaineering club just so he could collect and add to his growing collection of dried plants. The mentorship of Benito Tan and Jose Vera Santos, two botany greats, only whetted his appetite even more—15,000 Philippine plant species and his dream was to know and catalogue every single one of it, and to make the world know of the Philippines’ incredible biodiversity before it was too late.
“Sir Leonard’s energy and incredible, beyond-words type of love for botany and Philippine conservation were so strong that it just radiated out to anyone he met; and I can definitely speak for this, as well as my good friends, Sandra Yap, Hazel Consunji, Lorie Tongco, Ulysses Ferreras, and the dozens of other students he had touched one way or another. He was like a second father to us. He was “Tatay Chex” for Chekwa, our fond nickname for someone we adored. He was my dad in science, but I loved him like my own. He molded me into the person that I am now. He taught me everything I know about Philippine plants, which he knew like the palm of his hand. He was relentless in encouraging his students to pursue botany and conservation science, so that we can all fight for the cause of preserving every bit of Philippine biodiversity.
“One thing that I will surely miss about him was his intimate knowledge of any Philippine plant species. There is no leaf or twig that you can show him that he won’t be able to give you the latin name of, the shape of the scales or the hair type of its domatia, down to the pages of the Philippine Journal of Science where it was first published. If you ask him, “Sir, pano nyo po nalaman [How did you know that]?” He’d jokingly say, “Ah binulong saken ni Merrill [Merrill whispered it to me].” Merrill was literally sir’s American idol. He was an American botanist who devoted much of his life to the study of Philippine plants in the early 1900s. His portrait hangs in the herbarium, where Sir Leonard would sleep most of the time. This was Sir’s second home, after the forests. No offense Tita Glenda [Leonard’s wife], but Sir was a plant philanderer! One time I asked him, “Sir, alin po mas mahal nyo, si Tita Glends o ang halaman [Sir, who do you love more, Tita Glenda or your plants]”. He scratched his head, paused for a while, and said, “Ang hirap naman ng tanong mo [That’s a tough question].” So much was his love for his science that he also named his only daughter after Linneaus, the great Swedish botanist of the 1700s!
“There is no other Filipino botanist who comes close to Sir Leonard. He was the best of the best. Bar-none. Passionate is even an understatement to describe him. He was a self-made man; everything he knew he pretty much learned by himself, better than any PhD I’ve ever known. His passing is not just a big loss to his loved ones, but more so, a catastrophic loss to this country. Whoever is culpable for this has done our nation a great disservice because I’ve never known anyone who knew our plants the way he did, who had so selflessly given up anything for the cause of Philippine conservation, without any regard at all for personal gain or self-prestige. He is indeed a national treasure, an unsung hero.
“It is ironic that he died while collecting forest seeds for reforestation projects. Maybe somehow he knew that some of the seeds he had planted and nurtured 10 years ago are now ready to carry on his mission. I am one of those seeds and so are Sandra, Uly, Hazel, Lorie. Maybe it is time for us to plant our own seeds and train new students and enthuse others the way Sir Leonard did. May his death, instead of crippling the conservation movement, mobilize each one of us to continue fighting for our forests. This is the only way we can vindicate his death. This is the only way he would want to be remembered. We owe it to him, to ourselves and to this country. And as we leave here, may we all espouse the mantra he lived by, from the great Harvard sociobiologist, E.O. Wilson…
“Every scrap of biological diversity is priceless, to be learned and cherished and never to be surrendered without a struggle.”
“Goodbye, Sir Leonard. I will really miss you. Thank you so, so much for giving me the invaluable opportunity to learn from you. We love you. Nothing will ever be the same again.”
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Lourdes Molina Fernandez, editor-in-chief of the Business Mirror (and my editor at Today), paid tribute to the life and work of botanist Leonardo Co in an article published last Sunday. Here is the full text. Thanks, Chuchay, for allowing us to post this piece.
Leonardo Co: The irreplaceable ‘Sayang-tist’
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Just heard from Michael Purugganan at NYU that the Botanical Society of America plans to honor Leonard with a tribute in the Plant Science Bulletin.
November 23rd, 2010 at 14:32
now this hurts.
November 23rd, 2010 at 14:32
I didn’t know Dr. Co but I cried while I was reading the eulogy. Partly because I wanted to become a teacher that he became, and a scientist that he was, but I have not found the courage to be either one. I think what separates a great professor from a good one is that the former inspires students to become bigger than who they are, and I can tell that Dr. Co was one of them. There are only a handful of Dr. Cos in UP, and knowing them is humbling experience.
November 23rd, 2010 at 17:22
May Rafflesia leonardi live on to carry its noble name.
November 23rd, 2010 at 18:14
I can tell he is very passionate at what he does. And his passion is contagious.
He is such a great loss, especially to the underfunded research community.
November 24th, 2010 at 05:15
it’s sad that i only knew about people like Dr. Co when they have already passed away. i wish i had known while i was growing up there that we had great scientists like him. i have often told my nieces who are born in the US that they should be glad of the opportunities available to them – that they can be whatever they want to be – because that same opportunity was not available to their mother and myself and countless others growing up in the phils. i have another H.S. classmate who wanted to be a marine biologist but in my naivete/ignorance/whatever, i thought that it would not have been possible for her anyway since if we did have a course like that in univ, who would employ her? i’d be surprised (and ashamed) to know that yes, we do have marine biologists in the philippines AND that they make a decent living. (that last part is important because it is something that is possible in north america.)
but see, when i was growing up there, i didn’t know there were people like that or jobs like that. batibot wasn’t around yet, only sesame street. the news or even our high school didn’t expose us to occupations or fields like that. tv stations mostly had trash (eat bulaga and their ilk; soap operas that didn’t teach accountability, only victimhood; etc.). no tv shows ala Discovery Channel.
people like Dr. Co should be considered national treasures.
here’s something off topic but related to my comments:
http://www.parentcentral.ca/parent/education/article/888368–educators-encourage-parents-of-asian-background-to-let-their-children-study-trades-and-arts
on the one hand, i feel like they’re asking people to aim low by going into colleges (trades/arts) instead of universities for 2 reasons: (1) a very possible misconception on my part that colleges are lower quality than universities – i’d gladly be proven wrong (2) a study here in canada that shows that people who graduate with university degrees earn more over their lifetimes than people who graduate with a college degree. (before anyone calls me on my materialism, i have my personal reasons and motivations for this w/c you’ll find reasonable if you know about them.)
on the other hand, i do understand their point about not forcing kids to select fields only.
November 24th, 2010 at 17:01
I’ve been lurking here for years now and have wanted to sign up for ages, but I guess this is the tipping point.
As a student at the Institute of Biology in UPD where both of them worked, I can tell you that it was positively funereal last week, what with both of them passing away within 36 hours of each other. Normally composed professors wept openly, and I have had to stand up for a moment of silence in more than one class. I don’t mind, but it does underscore how terrible this tragedy is – this is UP, after all.
For anyone interested, there’s a petition over at
http://justiceforleonardco.agham.org/ to get an impartial investigation into the “crossfire” going.
November 25th, 2010 at 06:02
I heard about Dr Co, but I was never his pupil. Sir Dan was my ecology professor for one semester, and how I loved his class..
It’s so sad that UP is losing its great professors!