William Albert Setchell (April 15, 1864 – April 5, 1943) was an American botanist and marine phycologist who taught at the University of California, Berkeley, where he headed the Botany Department. Among his publications are the Phycotheca Boreali-Americana, a multi-volume specimen collection of dried algae, and the Algae of Northwestern America, a reference work.
Setchell's research ranged from the taxonomy of algae, fungi, and some angiosperms to biogeography and ethnobotany, especially as these related to marine algae.[3] His researches took him all around the world because of his interest in such subjects as the role of temperature in the worldwide distribution of algae and (in the 1920s) the role of kelps in reef formation.[1] One side project grew out of his smoking habit: he became interested in the origins of the genus Nicotiana and did some research on Nicotiana hybrids.[1]
One of his early major undertakings was a series of specimen collections, i.e. exsiccata series, that became collectively known by the title of the first volume, the Phycotheca Boreali-Americana.[3] In the early 1890s, Setchell teamed up with botanists Frank Shipley Collins and Isaac Holden to create specimen collections of dried North American freshwater and marine algae.[3][7][8] Each collection was mounted on pages bound together in a book form, with printed labels and an index, and issued in an edition of 80.[3][7] Published in installments between 1895 and 1919, the exsiccataPhycotheca Boreali-Americana ultimately totaled 46 bound fascicles (I–XLVI, numbers 1–2300) and 5 elephant folio volumes (fascicles A–E, numbers I–CXXV).[3][7][8][9][10] The regular volumes each contained 50 numbered specimens, while the elephant folios contained 25 specimens.[3][7] In collecting the thousands of specimens needed for this monumental project, the trio relied on many other plant collectors.[3]
Possibly his most important contribution to American botany was the multi-volume reference work Algae of Northwestern America, on which he collaborated with fellow UC Berkeley botanist Nathaniel Lyon Gardner.[1] Issued by the University of California Press, the first volume came out in 1903 and the last in 1925.[1]
Following his retirement, Setchell continued to work on botanical projects until his death in 1943.[3] A Festschrift was produced for his 70th birthday that included essays, a biographical sketch, and a complete bibliography.[4] His manuscripts, notes, field books, and correspondence are archived at the University of California.[3]
In 1920, Setchell married Clara B. Caldwell of Providence, Rhode Island. She assisted him at the university and accompanied him on all his trips until her death in 1934.
Plants named for Setchell
Three plant genera were named for Setchell: SetchelliaMagnus 1896, (a smut fungus) which is now a synonym of DoassansiaCornu,[11]SetchelliellaDe Toni (now Doassansia niessliiDe Toni, a species of blue-green algae).[12] Also, SetchellanthusBrandegee, (a Mexican shrub, containing a single species, Setchellanthus caeruleus).[13] In 1958, Czech mycologist Zdeněk Pouzar published Setchelliogaster which is a genus of fungi in the order Agaricales.[14]
In addition, more than three dozen species of plants, as well as a coral species and an annelid species, were also named in his honor.[1]