The activities in his honor will be held in Old
Havana, according to a news note issued by the Office of the
City Historian.
Among some of the first activities to be held on November 25th
will be the unveiling of a commemorative plague at the Alejandro
de Humboldt House and a concert by the Ars Longa music ensemble
at the Paula Church in Old Havana.
The following day, a scientific session will be held at the
Humboldt House where the “Erik Ekman in Cuba: Memories of an
Extraordinary Botanist Collector” exhibition will be inaugurated
and the book “Plantae ekmanianae: a Swedish Botanist in the
Caribbean” will be launched.
Two conferences will be presented on the role of the Swedish
researcher in the knowledge of Cuban and Caribbean flora.
Ekman arrived to Havana on April of 1914 with the
idea of making a short stopover before continuing his trip to La
Española but his interest for Cuban biodiversity made him stay
on the island for the following 10 years.
He collected over 2 000 new and unknown plants for science in
Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
Many of the materials have been the basis for the description of
species that are currently dedicated to the Swedish researcher
(it has the name of ekmanii), according to the source.
In 1915 he climbed the Turquino Peak and measured its altitude.
The names of two of the other peaks Pico Cuba and Pico Suecia,
which belongs to the Sierra Maestra Mountains is attributed to
him.
There is an area in the National Botanical Garden called Rincon
Ekman which exhibits several of his collected plants on the
island.
During the summer of 1924, Ekman left Cuba towards Haiti. He did
not return to the island or his homeland and passed away in the
Dominican Republic on January 15th, 1931 at the age of 47.