On View: Darwin’s Garden

When it comes to evolution, most people imagine fish with legs, anthropoid-like monkeys or those otherwise nondescript finches from the Galapagos Islands. An exciting new exhibit at the New York Botanical Garden, however, seeks to provide insight into a rather neglected realm of evolutionary history. Darwin’s Garden: An Evolutionary Adventure, on view now through June 15, is a 40-minute walking tour through botanical deep time that explores the phylogenetic relationships, histories and habits of some thirty different plant and fungus species, beginning with such primitive life forms and living fossils as algae, mosses and cycads through more complex flowering plants and carnivorous nitrogen-seeking specialists like the venus flytrap. This ambitious program spans “three separate Botanical Garden venues and includes an “evolutionary tour” of living plants that demonstrate key points on the tree of life, which links all living beings through a common ancestry.”

So take forty minutes from your day to visit the distant relatives from which you branched off hundreds of millions of years ago. Tix are $20 for adults, $7 for children, and $18 for students and seniors. You can order online or by calling 718-817-8716 during workweek business hours.



AddThis Social Bookmark Button   Print Print   Email Email