October 2015 Volume 5, Issue 1
Research Bites In this issue Newly Rated Researchers…….…………………………………………1-3
Developing New Generation of Researchers……...……………………….….12
Local & International News….………………………………………....3-5
Sustainable Watch...…………………………………………………….…….…...13
Gala Dinner & Awards……………………………………………..…….5-7
Honorary appointment ...…………………………………..……………………..13
Royal Society-DFID Capacity Building Initiative………….…………...8
Accolades & Awards…………………………………….………...….……….14/15
PhD Training Programme……..……………………………………….9-10
Did You Know....…………………….……………………………..………….…...16
Newly Appointed Professor ………………………...…………………..10
Forthcoming Events……………………….……………………………….…..…16
Climatology in the Department of Geography …….………………...11
H
elene de Wet is an Associate Professor at UNIZULU. She started her career as Senior Laboratory Assistant in the Department of Botany in 1990. She was appointed as a Lecturer in the same department in 1995. She registered for a PhD part-time in 2001 and graduated in 2006 from the University of Johannesburg. Her doctoral research covered a variety of fields such as ethnobotany, taxonomy and the chemical analysis of secondary plant products of the South African species family of the Menispermaceae. After her PhD she established herself as an expert in the field of ethnobotany. She is the first ethnobotanist to concentrate on Zulu people’s medicinal plant knowledge in a region not previously explored by any other ethnobotanist, namely Northern Maputaland. She concentrated
mostly on the plants that are grown in and on the periphery of people’s homesteads. Many new plants and vernacular names used for a variety of infections and other ailments have been documented for the first time. She also tested antimicrobial activities for many plants species that have never been done before and documented plant combinations to treat infections. Her ethnobotanical surveys also included medicinal plants used among people of Khoi-San and Cape Dutch descent in the eastern parts of the Karoo. Concurrent to her ethnobotanical research, she is currently writing taxonomic revisions for the seven Southern African Menispermaceae genera. Prof De Wet has published 23 articles in peer-reviewed journals and has also presented her research at international conferences. In 2008 and 2011, Continued on page 2