UTC Graduate Student’s Cloudland Canyon Plant Research Earns Top Botanical Honor

  • Tuesday, April 7, 2026
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga graduate student Andy Wall was selected for the 2026 North Carolina Botanical Garden Award at the recent Association for Southeastern Biologists conference in Mobile, Alabama.

Wall was the second consecutive UTC environmental science graduate student to win the honor, following 2025 recipient Julia Prins.

The North Carolina Botanical Garden Award is given for an outstanding presentation that best advances understanding of the biology and conservation of southeastern plants and their ecosystems.

“It definitely felt good.
It was validating to be recognized in that way,” said Wall, who will graduate from UTC in May.

Working under UTAA Distinguished Service and UC Foundation Professor Joey Shaw, Wall’s research, titled “The Vascular Flora and Species Distribution Modeling of Two Rare Species in Cloudland Canyon State Park, Dade and Walker Counties, Georgia,” focused on Cloudland Canyon State Park in northwest Georgia—an area known for its rugged terrain and ecological diversity.

Shaw said Wall was “a strong fit for the project,” citing his background in field botany.

Between late 2023 and the end of the 2025 growing season, Wall conducted a comprehensive floristic inventory of the park, documenting hundreds of plant species and building a dataset that will support conservation efforts. He completed 52 site visits to Cloudland Canyon and, combined with existing herbarium records, documented 665 species and subspecific taxa spanning 361 genera and 122 plant families.

A floristic inventory, he explained, provides a baseline understanding of what species exist in a given area. This information is essential for future research and land management.

“We need to understand what these plant distributions are and where they’re occurring. It begins with this boots-on-the-ground floristic research,” he said.

The research also identified 28 rare species and produced more than 200 county-level records—data that park managers can now use to make informed decisions about conservation, invasive species management and long-term stewardship.

“They know where the rare species are so that they can keep an eye on them,” Shaw said. “When it comes to invasive species, park managers can go in and help eradicate them so that they don’t take over.”

In total, Wall collected hundreds of specimens representing roughly 600 species, creating a verifiable record of the park’s biodiversity, and contributed those samples to UTC’s herbarium, where they will serve as a resource for future students and researchers.
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