A California scholar's research into a flowering shrub took him to Mexico and a violent death

In a photo provided by Roxanne Cruz-de Hoyos, Gabriel Trujillo and and his fiancée, Roxanne Cruz-de Hoyos, right pose for a photo. For four years, Trujillo trekked across North America — from Michigan to Mexico, coast to coast — in search of a flowering shrub called the common buttonbush. The research was tragically cut short last week in Mexico, where Trujillo’s father says he was shot seven times. Authorities discovered his body on June 22 in the state of Sonora, in northwest Mexico — days after his fiancée reported him missing. (Roxanne Cruz-de Hoyos via AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — For four years, Gabriel Trujillo trekked the breadth of the United States and south into Mexico in search of a flowering shrub called the common buttonbush.

The plant is native to the varied climates of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. Trujillo, a 31-year-old Ph.D. student at the University of California, Berkeley, wanted to know why it thrived in such a range of places, and whether the evolution of the species held possibilities for future habitat conservation and restoration efforts.

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