Richard Sadebeck
Richard Emil Benjamin Sadebeck (20 May 1839 in Breslau – 11 February 1905 in Meran) was a German pteridologist and mycologist. He was an older brother of mineralogist Alexander Sadebeck (1843–1879).
He studied natural sciences at the University of Breslau as a pupil of Heinrich Göppert. From 1865 to 1876 he worked as a schoolteacher in Berlin, and afterwards relocated to Hamburg, where he taught classes at the Johanneum. From 1883 to 1901 he was director of the Hamburg Botanical Museum.[1][2]
In 1893 he described the fungal genus Magnusiella (syn. Taphrina).[3]
Selected works
- De Montium Inter Vistritium et Nissam Fluvios Sitorum Flora, 1864.
- Die Entwicklung des Keimes der Schachtelhalme, 1878 – Development of horsetail shoots.
- Kritische Untersuchungen über die durch Taphrina-Arten hervorgebrachten Baumkrankheiten, 1890 – Critical studies on tree diseases caused by Taphrina species.
- Die parasitischen Exoasceen : eine Monographie, 1893 – Parasitic Exoasceae.
- Filices Camerunianae Dinklageanae, 1896.
- Hydropteridineae, 1897.
- Die wichtigeren Nutzpflanzen und deren Erzeugnisse aus den deutschen Colonien, 1897 – The more important crops and their products from the German colonies.
- Die Kulturgewachse der deutschen Kolonien und ihre Erzeugnisse (1899, chapter 10 by Ernest Friedrich Gilg).[4]
References
- Lexikon deutschsprachiger Bryologen, Volume 1 by Jan-Peter Frahm, Jens Eggers
- BHL Taxonomic literature : a selective guide to botanical publications
- Magnusiella Index Fungorum
- Most widely held works by Richard Sadebeck WorldCat Identities
- International Plant Names Index. Sadeb.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.