Edmund Russow

For other uses, see Russow.
Edmund Russow
Born 24 February 1841
Tallinn, Governorate of Estonia
Died 11 April 1897 (1897-04-12) (aged 56)
Citizenship Russian
Nationality Baltic German
Institutions University of Tartu

Edmund August Friedrich Russow (24 February 1841 11 April 1897) was a Baltic German biologist born in Tallinn (German: Reval), in present-day Estonia.

Academic career

Son of a military engineer, Edmund Russow studied at the Universities of Tartu (German: Dorpat) and Berlin. In 1867 he became an associate professor at Dorpat, where from 1874 to 1897, he served as a full professor. In 1895-97 he was president of the Estonian Naturalists' Society. Russow was at the forefront of nature conservation in Estonia, and associated with the work of Hugo Conwentz (1865-1922), a founder of nature conservation efforts throughout Europe.

Botanical work

Russow was an authority on Sphagnaceae (sphagnum mosses)[1] and remembered for his research in plant anatomy and histology, in particular studies of the plant family Marsileaceae (aquatic and semi-aquatic ferns).[2] The plant genus Russowia is named in his honor,[3] as is Sphagnum russowii (Russow's sphagnum).

Written works

References

  1. Botanical gazette, Volume 24 By John Merle Coulter, et al
  2. Google Books, Marsileaceae
  3. CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms, by Umberto Quattrocchi
  4. Open Library, authors
  5. IPNI.  Russow.

External links

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