Gustav Lindau

Gustav Lindau (May 2, 1866 in Dessau October 10, 1923 in Berlin), was a German mycologist and botanist.

Biography

Gustav Lindau studied natural history in Heidelberg and Berlin, where he studied under Simon Schwendener (1829–1919). He completed his doctoral thesis on the apothecia of lichens in 1888. In 1890 he became director at the botanical garden in Münster and an assistant to Julius Oscar Brefeld (1839–1925).

In 1892 he became an assistant at the Berlin botanical garden. He obtained his “habilitation” in 1894, and became a professor in 1902.[1]

The genus Lindauea (Acanthaceae) was named in his honor by Rendle, and the genus Lindauella was named after him by Heinrich Rehm in 1900.[2]

Works

  • Gustav Lindau and Paul Sydow: Thesaurus literaturae mycologicae et lichenologicae. (1908–1917, 5 volumes)
  • Gustav Lindau: Kryptogamenflora für Anfanger ("Cryptogam flora for Beginners"). (1911–1914, 6 volumes)

Literature

  • Heinrich Dörfelt (ed.):Encyclopedia of mycology. Gustav Fischer Verlag, Stuttgart, New York, 1989. ISBN 3-437-20413-0
  • Zander, R. in Dictionary of Plant Names ed. 13, Ulmer Verlag, Stuttgart,1984. ISBN 3-8001-5042-5))

References

  1. Gustav Lindau (1866 - 1923) Illinois Mycological Association
  2. BHL Taxonomic literature : a selective guide to botanical publications
  3. IPNI.  Lindau.

Note

Based in part on the translation from the German Wikipedia.


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