Johannes Schmidt (biologist)

Ernst Johannes Schmidt (2 January 1877 – 21 February 1933) was a Danish biologist credited with discovering in 1920 that European eels migrate to the Sargasso Sea to spawn. Before this people in North America and Europe had wondered why there were no baby eels where they were fishing.[1]

Danish research vessel Dana leaving Copenhagen in 1928 at the start of the Dana Expedition

Biography

Schmidt was born at Jægerspris, Denmark. Schmidt began his studies of natural history at the University of Copenhagen under professor of botany Eugen Warming (1841–1924) ,and obtained an MS degree in biology in 1898. He obtained a grant from the Carlsberg Foundation to study the flora of the coastal areas of Ko Chang in then Siam, including both mangrove trees and microalgae. He made his doctoral thesis in biology and botany, on shoot architecture of mangrove trees and Eugen Warming served as faculty opponent in October 1903.[2]

Schmidt then more or less switched to marine zoology, working 1902–1909 part-time for the Botanical Institute of the University of Copenhagen, part-time for the Danish Commission for Investigation of the Sea. In 1909, he was made head of the department of physiology at the Carlsberg Laboratory, a post he held until his early death.

Schmidt worked in parallel on phycology, where he described the genus Richelia (filamentous heterocyst-forming Cyanobacteria dwelling inside diatoms), on plant physiology and genetics, especially of hops, and on large-scale oceanography and ichthyology.

Beginning in 1904, Johannes Schmidt led a series of expeditions into the Mediterranean Sea and the North Atlantic to investigate eels. In 1928–1930, he led the Dana Expedition, funded by the Carlsberg Foundation, being a two-year voyage around the world's oceans. The discovery of the spawning place of the eel was one of the results of this expedition.

A peculiar incident is worthy of notice: a paper on the life-history of the eel, published 1912 in Germany,[3] had first been sent to London to be published by the Royal Society, but was refused with a note that Grassi's work on the subject sufficed. This constitutes a clear example of peer review failure.[4] Ten years later, Schmidt's work on the spawning place of the eel was published by the Royal Society[5] and even later he was awarded the Darwin Medal.[6]

Personal life

In 1903 he married Ingeborg Kühle (1880-1958), daughter of Søren Anton van der Aa Kühle (1849-1906), chief director of the Old Carlsberg Brewery. Schmidt died at Copenhagen and was buried at Vestre Kirkegård.[7]

Honours

Notes

  1. Brooke Jarvis (May 18, 2020). "Where Do Eels Come From?". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  2. "Warming, (Johannes) Eugenius (Bülow) (Denmark 1841-1924)". people.wku.edu. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  3. Schmidt, J. (1912) Danish researches in the Atlantic and Mediterranean on the life-history of the Fresh-water Eel (Anguilla vulgaris, Turt.). Internationale Revue der gesamten Hydrobiologie und Hydrographie 5: 317-342.
  4. "Johannes Schmidt (1877-1933)". ICES Journal of Marine Science. 8: 145–152. 1933. doi:10.1093/icesjms/8.2.145.
  5. Schmidt, Johs. (1923) The Breeding Places of the Eel. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, Vol. 211: 179-208
  6. "Johannes Schmidt, 1930". The Royal Society. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  7. "S.A.v.d. Aa Kühle". Dansk Biografisk Leksikon. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  8. IPNI.  E.J.Schmidt.

References

  • "List of Professor Dr. Johannes Schmidt's Scientific Papers 1899-1932". ICES Journal of Marine Science. 8: 153–160. 1933. doi:10.1093/icesjms/8.2.153.
  • Bruun, Anton Fr. (1934) The Life and Work of Professor Johannes Schmidt. Rivista di Biologia (Perugia) XVI (1): p. XII.
  • Paulsen, Ove (1933) Til Minde om Johs. Schmidt (in Danish). Naturens Verden.
  • Tsukamoto, Katsumi (1992). "Discovery of the spawning area for Japanese eel". Nature. 356: 789–791. doi:10.1038/356789a0.
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