Rudolf Jakob Camerarius
Rudolf Jakob Camerarius | |
---|---|
Rudolf Jakob Camerarius (1665-1721) | |
Born |
February 12, 1665 Tübingen, Holy Roman Empire |
Died |
September 11, 1721 Tübingen, Holy Roman Empire |
Nationality | German |
Fields | Botanist and physician |
Doctoral advisor |
Elias Rudolph Camerarius Sr. Georg Balthasar Metzger |
Doctoral students | Johann Andreas Planer |
Notes | |
He is the son of Elias Rudolph Camerarius Sr. |
Rudolf Jakob Camerarius or Camerer (February 12, 1665 – September 11, 1721) was a German botanist and physician.
Life
Camerarius was born at Tübingen, and became professor of medicine and director of the botanical gardens at Tübingen in 1687. He is chiefly known for his investigations on the reproductive organs of plants (De sexu plantarum epistola (1694)).[1]
While other botanists, such as John Ray and Nehemiah Grew, had observed that plants seemed to have sex in some form, and guessed that pollen was the male fertilizing agent, it was Camerarius who did experimental work. In studying the mulberry, he determined that female plants not near to male (staminate) plants produced fruit but with no seeds. Mercurialis and spinach plants fared likewise. With the castor oil plant (Ricinus) and with maize he cut off the staminate flowers (the "tassels" of maize), and likewise observed that no seeds formed. His results were reported in the form of a letter (the epistola), and attracted immediate attention, subsequent workers extending his results from the monoecious plants he had studied to dioecious ones as well.
Notes
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Camerarius, Rudolf Jakob". Encyclopædia Britannica. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Duane Isely, One hundred and one botanists (Iowa State University Press, 1994), pp. 74–76
External links
Media related to Rudolf Jakob Camerarius at Wikimedia Commons