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German botanist (1862–1948) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joseph Friedrich Nicolaus Bornmüller (February 6, 1862 – December 19, 1948) was a German botanist born in Hildburghausen, Thuringia.
He studied horticulture in Potsdam, and in 1886 traveled to the Balkans and Greece on his first botanical expedition. In 1887-88 he worked at the botanical garden in Belgrade, and during his subsequent career conducted botanical studies widely throughout the Middle East, Asia Minor and North Africa. In his research, he also visited Greece, Madeira and the Canary Islands.
In 1903 he succeeded Heinrich Carl Haussknecht (1838–1903) as curator of the "Haussknecht Herbarium" at Weimar, a position he maintained until 1938. Between 1888 and 1920 he curated and distributed large series of duplicate specimens. The specimens have sometimes collection numbers on printed labels, resembling exsiccatae and found in major herbaria.[1]
In 1918 he was awarded an honorary professorship from the University of Jena.[2]
Among Bornmüller's many publications was a treatise on Macedonian flora titled Beiträge zur Flora Mazedoniens (1925–1928).
The plant genus Bornmuellerantha from the family Scrophulariaceae; the plant genus Bornmuellera from the family Brassicaceae; the plant species Allium bornmuelleri, Geocaryum bornmuelleri, and Paronychia bornmuelleri ; the venomous viper species Montivipera bornmuelleri ;[3] and the caecilian species Crotaphatrema bornmuelleri are named in his honor.[4]
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