Search results
- Then, the author describes the “Sachs-Pfeffer-revolution” in the botanical sciences, and defines plant physiology, with reference to a Kutschera-paper published 2015 in Nature Plants, as “systems biology of photoautotrophic organisms (embryophytes, algae, cyanobacteria)”.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › pmc › articlesHistorical roots and current status of plant physiology - PMC
People also ask
What did Julius Sachs say about plant physiology?
Why is Julius von Sachs important?
How did Sachs promote plant physiology?
Who wrote the Handbook of Experimental Plant Physiology?
Three years earlier, in 1865, Sachs produced the equally impressive Handbuch der Experimental-Physiologie der Pflanzen (Handbook of Experimental Plant Physiology), which summarized the state of knowledge in all aspects of the discipline known today as plant physiology.
Although he contributed to virtually every branch of bot-any, Sachs will always be associated with the development of plant physiology and what is known today as plant molecular biology and plant systems biology.
Sep 1, 2015 · In October 1865, Julius Sachs published a monograph entitled Experimental Physiology of Plants, and so initiated a new, quantitative branch of basic and applied botany.
- Ulrich Kutschera
- kut@uni-kassel.de
- 2015
May 17, 2018 · Three years earlier, in 1865, Sachs produced the equally impressive Handbuch der Experimental‐Physiologie der Pflanzen (Handbook of Experimental Plant Physiology), which summarized...
He is considered the founder of experimental plant physiology and co-founder of modern water culture. Julius von Sachs and Wilhelm Knop are monumental figures in the history of botany by first demonstrating the importance of water culture for the study of plant nutrition and plant physiology in the 19th century. [1]
May 17, 2018 · Three years earlier, in 1865, Sachs produced the equally impressive Handbuch der Experimental-Physiologie der Pflanzen ( Handbook of Experimental Plant Physiology ), which summarized the state of knowledge in all aspects of the discipline known today as plant physiology.
Jun 7, 2010 · Sachs conceived of organisms as complexes of mechanisms that contributed to the continued existence of the organism and its reproduction into new organisms. As a discipline, physiology demonstrated which mechanisms contributed to those two processes, describing those mechanisms’ characteristics.