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  1. Gottlieb Haberlandt (28 November 1854 – 30 January 1945) was an Austrian botanist. He was the son of European 'soybean' pioneer Professor Friedrich J. Haberlandt. [1] His son Ludwig Haberlandt was an early reproductive physiologist now given credit as the 'grandfather' of the birth control pill.

  2. Gottlieb Haberlandt (born Nov. 28, 1854, Ungarisch-Altenburg, Hung.—died Jan. 30, 1945, Berlin, Ger.) was an Austrian botanist, pioneer in the development of physiological plant anatomy, and the first person to study plant tissue culture (1921).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Gottlieb Haberlandt, working in Graz, Austria, was the first to culture isolated somatic cells of higher plants in vitro. He began these investigations in 1898 and published the results in 1902 (Haberlandt, 1902).

    • Ian M. Sussex
    • 10.1105/tpc.108.058735
    • 2008
    • Plant Cell. 2008 May; 20(5): 1189-1198.
  4. Haberlandt´s vision of the totipotency of plant cells represents the actual beginning of tissue culture. This book pays homage to a great Austrian scientist and the further development of his ideas.

  5. Physiological Plant Anatomy (original German title: Physiologische Pflanzenanatomie) is a botany book first published in 1884 by Gottlieb Haberlandt (1854–1945). The textbook focuses on the investigation of each plant tissue layer and the final analysis of their physiological performance regarding the previous.

  6. Although real success first came with animal tissues, the botanist Gottlieb Haberlandt (1854-1945) (Fig.1) clearly set forth the purposes and potentialities of cell culture after having attempted culture of plant cells.

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  8. The list of scientific publications of Haberlandt (about 150 titles, von Guttenberg 1953) shows the two different fields he studied in Graz and in Berlin, and two different methods of research he used as well as different manners of presenting the results respectively.

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