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  2. Eduard Adolf Strasburger (1 February 1844 – 18 May 1912) was a Polish - German [1] professor and one of the most famous botanists of the 19th century. He discovered mitosis in plants.

  3. Apr 10, 2024 · Eduard Adolf Strasburger (born Feb. 1, 1844, Warsaw, Pol., Russian Empire [now in Poland]—died May 18, 1912, Bonn, Ger.) was a German plant cytologist who elucidated the process of nuclear division in the plant kingdom.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Apr 29, 2012 · Since Strasburgers cunning experiments on pollen tubes, the mechanisms of pollination and fertilization in higher plants have become one of the most fascinating fields in plant development and evolution (Lord and Russell 2002), including problems of self-incompatibility and programmed cell death (Thomas and Franklin-Tong 2004), polar cell ...

    • Dieter Volkmann, František Baluška, Diedrik Menzel
    • 2012
  5. STRASBURGER, EDUARD (1844–1912), German botanist and one of the founders of modern plant cytology. Strasburger, born in Warsaw, was made director of the Botanical Institute at Jena in 1869, and two years later, when only 27 years of age, was appointed full professor there. In 1880 he became professor at Bonn, where he worked until his death.

  6. Eduard Adolf Strasburger. 1844-1912. German plant cytologist who studied nuclear division in plants. Strasburger accurately described the embryonic sac in gymnosperms (conifers and others) and angiosperms (flowering plants). He explained the basic principles of mitosis and declared that new nuclei can arise only from the division of other ...

  7. Life and work of Eduard Strasburger (1844-1912) The plant scientist wrote one of the best known textbooks on plant sciences already many decades ago. The book is still being published today. But the findings of Eduard Strasburger once were fiercely dabated and some of them proven more than 60 years after their first publication.

  8. Eduard Strasburger, director of the Botany Institute and the Botanical Garden at the University of Bonn from 1881 to 1912, was one of the most admirable scientists in the field of plant biology, not just as the founder of modern plant cell biology but in addition as an excellent teacher who strongly believed in "education through science." He ...

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