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  1. Vladimir Nikolayevich Sukachev (also spelled Vladimir Nikolajevich Sukaczev) (Russian: Влади́мир Никола́евич Сукачёв; born 7 June 1880 in Aleksandrovka, Russian Empire – died 9 February 1967 in Moscow) was a Russian geobotanist, engineer, geographer, and corresponding member (1920) and full member (1943) of the USSR ...

  2. Biography. Russian botanist at the Academy of Sciences, Vladimir Sukaczev (or Sukachev) had a broad range of interests spanning taxonomy, genetics, forest ecology and plant geography and his fieldwork centred on the Baikal region.

  3. V. N. Sukachev was a leader among botanists and Russian biologists, who studied the struggle for existence and natural selection experimen-tally. His teacher in science was G. F. Morozov, a forestry specialist, who implanted Darwinism in Russian forestry during the period of the ‘eclipse’ of Darwinism 4.

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  5. Sukachev, Vladimir Nikolaevich (Russia 1880-1967) botany, forestry, phytogeography. Sukachev's long career turned on forest ecology, but he brought to this study an extensive knowledge of plant systematics, experimental technique, genetics, evolutionary biology, and geography.

  6. Jun 1, 2015 · He read Vladimir Nikolaevich Sukachevs Swamps: Their Formation, Development and Properties and was, Douglas Weiner has speculated, “affected by the holistic, ecological spirit of Sukachevs pioneering text in community ecology.”

  7. Vladimir Sukachev's concept of biogeocoenosis. Tatjana Petzer. In search for an ecological concept defining a "whole complex of organisms inhabiting a given region" with more methodological value than 'complex organism' or 'biome' and 'biotic community', the British phytocenologist Arthur Tansley introduced the term 'ecosystem' in 1935. [...]

  8. Vladimir Nikolayevich Sukachev (also spelled Vladimir Nikolajevich Sukaczev) (Russian: Влади́мир Никола́евич Сукачёв; born 7 June 1880 in Aleksandrovka, Russian Empire – died 9 February 1967 in Moscow) was a Russian geobotanist, engineer, geographer, and corresponding member (1920) and full member (1943) of the USSR ...

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