- Source: Karl von Tubeuf
Bolero: Dance of Life (1981)
John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum (2019)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.
Carl or Karl von Tubeuf FLS HFRSE (20 January 1862, in Amorbach, Kingdom of Bavaria ā 8 February 1941, in Munich, Germany) was a German forestry scientist, mycologist and plant pathologist.
He introduced both the term biological control and the use of a biological control to manage a plant disease. He published one of the first books on plant diseases (in German, then translated into English.)
In addition to foundational work in plant pathology, he published broadly on other topics including forest botany, dendrology, mycology, and zoology. He discovered new species of gall mites of conifers.
Tubeufstrasse in Munich is named after him.
Life
Karl von Tubeuf was born in Amorbach on 20 January 1862 the son of Simon Anton Freiherr von Tubeuf (1822-1870), and his wife, Luise von Ploennies. He and his brother Anton von Tubeuf were educated at the Maximilian Gymnasium Munich.
Tubeuf studied forestry at the Aschaffenburg Forestry Institute in Aschaffenburg (1881-1883), and the University of Munich (1883-1885), completing his dissertation āCucurbitaria laburni on Cytisus laburnumā in 1886 with Robert Hartig. The two became more than professionally associated: Tubeuf married Hartig's daughter Edith (1870ā1945).
In 1886, Tubeuf worked briefly for the Bavarian Forest Superintendent in Freising, as an assistant to Hartig, and as a substitute lecturer in forest botany at Karlsruhe Technische Hochschule. In 1887, he again returned to the Forest Research Institute as an assistant to Hartig, as well as working as a private lecturer at both the University of Munich and Munich Polytechnical University.
In 1895, Tubeuf published the German edition of his textbook on the diseases of plants. It was followed in 1897 by a translation into English as Diseases of Plants Induced by Cryptogamic Parasites.
In 1898, Tubeuf joined the Imperial Board of Health in Berlin, and acted as an Imperial Advisor, establishing a Government Institute of Biology. In 1901, he became Head of the Biological Division for Agriculture and Forestry in Berlin-Dahlem. On April 1, 1902, Tubeuf succeeded Robert Hartig as Professor of Plant Anatomy, Physiology,
and Pathology at the University of Munich. He remained there from 1902 to 1933 as a professor of forestry science.
Tubeuf founded the journal Forstlich-naturwissenschaftliche Zeitschrift (Forest Science Journal) in 1892 and
founded and edited Praktische BlƤtter fĆ¼r Pflanzenschutz (Practical Journal for Plant Protection) in 1898.
He and Lorenz Hiltner founded Naturwissenschaftliche Zeitschrift fĆ¼r Land- und Forstwirtschaft (Scientific Journal for Agriculture and Forestry) which ran from 1903-1920. Tubeuf also founded and edited BlƤtter fĆ¼r Naturschutz (Journal for Nature Conservation) and served as editor of Zeitschrift fĆ¼r Pflanzenkrankheiten und Pflanzenschutz (Journal of Plant Diseases and Plant Protection) from 1925-1936.
Tubeuf was the founding chairman of the Association for Nature Conservation in Bavaria, established on June 26, 1913 by the State Committee for Nature Conservation, the Bavarian Botanical Society, the Bavarian Ornithological Society and the Association for Natural History, with the support of Rupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria.
Botanical Recognition
The fungi genus Tubeufia (Penz. & Sacc., 1897; family Tubeufiaceae) commemorates his name.
Published works
His book Pflanzenkrankheiten durch kryptogame Parasiten verursacht, (1895) was later translated into English and published as Diseases of plants induced by cryptogamic parasites (1897). Other noted works by Tubeuf include:
BeitrƤge zur Kenntniss der Baumkrankheiten, 1888 ā Contributions to the knowledge of tree diseases.
Samen, FrĆ¼chte und Keimlinge der in Deutschland heimischen oder eingefĆ¼hrten forstlichen Culturpflanzen, 1891 ā Seeds, fruit and seedlings of domestic and imported forest-cultivated plants.
Die Haarbildungen der Coniferen, 1896 ā Hair formations of conifers.
Die Nadelhƶlzer mit besonderer BerĆ¼cksichtigung der in Mitteleuropa winterharten Arten, 1897 ā Conifers, with special consideration given to the hardy species in Central Europe.
Der echte Hausschwamm und andere das Bauholz zerstƶrende Pilze (2nd edition, 1902) ā Dry rot and other timber-destroying fungi.
Monographie der Mistel, 1923 ā Monograph on mistletoe.