Albert Gaillard

Albert Gaillard (5 September 1858 in Neuilly-sur-Seine – 28 July 1903 in Angers) was a French mycologist.

From 1889 to 1903, he worked as curator of the Lloyd herbarium in Angers (later known as the "Arboretum de la Maulévrie Herbiers de la Ville d'Angers"). In 1887 he collected mycological and botanical specimens in Venezuela; mainly in the vicinity of Puerto Ayacucho and places along the Orinoco River, journeying as far as San Fernando de Atabapo. In Colombia, he collected specimens along the Rio Guaviare, a tributary of the Orinoco.[1]

The genus Gaillardiella (family Nitschkiaceae) was named in his honor by Narcisse Théophile Patouillard (1895).[1]

Published works

  • Champignons du Vénézuéla et principalement de la région du Haut-Orénoque, récoltés en 1887 par M.A. Gaillard. Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France (1888–89) – Fungi of Venezuela, mainly from the region of the Upper Orinoco, collected in 1887 by A. Gaillard. (co-author: Narcisse Théophile Patouillard).
  • Contribution à l'étude des champignons inférieurs: famille des Périspoiacées, le genre Meliola : anatomie, morphologie, systématique, (1892) – Contribution to the study of lower fungi, (genus Meliola : anatomy, morphology, systematics).[2]
  • Le genre Meliola. (part 1) Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France 8: 76-[78]. (1892) – The genus Meliola.
  • Le genre Meliola, (part 2) Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France 8 (4): 176-188. (1892) – The genus Meliola.
  • Note sur quelques espéces nouvelles du genre Asterina. Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France 13: 179-181. (1897) – Note on some new species of the genus Asterina.[3]
gollark: That's not how the problem goes.
gollark: Ah, here it is, I accidentally put it in the box of baryons.
gollark: Hmm. I MAY have to find my immovable and indestructible trolley barrier.
gollark: No, ALL is to be counterfactual.
gollark: Oh, and if you look at versions where it's "pull lever to divert trolley onto different people" versus "push person off bridge to stop trolley", people tend to be less willing to sacrifice one to save five in the second case, because they're more involved and/or it's less abstract somehow.

References

  1. JSTOR Global Plants (biography)
  2. Google Books Contribution à l'étude des champignons inférieurs.
  3. Cybertruffle bibliography
  4. IPNI.  Gaillard.
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