Paul Sydow

Paul Sydow (1 November 1851 in Kallies – 26 February 1925 in Sophienstädt near Ruhlsdorf) [1] was a German mycologist and lichenologist, father of Hans Sydow (1879–1946).

He worked as a schoolmaster in Berlin. With his son, Hans, he authored works involving descriptions of new species of ascomycetes, rusts and smuts.[2] He also wrote about algae. He authored 252 works in five languages.[3]

Works

  • Paul Sydow: Die Flechten Deutschlands : Anleitung zur Kenntnis und Bestimmung der deutschen Flechten, 1887.
  • Paul and Hans Sydow: Monographia Uredinearum : seu specierum omnium ad hunc usque diem cognitarum descriptio et adumbratio systematica, 1904–1924.[4]
  • Gustav Lindau and Paul Sydow: Thesaurus literaturae mycologicae et lichenologicae. (1908–1917, 5 volumes).

He also made contributions to volume 12 of Pier Andrea Saccardo's Sylloge fungorum omnium hucusque cognitorum, 1897,[3] as well as volume 11 of his Annales Mycologici.[5]

gollark: It would be weird if the optima were right in the small explored bit, maybe. On the other hand, there are evolutionary processes at work selecting things.
gollark: The space of possible economic/political/social systems is very large. I doubt much of it has been explored.
gollark: Obviously conventional things are right because yes.
gollark: It's not like you can't run it under existing capitalistic systems, to some extent.
gollark: The countercounterargument is that workers can be wrong/non-altruistic managementwise too.

References

  1. UNI Goettingen Department of Systematic Botany
  2. Google Books Dictionary of the Fungi, edited by P.M. Kirk, P.F. Cannon, D.W. Minter, J.A. Stalpers
  3. WorldCat Identities (publications)
  4. IDREF.fr (bibliography)
  5. Bensch, K. (2020). "Saccardo, P.A. 1913. Notae mycologicae. Series XVI. Annales Mycologici. 11(4):312-325". MycoBank. International Mycological Association (IMA) and the Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  6. IPNI.  P. Syd.
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