Paul Schulze (zoologist)

Paul Schulze was "the most important German tick taxonomist of the early 20th century."[1] Between 1929 and 1937, he described 19 genera, 17 subgenera, 150 species and 150 subspecies of ixodid ticks.[2][1][3] He was essentially an amateur taxonomist, working alone for most of his career, not consulting the major tick collections or collaborating with other tick taxonomists.[3]

Paul Schulze
Born(1887-11-20)20 November 1887
Died13 May 1949(1949-05-13) (aged 61)
NationalityGerman
Alma materUniversity of Berlin
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of Rostock

Life and career

Born Leopold Ernst Paul Schulze on November 20, 1887 in Berlin, he graduated from high school in 1907 and studied science in Berlin, where in 1910 he became an assistant at the Zoological Institute of the University of Berlin.[4] In 1911 he was awarded the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Zoology from the University of Berlin.[4] The title of his dissertation was Die Nackengabel der Papilionidenraupen (The Osmeterium of the Papilionidae).[4]

During World War I, Schulze served as a soldier in a support role, behind the front lines, due to a heart problem.[4] After this compulsory service, he completed post-doctoral work at the University of Berlin in 1918.[4]

In 1923, Schulze was appointed a full professor at the University of Rostock, serving from 1923 to 1945 as Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, Dean of the Faculty of Arts from 1931-1932, and as a Rector from December 1932 to March 1936.[4] His professional contributions included serving as co-director of the university entomology seminar, co-editorship of Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Ökologie der Tiere (Journal of Morphology and Ecology of Animals), and serving as Secretary of the Verein der Freunde der Naturgeschichte in Mecklenburg (Association of Friends of Natural History in Mecklenburg).[4]

In 1945, Schulze was dismissed from university service as a consequence of his membership in the National Socialist German Workers Party, which he had joined in 1937.[4][5]

Schulze died on May 13, 1949 in Rostock.[4]

Legacy

Although many of the scientific names bestowed by Schulze have been synonymized, they remain important as molecular and morphological studies result in the reinstatement of other names that were once considered synonyms.[2]

Contemporary tick specialists praise Schulze's "perception of the complexity of the genus Dermacentor (under Indocentor) in the Oriental and Australasian zoogeographic regions, and his understanding of tick biodiversity in these regions" which "constitute seminal scientific achievements."[2]

Ticks named by Schulze

  • Amblyomma babirussae Schulze, 1933
  • Amblyomma quadricavum Schulze, 1941
  • Dermacentor confragus Schulze, 1933
  • Dermacentor sinicus Schulze, 1932
  • Dermacentor steini Schulze, 1933
  • Haemaphysalis bartelsi Schulze, 1938
  • Haemaphysalis heinrichi Schulze, 1939
  • Haemaphysalis hylobatis Schulze, 1933
  • Haemaphysalis renschi Schulze, 1933
  • Hyalomma albiparmatum Schulze, 1919
  • Hyalomma impeltatum Schulze & Schlottke, 1930
  • Hyalomma nitidum Schulze, 1919
  • Hyalomma scupense Schulze, 1919
  • Ixodes apronophorus Schulze, 1924
  • Ixodes arboricola Schulze & Schlottke, 1930
  • Ixodes collocaliae Schulze, 1937
  • Ixodes cumulatimpunctatus Schulze, 1943
  • Ixodes luxuriosus Schulze, 1932
  • Ixodes nuttallianus Schulze, 1930
  • Ixodes persulcatus Schulze, 1930
  • Ixodes priscicollaris Schulze, 1932
  • Ixodes rugicollis Schulze & Schlottke, 1930
  • Ixodes steini Schulze, 1932
  • Ixodes vanidicus Schulze, 1943
  • Rhipicephalus pilans Schulze, 1935
  • Rhipicephalus pumilio Schulze, 1935

Ticks named in honor of Schulze

  • Hyalomma schulzei Olenev, 1931
  • Ixodes schulzei Aragão & Fonseca, 1951
  • Rhipicephalus schulzei Olenev, 1929
gollark: It's U+262D HAMMER AND SICKLE, no idea if any keyboard lets you type it.
gollark: I don't think so. Go bother the consortium.
gollark: ☭
gollark: ⚾ 🏏
gollark: Blame Apple.

References

  1. Trevor N. Petney, Miriam P. Pfäffle & Jasmin D. Skuballa. 2017. An annotated checklist of the ticks (Acari: Ixodida) of Germany. Systematic & Applied Acarology 17(2): 115–170; https://biotaxa.org/saa/article/view/saa.17.2.2, last accessed 26 Jun 2019.
  2. Alberto A. Guglielmone, Trevor N. Petney, Mariano Mastropaolo, and Richard G. Robbins. 2017. Genera, subgenera, species and subspecies of hard ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) described, named, renamed or given new rank by Paul Schulze (1887–1949) and their current status. Zootaxa, Vol. 4325, No. 1 (29 Sept. 2017), https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.4325.1.1; DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4325.1.1, last accessed 24 Jun 2019.
  3. Jane B. Walker, James E. Keirans, Ivan G. Horak. 2000. The Genus Rhipicephalus (Acari, lxodidae): A Guide to the Brown Ticks of the World. Cambridge University Press, 2000, p. 519; https://books.google.com/books?id=-tfXTrL9-skC&source=gbs_book_other_versions, last accessed 26 Jun 2019.
  4. Universität Rostock: Entry of "Paul Schulze" in the Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium, URL: http://purl.uni-rostock.de/cpr/00003384 (retrieved on 26.06.2019).
  5. Michael Buddrus and Sigrid Fritzlar. 2007. Die Professoren der Universität Rostock im Dritten Reich: ein biographisches Lexikon (The Professors of the University of Rostock in the Third Reich, A Biographical Lexicon). K.G. Saur (An imprint of Walter de Gruyter), München, 2007, pp. 374-376; https://books.google.com/books/about/Die_Professoren_der_Universit%C3%A4t_Rostock.html?id=pHslAQAAIAAJ. ISBN 978-3598117756.
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