Maurice Beeli Explained

Maurice Philippe Gaspard Beeli (21 October 1879, St-Gilles-lez-Bruxelles – 17 March 1957) was a Belgian mycologist.

For more than thirty years, being encouraged by Émile De Wildeman and Walter Robyns, successive directors of the National Botanic Garden of Belgium, he collaborated on collections of fungi native to Belgium and the Belgian Congo. Although regarded as a pioneer of Congolese mycology, he never travelled to Africa.[1]

Between 1920 and 1940, he published nearly 30 works about African mushrooms that were kept at the botanical garden, with 11 of the articles being printed in the journal "Fungi Goossensiani". He initiated work on the "Flore iconographique des champignons du Congo", precursor to the "Flore illustrée des champignons d’Afrique centrale", a major regional work.

As a taxonomist, he circumscribed the genus Meliolinopsis (synonym Meliolaster).[2]

Partial bibliography

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. http://www.kaowarsom.be/en/notices_BEELI_Maurice_Philippe_Gaspard Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences
  2. https://www.gbif.org/species/100473000 GBIF
  3. http://www.cybertruffle.org.uk/cgi-bin/bibquery.pl?author=beeli,%20m. Cybertruffle