Raoul A. Robinson Explained

Raoul A. Robinson (September 25, 1928 in Saint Helier, Jersey - 25 July 2014) was aCanadian/British plant scientist with more than forty years of wide-ranging global experience in crop improvement for both commercial and subsistence agriculture. He is best known for his application of system theory to crop pathosystems and the elucidation of the concepts of horizontal and vertical resistance and their implication on breeding for durable resistance.[1]

Education

He was educated at Victoria College, Jersey,[2] and graduated from the University of Reading in 1951.

Career

Over the course of his adventurous and productive career, Robinson concentrated most intensively on maize, potatoes, beans, and coffee. In addition, he has worked with cotton, tomatoes, dates, wheat, alfalfa, cocoa, cassava, coconut, tobacco, taro, sweet potato, vanilla, black pepper, and other crops.

Books

Articles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Raoul Arthur Robinson Plant Pathologist and Horizontal Resistance Breeder 1928-2014. The American Phytopathological Society. 21 February 2018.
  2. Victoria College Register 1929-56