Reinhold Ferdinand Sahlberg Explained

Reinhold Ferdinand Sahlberg (23 December 1811, Åbo – 18 March 1874, Yläne) was a Finnish naturalist notably specialising in entomology.

He was the son of the entomologist and botanist Carl Reinhold Sahlberg (1774–1860) and the father of the entomologist and explorer Johan Reinhold Sahlberg (1845–1920).

In 1827 Reinhold Sahlberg entered, at the age of sixteen, the Imperial Alexander University in Finland where his father taught. He received his magister in 1836 and his title of doctor of medicine in 1840.

Between 1839 and 1843, he participated as a naturalist in a circumnavigation to Brazil, Chile and then to Sitka in Alaska which returned by Siberia.

Between 1845 and 1852, Reinhold Sahlberg worked as assistant of zoology and botany at the University of Helsingfors (Helsingfors Universitet – Swedish for Helsinki). In 1849–1851 he returned to Brazil.

The rich collections made by Sahlberg lie today in the Finnish Museum of Natural History and the Swedish Museum of Natural History.

Works

References

Horn, W. H. R. & Schenkling, S. 1928–1929: Index Litteraturae Entomologicae, Serie I: die Welt-Literatur über die gesamte Entomologie bis inklusive 1863. – Berlin-Dahlem, Selbstverlag W. Horn 1–4 XXI p., 1426 p., 4 Tafeln