Richard Wettstein Explained

Richard Wettstein
Birth Name:Anna Weinberg
Birth Date:30 July 1863
Birth Place:Vienna, Austrian Empire
Death Place:Trins, First Austrian Republic
Nationality:Austrian
Fields:Botany
Alma Mater:University of Vienna

Richard Wettstein (30 June 1863 in Vienna – 10 August 1931 in Trins) was an Austrian botanist. His taxonomic system, the Wettstein system, was one of the earliest based on phyletic principles.

Wettstein studied in Vienna, where he was a disciple of Anton Kerner von Marilaun (1831-1898) and married his daughter Adele.[1] During his time at the University of Vienna, he founded the student-led Natural Science Association with his friend Karl Eggerth in 1882.[2] He was a professor at the University of Prague from 1892, and at the University of Vienna from 1899. He newly laid out the Botanical Garden of the University of Vienna.[3]

In 1901 he became president of the Vienna Zoological-Botanical Society (Zoologisch-Botanische Gesellschaft), and during the same year took part in a scientific expedition to Brazil. In 1919 he was appointed vice-president of the Vienna Academy of Sciences. During his later years (1929–30), he traveled with his son, Friedrich, to eastern and southern Africa.

The mycological genus Wettsteinina is named in his honor and also Wettsteiniola, which is a genus of flowering plants from Brazil, belonging to the family Podostemaceae, also honor's Richard Wettstein.[4]

In 1905, he was co-president of the International Botanical Congress, held in Vienna.

In 1913 Wettstein edited and distributed the last fascicles (specimens no. 3601-4000) of the famous exsiccata work Flora exsiccata Austro-Hungarica, a museo botanico universitatis vindobonensis edita.[5]

Selected publications

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://www.landesmuseum.at/pdf_frei_remote/PHY_40_1_0089-0113.pdf Franz Speta 2000, Warum Otto STAPF (1857-1933) Wien verlassen hat. Phyton (Horn, Austria) 40/1, 89-113
  2. Svojtka . Matthias . 2009 . Sammler als Wegbereiter naturwissenschaftlicher Erkenntnis – Fallstudien Leopold Johann Nepomuk von Sacher-Masoch (1797-1874) und Karl Eggerth (1861-1888) . Berichte der Geologischen Bundesanstalt . 45 . 40–43 . 9 February 2023.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=5jrIqC3JUkoC&pg=PA42 Thomas Maisel. Scholars in Stone and Bronze: The Monuments in the Arcaded Courtyard of the University of Vienna. University of Vienna. Böhlau Verlag Wien 2008. p. 42 Richard Wettstein von Westerheim (1863–1931) botanist
  4. Web site: Wettsteiniola Suess. Plants of the World Online Kew Science . Plants of the World Online . 13 March 2021 . en.
  5. Web site: Flora exsiccata Austro-Hungarica, a museo botanico universitatis vindobonensis edita: IndExs ExsiccataID=676642048 . IndExs – Index of Exsiccatae . Botanische Staatssammlung München . 14 April 2024.