Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Liberty Hyde Bailey prägte die heute in der botanischen Systematik gängigen Fachbegriffe Cultigen und Cultivar. Bailey unternahm Experimente zur gezielten Kreuzung und Hybridisierung von Pflanzen und veröffentlichte 1892 mit Cross-breeding and hybridization das erste amerikanische Buch über kontrollierte experimentelle Pflanzenzüchtung.

  2. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Liberty Hyde Bailey , est un botaniste américain , cofondateur de l' American Society for Horticultural Science (en) , né le 15 mars 1858 à South Haven dans le Michigan et mort le 15 décembre 1954 à Ithaca . Biographie [modifier | modifier le code] Bailey naît et grandit dans une plantation d'arbres fruitiers. Il entre en 1877 au Michigan ...

  3. Liberty Hyde Bailey was a highly prolific horticulturalist, taxonomist, and educator at Cornell University. Born in South Haven, Michigan, he graduated from Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in 1882 before becoming an assistant to Asa Gray at Harvard for two years. He then returned to MAC as a professor and established the first horticultural ...

  4. Bailey placed his taxonomic studies of Rubus at the top of his accomplishments in systematic botany. Before 1890, he published three papers on native dewberries, followed in 1895 by an extensive treatment of cultivated blackberries and their indigenous counterparts. In 1932, he published his first major monograph and, from 1941 to 1945, his ...

  5. Here is an excerpt: De Vries as we have noted, gave three different accounts accounts,and this leads us to Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858-1954). In a letter to Bailey, de Vries stated that he was led to Mendel's work by an item in a bibliography that Bailey had published in 1892. Bailey inserted an excerpt from this letter in a footnote in the later ...

  6. 15 de dez. de 2010 · Bailey Liberty Hyde : Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858–1954) grew up on a farm in Michigan and went on to become Dean of the College of Agriculture at Cornell University, Chair of the Country Life Commission under President Theodore Roosevelt, and the "Father of Modern Horticulture." He authored more than seventy books, published thousands of ...

  7. Liberty Hyde Bailey, who was hired by the Botany Department in 1888, started building a forcing house complex (above) south of Barton Hall on what is now Hoy Field in 1889. Bailey (in forcing house, above) became the first dean of New York State College of Agriculture in 1903 and persuasively argued that greenhouses were vital to the new college’s mission.