Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Árpád von Degen

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Arpad Degen


Arpad von Degen

Árpád von Degen (born 31 March 1866 in Pozsony (now Slovakia)), was a Hungarian biologist and botanist whose activities were rooted in theoretical principles and scientific botany. Head of the royal Seed Testing Station in Budapest from 1896, Professor of Botany at the Budapest University from 1927 and member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, he died on 30 March 1934 in Budapest.

Dr. Degen traveled in different parts of Europe, the Balkans and Asia Minor, and was the first botanist to make an in-depth study of the Velebit flora, recording about 2.200 types of wild plants. The Degenia velebitica (Degen) Hayek (Brassicaceae) was discovered by him on 17 July 1907. He also described several new species from Albania between the years 1895 and 1897. He had contacts with the Bulgarian tsar Ferdinand and prepared the project for the establishment of the first herbarium at the Natural History Museum in Sofia.

Books

He wrote over a hundred essays and articles about the European and the Balkan flora and made observations on the characteristics of some oriental herbs.

  • Egy új Ajuga fajról: (Ajugæ species nova [A. piskoi].) (1896)
  • Wulfenia Baldaccii: Egy új Wulfenia faj a Balcan-félszigetről (1897)
  • Nevezetesebb botanikai felfedezések a Balkán félsziget területéről (1901)
  • Magyar botanikai lapok (1902)
  • Studien über Cuscuta-Arten (1912)
  • A heréseinket károsító arankákról (1921)
  • A Magyar Tudományos Akadémia szerepe a növénytani tudományok fejlődésében (1933)
  • Flora velebitica - 4 vols. Akadémiai Kiadó, Ungarischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (1936–1938)
  • References

    Árpád von Degen Wikipedia