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Adeline Ames

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Nationality
  
American

Fields
  
Botany, Mycology

Died
  
1976

Name
  
Adeline Ames

Author abbrev. (botany)
  
A.Ames


Institutions
  
Assistant Forest Pathologist, Department of Plant Industry, Washington, D.C., 1913; Professor of Biology, Sweet Briar College, 1920 - 1941

Alma mater
  
University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Cornell University

Institution
  
Washington, D.C., Sweet Briar College

Adeline Sarah Ames (1879 – 1976) was an American mycologist who specialized in the study of mycelium.

Contents

Biography

Born October 6, 1879 in Henderson, York County, Nebraska, Ames was the eldest of four children of Elwyn Ames and Hettie Owen Ames. She attended the University of Nebraska, (B.A., A.M., 1903) and received her Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1913. She died in Long Beach, California, on February 11, 1976.

Career

In 1913, Ames served as Assistant Forest Pathologist in the Department of Plant Industry in Washington, D.C. In 1918, she also worked with George Francis Atkinson in Tacoma, Washington collecting fleshy fungus flora. From 1920–1941, she was a biology professor at Sweet Briar College.

Scientific work

In February 1913, while a graduate student at Cornell University, she studied the collection of Polyporaceae at the New York Botanical Garden, with special reference to the species occurring in the United States. In 1913, she published the article "A New Wood-Destroying Fungus" in the Botanical Gazette where she worked with Atkinson in Cornell examining polypores collected in the engineering building at the Alabama Polytechnic Institute growing on woodwork. The fungus was identified as a new species, Poria atrosporia, mycelium with pale umbrinous coloration within the substratum or in a superficial layer found on wood from conifers.

References

Adeline Ames Wikipedia