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George Elwood Nichols

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
George Nichols

Fields
  
Botany

Doctoral students
  
Frank Edwin Egler

Institutions
  
Yale University

Alma mater
  
Yale University

Institution
  
Yale University

Born
  
April 12, 1882 Southington, Connecticut (
1882-04-12
)

Thesis
  
Morphological Study of Juniperus communis var. depressa (1909)

Died
  
1939, New Haven, Connecticut, United States

George Elwood Nichols (1882–1939) was a botanist, bryologist, algologist and ecologist, one of the founders of the Ecological Society of America.

After secondary school in Southington, Nichols matriculated in 1900 at Yale University, there receiving in 1904 his bachelor's degree and in 1909 his Ph.D.; in 1910 his thesis was published in Beihefte zum Botanischen Centralblatt.

At Yale University's botany department, Nichols became an instructor, then in 1915 assistant professor, in 1924 associate professor and in 1926 full professor. From 1926 until his death, he served simultaneously in three capacities: the Eaton Professor of Botany, chair of Yale's botany department, and director of the Marsh Botanical Garden. Beginning in 1920, each summer he worked at the University of Michigan's biological station at Douglas Lake. At the biological station he studied algae and bryophytes, writing about 25 articles on his findings.

Nichols was the president of the Ecological Society of America in 1932. Several species have been named in his honor, including Dicranella nicholsii named by Robert Statham Williams (1859–1945) and Hygrohypnum nicholsii named by Abel Joel Grout (1867–1947).

References

George Elwood Nichols Wikipedia