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Wilhelm Johannsen

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Wilhelm Johannsen (3 February 1857 - 11 November 1927) was a Danish botanist, plant physiologist and geneticist. He was born in Copenhagen. While very young, he was apprenticed to a pharmacistand worked in Denmark and Germany beginning in 1872 until passing his pharmacist's exam in 1879. In 1881, he became assistant in the chemistry department at the Carlsberg Laboratory under the chemist Johan Kjeldahl. Johannsen studied the metabolism of dormancy andgermination in seeds, tubers and buds. He showed that dormancycould be broken by various anesthetic compounds, such as diethyl ether and chloroform. In 1892, he was appointed lecturer at Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University and later became professor ofbotany and plant physiology. He taught plant physiology[1]. His most well-known research concerned so-called pure lines of the self-fertilecommon bean. He was able to show that even in populationshomozygous for all traits, i.e. without genetic variation, seed size followed a normal distribution. This was attributable to resource provision to the mother plant and to the position of seeds in pods and of pods on the plant. This led him to coin the terms phenotype andgenotype. His findings led him to oppose contemporary Darwinists, most notably Francis Galton and Karl Pearson, who held the occurrence of normal distributed trait variation in populations as proof of gradual genetic variation on which selection could act[2]. Only with themodern evolutionary synthesis, was it established that variation needed to be heritable to act as the raw material for selection. The termsphenotype and genotype were created by Wilhelm Johannsen and first used in his paper Om arvelighed i samfund og i rene linier[3] and in his book Arvelighedslærens Elementer[4]. This book was rewritten, enlarged and translated to German as Elemente der exakten Erblichkeitslehre[5]. It was in this book Johannsen introduced the termgene. This term was coined in opposition to the then common pangenethat stemmed from Darwin's theory of pangenesis. The book became one of the founding texts of genetics. Also in 1905, Johannsen was appointed professor of plant physiology at the University of Copenhagen , becoming vicechancelor in 1917. In December 1910, Johannsen was invited to give an address before the American Society of Naturalists. This talk was printed in the American Naturalist[6]. In 1911, he was invited to give a series of four lectures at Columbia University[7]

Miscellaneous

Corresponding member of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (elected 1915).

References

    • Anker, Jean (1932) Wilhelm Johannsen, pp. 177-180 in: Meisen, V. Prominent Danish Scientists through the Ages. University Library of Copenhagen 450th Anniversary. Levin & Munksgaard, Copenhagen.

External links

Categories: 1857 births | 1927 deaths | Danish botanists | Geneticists | Agriculture educators | Danish science writers |University of Copenhagen alumni | University of Copenhagen faculty | People from Helsingør

Wilhelm Ludvig Johannsen

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