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词条 Phycology
释义

  1. History of phycology

  2. Notable phycologists

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

{{distinguish|Psychology}}

Phycology (from Greek {{lang|grc|φῦκος}}, phykos, "seaweed"; and {{lang|grc|-λογία}}, -logia) is the scientific study of algae. Also known as algology, phycology is a branch of life science and often is regarded as a subdiscipline of botany.

Algae are important as primary producers in aquatic ecosystems. Most algae are eukaryotic, photosynthetic organisms that live in a wet environment. They are distinguished from the higher plants by a lack of true roots, stems or leaves. They do not flower. Many species are single-celled and microscopic (including phytoplankton and other microalgae); many others are multicellular to one degree or another, some of these growing to large size (for example, seaweeds such as kelp and Sargassum).

Phycology includes the study of prokaryotic forms known as blue-green algae or cyanobacteria. A number of microscopic algae also occur as symbionts in lichens.

Phycologists typically focus on either freshwater or ocean algae, and further within those areas, either diatoms or soft algae.

History of phycology

{{main article|History of phycology}}

While both the ancient Greeks and Romans knew of algae, and the ancient Chinese[1] even cultivated certain varieties as food, the scientific study of algae began in the late 18th century with the description and naming of Fucus maximus (now Ecklonia maxima) in 1757 by Pehr Osbeck. This was followed by the descriptive work of scholars such as Dawson Turner and Carl Adolph Agardh, but it was not until later in the 19th century that efforts were made by J.V. Lamouroux and William Henry Harvey to create significant groupings within the algae. Harvey has been called "the father of modern phycology"[2] in part for his division of the algae into four major divisions based upon their pigmentation.

It was in the late 19th and early 20th century, that phycology became a recognized field of its own. Men such as Friedrich Traugott Kützing continued the descriptive work. In Japan, beginning in 1889, Kintarô Okamura not only provided detailed descriptions of Japanese coastal algae, he also provided comprehensive analysis of their distribution.[3] Although R. K. Greville published his Algae Britannicae as early as 1830, it was not until 1902 with the publication of A Catalogue of the British Marine Algae[4] by Edward Arthur Lionel Batters that the systematic correlation of records, extensive distribution mapping and the development of identification keys began in earnest. In 1899-1900, Anna Weber-Van Bosse, a Dutch Phycologist travelled on the Siboga expedition and later in 1904, published [https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/18871#page/6/mode/1up The Corallinaceae of the Siboga-expedition].[5]

As early as 1803 Jean Pierre Étienne Vaucher had published on the isogamy (sexual conjugation) in the algae, but it was in the early 20th century that reproduction and development began to be extensively studied. The 1935 and 1945 comprehensive volumes of Felix Eugen Fritsch consolidated what was then known about the morphology and reproduction of the algae. This was followed in the 1950s by the development of area checklists, led by Mary W. Parke with her 1931 Manx Algae and followed in 1953 by her "A preliminary check-list of British marine algae"[6] Although Lily Newton's 1931 Handbook[7] provided the first identification key for the algae of the British Isles, it wasn't until the 1960s that the development of such keys became routine. The 1980s with the new emphasis on ecology[8] saw increased study of algal communities, and the place of algae in larger plant communities, and provided an additional tool for explaining geographical variation.[9][10]

The continent with the richest diversity of seaweeds is Australia, which has 2,000 species.[11]

Notable phycologists

  • Isabella Abbott (1919–2010)
  • Carl Adolph Agardh (1785–1859)
  • Jacob Georg Agardh (1813–1901)
  • M. S. Balakrishnan (1917–1990)
  • Elsie M. Burrows (Dr.) (1913–1986)
  • Margaret Constance Helen Blackler (1902–1981)
  • Elsie Conway (1902–1992), Visited University of British Columbia in 1969–1970 and researched there in 1972–1974. President of the British Phycological Society 1965–1967.
  • E. Yale Dawson (1918–1966)
  • Giovanni Battista de Toni (1864–1924)
  • Kathleen Mary Drew-Baker (1901–1957)
  • Nathaniel Lyon Gardner (1864-1937)
  • Robert Kaye Greville (1794–1866)
  • Lena Tracy Hanks (1879–1944)
  • Eifion Jones (1925–2004)
  • Vasudeva Krishnamurthy (1921–2014)
  • Friedrich Traugott Kützing (1807–1893)
  • Marie Lemoine (1887–1984)
  • Diane S. Littler
  • Hans Christian Lyngbye (1782–1837)
  • Irene Manton (1904–1988)
  • Carl Nägeli (1817–1891)
  • Lily Newton (1893–1981)
  • Friedrich Oltmanns (1860–1945)
  • William J. Oswald (1919–2005)
  • George Frederik Papenfuss (1903–1981)
  • Mary Parke (1908–1989)
  • Franz Josef Ruprecht (1814–1870)
  • William Albert Setchell (1864–1943)
  • Paul Silva (1922–2014)
  • Milton Sommerfeld (1940–2017)[12]
  • John Stackhouse (1742–1819)
  • William Randolph Taylor (1895–1990)
  • Vittore Benedetto Antonio Trevisan de Saint-Léon (1818–1897)
  • Gavino Trono,[13] awarded as a National Scientist of the Philippines in 2014 for his research on seaweeds
  • Máirin de Valéra (1912–1984)
  • Anna Weber-van Bosse (1852-1942)
  • George Stephen West (1876-1919)
  • Carl Ludwig Willdenow (1765–1812)

See also

  • Algaculture, the culture of algae
  • Algae fuel
  • History of phycology
  • Paleophycology
  • Phycological Society of America

References

1. ^Porterfield, William M. (1922) [https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=6J8mBMCygk8C&oi=fnd&pg=PA297 "References to the algae in the Chinese classics"] Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 49: pp. 297–300
2. ^"About Phycology" Lance Armstrong Foundation
3. ^Tokida, Jun and Hirose, Hiroyuki (1975) Advance of Phycology in Japan Junk, The Hague, Netherlands, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ig4yuw_GC_4C&pg=PA241&lpg=PA241 page 241], {{ISBN|90-6193-026-X}}
4. ^Batters, Edward Arthur Lionel (1902) A catalogue of the British Marine Algae being a list of all the species of seaweeds known to occur on the shores of the British Islands, with the localities where they are found Newman, London, {{OCLC|600805992}}, published as a supplement to Journal of Botany, British and Foreign
5. ^{{Cite book|title=The Corallinaceae of the Siboga-expedition|last=Weber-Van Bosse|first=A.|last2=Foslie|first2=M.|publisher=F. J. Brill|year=1904|isbn=|location=|pages=}}
6. ^Parke, Mary W. (1953) "A preliminary check-list of British marine algae" Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 32(2): pp. 497–520; revised and corrected through the third revision of 1976
7. ^Newton, Lily (1931) A Handbook of the British Seaweeds British Museum, London
8. ^Walter, Heinrich and Breckle, Siegmar-Walter (1983) Ökologie der Erde: : Geo-Biosphäre: Band 1, Ökologische Grundlagen in globaler Sicht (Ecology of the Earth: the geobiosphere: Volume 1, Ecological principles in a global perspective) Fischer, Stuttgart, Germany, {{ISBN|3-437-20297-9}}; in German
9. ^Stevenson, R. Jan; Bothwell, Max L. and Lowe, Rex L. (1996) Algal ecology: freshwater benthic ecosystems Academic Press, San Diego, California, [https://books.google.com/books?id=gl7hw2WLAlcC&pg=PA23 page 23], {{ISBN|0-12-668450-2}}
10. ^Figueiras, F. G.; Picher, G. C. and Estrada, M. (2008) "Chapter 10: Harmful Algal Bloom Dynamics in Relation to Physical Processes" [https://books.google.com/books?id=-707tqiXoZUC&pg=PA130 page 130] In Granéli, E. and Turner, J. T. (2008) Ecology of Harmful Algae Springer, Berlin, pp. 127–138, {{ISBN|3-540-74009-0}}
11. ^{{cite web|title=Marine algae|url=http://www.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/science/Plant_Diversity_Research/marine_algae|publisher=Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust|accessdate=21 September 2014}}
12. ^{{cite web|url=https://asunow.asu.edu/20170517-asu-news-algae-researcher-milton-sommerfeld-remembered|title=Remembering Milton Sommerfeld, ASU's 'Wizard of Ooze'|author=|date=17 May 2017|website=asu.edu|accessdate=20 September 2018}}
13. ^{{Cite web|url = http://www.seafdec.org.ph/2014/dr-trono-new-national-scientist/|title = Dr. Trono is the New National Scientist|date = |accessdate = August 25, 2014|website = |publisher = |last = |first = }}

External links

  • Algae: The World's Most Important "Plants" video lecture by Russell Chapman from 2006.
  • http://www.brphycsoc.org/ British Phycological Society
  • http://www.intphycsoc.org/ International Phycological Society
  • http://www.schweizerbart.de/j/algological-studies/ Algological Studies is an international journal of phycology which publishes peer reviewed scientific papers of international significance from the entire field of algology (phycology)
  • http://www.algaebase.org/ AlgaeBase
  • http://www.seaweed.ie/ Seaweed Site
  • https://diatom.ansp.org/ ANSP Phycology Section
{{botany}}

1 : Phycology

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