Oskar Kellner
Oskar Kellner | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 12 September 1911 Karlsruhe, Germany | (aged 60)
Oskar (Oscar) Johann Kellner (13 May 1851 - 12 September 1911) was a German agricultural scientist (Agrikulturchemiker, Tierphysiologe).
Biography
[edit]Kellner was invited to teach in Japan as a foreign advisor by the Meiji government of the Empire of Japan to improve on Japanese agricultural productivity.
Arriving on 5 November 1881, he taught at the Komaba Agricultural School in Tokyo, and its successor, the Tokyo Agriculture and Forestry School (now a department within Tokyo University), and also conducted research into chemical fertilizers. He is considered the “father” of Japanese agricultural chemistry. His nutritional analysis of livestock feed was called the “Kellner Standard” and was subsequently adopted by the Japanese livestock industry. Kellner returned to Germany on 31 December 1892.
The Kellner rice fields at Komabano Park close to the University of Tokyo Komaba campus, serve as a lasting tribute to his research activities while in Japan.
Works
[edit]- die Ernährung der landwirtschaftlichen Nutztiere, 1905
- Grundzüge der Fütteringslehre, 1907
External links
[edit]- 1851 births
- 1911 deaths
- People from Opole County
- Expatriates in Japan
- Expatriates from the German Empire
- Scientists from the Kingdom of Prussia
- Foreign advisors to the government in Meiji-period Japan
- Foreign educators in Japan
- Agriculture in Japan
- Scientists from the Province of Silesia
- German agronomists
- Academic staff of the University of Tokyo