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August David Krohn

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August David Krohn (1803–1891) was a Saint Petersburg born zoologist of German origin. He was the son of Abraham Krohn, the founder of Russia's first brewery, who had left the island of Rügen to serve in the court of Catherine the Great. He was the uncle of the fennoman folklorist Julius Krohn. According to legend, Krohn is said to have left for Central Europe after losing to his younger brother Leopold the competition for the hand of a Vyborg mansion owner's 15-year-old daughter. He remained unmarried until his death at the age of 88.

Krohn worked at the University of Bonn on zoology, anatomy and embryology. He was a pioneer in marine biology and published essential works on Chaetognatha (Arrow Worms) in 1844 & 1853. He was in correspondence with Charles Darwin and is said to have pointed out errors in Darwin's work in his thesis. The genus and species identified by him are marked with the author abbreviation Krohn. He was the first to classify the phylum Rhombozoa of the kingdom Animalia.

The species Euphausia krohnii and Cliopsis krohnii and the family Eukrohniidae are named after him.

Publications

Books

  • Krohn, Augustus Davides (1826). De iridodialysis operatione instrumentisque in ea adhibendis : Dissertatio ophthalmologica inauguralis ... ([iv], 32, [1] p., 3 plates ; 26.2 cm.) (in Latin). Berolini (Berlin): Typis Academiæ Regiæ Scientiarum. OCLC: 16066369. Doctoral thesis
  • Krohn, August David (1844). Anatomisch-physiologische Bebachtungen über die Sagitta bipuncta. Hamburg: Nestler & Melle.

Journals

See also

References