Eduard Hackel
Eduard Hackel | |
---|---|
Born | March 17, 1850 Haida, Bohemia |
Died | February 2, 1926 |
Nationality | Austrian |
Known for | Poaceae |
Scientific career | |
Fields | botany |
Author abbrev. (botany) | Hack. |
Eduard Hackel (born March 17, 1850 in Haida, Bohemia – died February 2, 1926, in Attersee, Upper Austria) was an Austrian botanist. His father was a veterinary in Haida. He was married and had one son.
Hackel studied at the Polytechnical Institute in Vienna, and became substitute teacher at a high school in St. Pölten in 1869. He became full professor of natural history there upon obtaining his teaching certificate in 1871 and remained in this position until his retirement in 1900. He published his first papers on grasses in 1871 and soon became known as a world expert on the grass family (Poaceae). While he himself undertook only a single collecting trip – to Spain and Portugal, he was charged with working up collections of grasses mainly from Japan, Taiwan, New Guinea, Brazil and Argentina. Apart from systematics, Hackel also contributed to the morphology and histology of members of the grass family.
The genera Hackelia (Boraginaceae), and Hackelochloa (Poaceae) are named for him.
Important works
- Monographia festucarum europeaearum 1864
- Gramineae in Martius’s Flora Brasiliensis, 1883,
- Catalogue raisonné des graminées du Portugal. 1880.
References
- Detailed biography in Allgemeine deutsche Biographie
- Correspondence with Dr Júlio Henriques, Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal.