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Augustin Pyramus de Candolle

Augustin Pyramus (or Pyrame) de Candolle (UK: /kænˈdɒl/, US: /kɒ̃ˈdɔːl/, French: [kɑ̃dɔl]; 4 February 1778 – 9 September 1841) was a Swiss botanist. René Louiche Desfontaines launched de Candolle's botanical career by recommending him at a herbarium. Within a couple of years de Candolle had established a new genus, and he went on to document hundreds of plant families and create a new natural plant classification system. Although de Candolle's main focus was botany, he also contributed to related fields such as phytogeography, agronomy, paleontology, medical botany, and economic botany.

Augustin Pyramus de Candolle
Born(1778-02-04)4 February 1778
Died9 September 1841(1841-09-09) (aged 63)
Geneva, Switzerland
NationalityGenevan, then Swiss (1815)
Other namesAugustin Pyrame de Candolle
EducationCollège de Genève
Known forSystem of Taxonomy, Principle of "Nature's War"
Parents
  • Augustin de Candolle (father)
  • Louise Eléonore Brière (mother)
RelativesAlphonse Pyramus de Candolle, son; Casimir de Candolle, grandson; Richard Émile Augustin de Candolle, great-grandson
AwardsRoyal Medal (1833); associate member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
Scientific career
FieldsBotany, agronomy, phytogeography, chronobiology
InstitutionsUniversity of Montpellier, Collège de Genève
PatronsGeorges Cuvier
Author abbrev. (botany)DC.

De Candolle originated the idea of "Nature's war", which influenced Charles Darwin and the principle of natural selection.[1] de Candolle recognized that multiple species may develop similar characteristics that did not appear in a common evolutionary ancestor; a phenomenon now known as convergent evolution. During his work with plants, de Candolle noticed that plant leaf movements follow a near-24-hour cycle in constant light, suggesting that an internal biological clock exists. Though many scientists doubted de Candolle's findings, experiments over a century later demonstrated that "the internal biological clock" indeed exists.

De Candolle's descendants continued his work on plant classification; son Alphonse and grandson Casimir de Candolle contributed to the Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis, a catalog of plants begun by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle.

Early life edit

Augustin Pyramus de Candolle was born on 4 February 1778 in Geneva, Republic of Geneva, to Augustin de Candolle, a former official, and his wife, Louise Eléonore Brière. His family descended from one of the ancient families of Provence in France, but relocated to Geneva at the end of the 16th century to escape religious persecution.[2]

At age seven de Candolle contracted a severe case of hydrocephalus, which significantly affected his childhood.[3] Nevertheless, he is said to have had great aptitude for learning, distinguishing himself in school with his rapid acquisition of knowledge in classical and general literature and his ability to write fine poetry. In 1794, he began his scientific studies at the Collège de Genève, where he studied under Jean Pierre Étienne Vaucher, who later inspired de Candolle to make botanical science the chief pursuit of his life.[2]

Career in botany edit

He spent four years at the Geneva Academy, studying science and law according to his father's wishes. In 1798, he moved to Paris after Geneva had been annexed to the French Republic. His botanical career formally began with the help of René Louiche Desfontaines, who recommended de Candolle for work in the herbarium of Charles Louis L'Héritier de Brutelle during the summer of 1798.[4] The position elevated de Candolle's reputation and also led to valuable instruction from Desfontaines himself.[4] de Candolle established his first genus, Senebiera, in 1799.[4]

De Candolle's first books, Plantarum historia succulentarum (4 vols., 1799) and Astragalogia (1802), brought him to the notice of Georges Cuvier and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. de Candolle, with Cuvier's approval, acted as deputy at the Collège de France in 1802. Lamarck entrusted him with the publication of the third edition of the Flore française (1805–1815),[a][2][6] and in the introduction entitled Principes élémentaires de botanique, de Candolle proposed a natural method of plant classification as opposed to the artificial Linnaean method.[7][2] The premise of de Candolle's method is that taxa do not fall along a linear scale; they are discrete, not continuous.[8] Lamarck had originally published this work in 1778, with a second edition in 1795. The third edition, which bears the name of both Lamarck and de Candolle, was in reality the work of the latter, the former having only lent his name and access to his collection.[9]

In 1804, de Candolle published his Essai sur les propriétés médicales des plantes and was granted a doctor of medicine degree by the medical faculty of Paris. Two years later, he published Synopsis plantarum in flora Gallica descriptarum. de Candolle then spent the next six summers making a botanical and agricultural survey of France at the request of the French government, which was published in 1813. In 1807 he was appointed professor of botany in the medical faculty of the University of Montpellier, where he would later become the first chair of botany in 1810. His teaching at the University of Montpellier consisted of field classes attended by 200–300 students, starting at 5:00 am and finishing at 7:00 pm.[10]

During this period, de Candolle became a close acquaintance of the Portuguese polymath, José Correia da Serra, who was Portuguese ambassador to Paris and who circulated in an international network of thinkers ranging from the Briton Joseph Banks to the Americans Thomas Jefferson and William Bartram, and the French scholars Antoine Laurent de Jussieu and Georges Cuvier. Correia's endorsement of the idea of emphasizing similarity and symmetry in classifying plants influenced de Candolle, who acknowledged as much in his writing.[11][12]

While in Montpellier, de Candolle published his Théorie élémentaire de la botanique (Elementary Theory of Botany, 1813),[2] which introduced a new classification system and the word taxonomy.[13] Candolle moved back to Geneva in 1816 and in the following year was invited by the government of the Canton of Geneva to fill the newly created chair of natural history.[2]

 
de Candolle family home in Geneva

De Candolle spent the rest of his life in an attempt to elaborate and complete his natural system of botanical classification. de Candolle published initial work in his Regni vegetabillis systema naturale, but after two volumes he realized he could not complete the project on such a large scale. Consequently, he began his less extensive Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis in 1824. However, he was able to finish only seven volumes, or two-thirds of the whole.[2] Even so, he was able to characterize over one hundred families of plants, helping to lay the empirical basis of general botany.[14] Although de Candolle's main focus was botany, throughout his career he also dabbled in fields related to botany, such as phytogeography, agronomy, paleontology, medical botany, and economic botany.[15]

In 1827 he was elected an associated member of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands.[16]

Later life edit

Augustin de Candolle was the first of four generations of botanists in the de Candolle dynasty.[17] He married Mademoiselle Torras and their son, Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle, eventually succeeded to his father's chair in botany and continued the Prodromus.[2] Casimir de Candolle, Augustin de Candolle's grandson, also contributed to the Prodromus through his detailed, extensive research and characterization of the plant family Piperaceae.[18] Augustin de Candolle's great-grandson, Richard Émile Augustin de Candolle, was also a botanist.[19] Augustin de Candolle died on 9 September 1841 in Geneva, after being sick for many years.[2] That same year, he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.[20]

In 2017, a book[21] was written in French about his life and one of his greatest contributions, the Botanical Garden of Geneva.

Legacy edit

He is remembered in the plant genera Candollea and Candolleodendron,[22] several plant species like Eugenia candolleana or Diospyros candolleana and the mushroom Psathyrella candolleana.[23] Candollea, a scientific journal that publishes papers on systematic botany and phylotaxonomy,[24] was named after de Candolle and his descendants in honor of their contribution to the field of botany.[18] He was a mentor to the French-Mexican botanist Jean-Louis Berlandier and is credited with encouraging Marie-Anne Libert to investigate cryptogamic flora.[25]

de Candolle also had the unexpected distinction of triggering the adoption of pre-paid postage in the Canton and City of Geneva, in a long address which he gave to the governing council in 1843. This led to them issuing Switzerland's second postage stamp, the famous Double Geneva later in that year [26] (see also postage stamps and postal history of Switzerland).

Classification system edit

De Candolle was the first to put forward the idea of "Nature's war",[1] writing of plants being "at war one with another" with the meaning of different species fighting each other for space and resources.[27] Charles Darwin studied de Candolle's "natural system" of classification in 1826 when at the University of Edinburgh,[28] and in the inception of Darwin's theory in 1838 he considered "the warring of the species", adding that it was even more strongly conveyed by Thomas Malthus,[29] producing the pressures that Darwin later called natural selection.[27] In 1839 de Candolle visited Britain and Darwin invited him to dinner, allowing the two scientists the opportunity to discuss the idea.[1]

De Candolle was also among the first to recognize the difference between the morphological and physiological characteristics of organs. He ascribed plant morphology as being related to the number of organs and their positions relative to each other rather than to their various physiological properties. Consequently, this made him the first to attempt to attribute specific reasons for structural and numerical relationships amongst organs, and thus to distinguish between major and minor aspects of plant symmetry.[14] To account for modifications of symmetry in parts of different plants, an occurrence that could hinder the discovery of an evolutionary relationship, de Candolle introduced the concept of homology.[30]

Chronobiology edit

De Candolle also made contributions to the field of chronobiology. Building upon earlier work on plant circadian leaf movements contributed by such scientists as Jean-Jacques d'Ortous de Mairan and Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau, de Candolle observed in 1832 that the plant Mimosa pudica had a free-running period of leaf opening and closing of approximately 22–23 hours in constant light, significantly less than the approximate 24-hour period of the Earth's light-dark cycles.[31][32] Since the period was shorter than 24 hours, he hypothesized that a different clock had to be responsible for the rhythm; the shortened period was not entrained—coordinated—by environmental cues, thus the clock appeared to be endogenous.[33] Despite these findings, a number of scientists continued to search for "factor X", an unknown exogenous factor associated with the earth's rotation that was driving circadian oscillations in the absence of a light dark schedule, until the mid-twentieth century.[34] In the mid-1920s, Erwin Bunning repeated Candolle's findings and came to similar conclusions, and studies that showed the persistence of circadian rhythm in the South Pole and in a space lab further confirmed the existence of oscillations in the absence of environmental cues.[34]

Published works edit

  • Reticularia rosea (1798)
  • Historia Plantarum Succulentarum (4 vols., 1799) 2 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  • Astragalogia (1802)
  • de Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste; de Candolle, AP (1815) [1805]. Flore française ou descriptions succinctes de toutes les plantes qui croissent naturellement en France disposées selon une nouvelle méthode d'analyse; et précédées par un exposé des principes élémentaires de la botanique (in French) (3rd ed.). Paris: Desray.
    • Introduction: Principes élémentaires de botanique p. 61
    • vol. I
    • vol. II
    • vol. III
    • vol. IV Part I
  • Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet de; Candolle, Augustin Pyramus de (1815). FLORE FRANÇAISE, OU, Descriptions succinctes de toutes les plantes qui croissent naturellement en France : disposées selon une nouvelle méthode d'analyse, et précédées par un exposé des principes élémentaires de la botanique [SHORT DESCRIPTIONS OF ALL PLANTS WHICH ARE NATURALLY GROWING IN FRANCE, ARRANGED ACCORDING TO A NEW METHOD OF ANALYSIS, And preceded by a Statement of Elementary Principles of Botany] (in French). Vol. 1. Desray.
    • vol. V Supplementary volume, volume index page 650
  • Les liliacées vols. 1–4, (1805–1808) 19 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine of 8
  • Essai sur les propriétés médicales des plantes comparées avec leurs formes extérieures et leur classification naturelle (1804)
  • Synopsis plantarum in flora Gallica descriptarum (1806)
  • Mémoire sur la Géographie des Plantes de France, Considerée dans Ses Rapports avec la Hauteur Absolue (1817)
  • de Candolle, AP (1819) [1813]. Théorie élémentaire de la botanique, ou exposition des principes de la classification naturelle et de l'art de décrire et d'etudier les végétaux (2nd ed.). Déterville. (2nd ed. 1819)
  • Flore du Mexique (1819) transcribed in Hervé M. Burdet, "Le récit par Augustin Pyramus de Candolle de l'élaboration de la Flore du Mexique, dite aussi Flore des dames de Genève," Anales del Jardín Botánico de Madrid, 54 (1996) 575–88.
  • de Candolle, Augustin Pyramus (1818–1821). Regni vegetabilis systema naturale, sive Ordines, genera et species plantarum secundum methodi naturalis normas digestarum et descriptarum 2 vols. Paris: Treuttel et Würtz.
  • Essai Élémentaire de Géographie Botanique (1820)
  • A. P. de Candolle and K. Sprengel. Elements of the philosophy of plants: containing the principles of scientific botany. W. Blackwood, Edinburgh,1821.
  • de Candolle, A. P. (1824–1873). Prodromus systematis naturalis regni vegetabilis, sive, Enumeratio contracta ordinum generum specierumque plantarum huc usque cognitarium, juxta methodi naturalis, normas digesta 17 vols. Paris: Treuttel et Würtz.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Flore française (third edition) was published in 1805 in 5 volumes, and reissued in 1815 together with a sixth volume as a supplement[5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 283.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chisholm 1911.
  3. ^ Brewster et al. 1842, p. 253.
  4. ^ a b c Gray & Sargent 1889, pp. 292–293.
  5. ^ de Lamarck & de Candolle 1815.
  6. ^ Williams & Knapp 2010, p. 181.
  7. ^ Waggoner 2000.
  8. ^ Stevens 1994, p. 79.
  9. ^ Martius 1843.
  10. ^ de Candolle, Augustin-Pyramus; Candaux, Jean-Daniel; Drouin, Jean-Marc (Autumn 2004). "Memoires et Souvenirs (1878–1841)". Journal of the History of Biology. 37 (3): 603–604. JSTOR 4331909.
  11. ^ Diogo, Maria Paula; Carneiro, Ana; Simões, Ana (1 June 2001). "The Portuguese naturalist Correia da Serra (1751–1823) and his impact on early nineteenth-century botany". Journal of the History of Biology. 34 (2): 353–393. doi:10.1023/A:1010350218005. ISSN 1573-0387. S2CID 14138084.
  12. ^ American Catholic Historical Researches (1905). "Abbe Correa de Serra, the Priest Ambassador of Portugal to the United States, 'The Most Enlightened Foreigner That Ever Visited This Country,' 'The Most Extraordinary Man Living', and 'Claimed as One of the Fathers of Our Country". The American Catholic Historical Researches. 1 (1): 30–43.
  13. ^ Singh 2004, p. 20.
  14. ^ a b Sachs, Balfour & Garsney 1890, pp. 127–128.
  15. ^ Emerson 1842, pp. 225–226.
  16. ^ "Augustin Pyramus de Candolle (1778–1841)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 5 October 2016.
  17. ^ Trelease 1924, p. 55.
  18. ^ a b Trelease 1924, p. 60.
  19. ^ Trelease 1924, p. 61.
  20. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  21. ^ P. Bungener, P. Mattille & M.W. Callmander (2017). Augustin-Pyramus de Candolle: une passion, un Jardin. Lausanne, Genève, éditions Favre & CJBG http://www.editionsfavre.com/info.php?isbn=978-2-8289-1644-2
  22. ^ Isely 2002, p. 147.
  23. ^ Evenson VS. (1997). Mushrooms of Colorado and the Southern Rocky Mountains. Big Earth Publishing. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-56579-192-3.
  24. ^ Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques.
  25. ^ Maroske, Sara; May, Tom W. (1 March 2018). "Naming names: the first women taxonomists in mycology". Studies in Mycology. Leading women in fungal biology. 89: 63–84. doi:10.1016/j.simyco.2017.12.001. ISSN 0166-0616. PMC 6002341. PMID 29910514.
  26. ^ P Mirabaud & A de Reuterskiold "The postage stamps of Switzerland 1842–1862" 1898; facsimile reprint 1975 Quarterman Publications, Laurence Massachusetts
  27. ^ a b Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 265.
  28. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 43.
  29. ^ "Darwin transmutation notebook D pp. 134e–135e". Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  30. ^ Allaby 2010, p. 87.
  31. ^ McClung 2006.
  32. ^ Eckardt 2005.
  33. ^ Moore-Ede 1986, pp. R741–R742.
  34. ^ a b Albrecht 2010, pp. 3–4.
  35. ^ International Plant Names Index.  DC.

Bibliography edit

Books
  • Albrecht, Urs (2010). "A History of Chronobiological Concepts". The Circadian Clock. Springer New York. pp. 1–35. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-1262-6_1. ISBN 978-1-4419-1262-6.
  • Allaby, Michael (2010). Plants: Food, Medicine, and the Green Earth. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8160-6102-0.
  • Buek, H.W. (1840–1874). Genera, species et synonyma Candolleana: alphabetico ordine disposita, seu Index generalis et specialis ad A.P. Decandolle, Prodromum systematis naturalis regni vegetabilis. Berlin: Sumptibus librariae Nauckianae.
  • Desmond, Adrian; Moore, James (1991). Darwin. London: Michael Joseph, Penguin Group. ISBN 978-0-7181-3430-3.
  • Gray, Asa; Sargent, Charles (1889). Scientific papers of Asa Gray: Selected by Charles Sprague Sargent. Houghton Mifflin. p. 292. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
  • Isely, Duane (2002). One Hundred and One Botanists. Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-283-1. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  • Sachs, Julius; Balfour, Isaac Bayley; Garsney, Henry Edward Fowler (1890). History of Botany (1530–1860). Oxford: Clarendon Press. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  • Singh, Gurcharan (2004). Plant systematics: an integrated approach. Science Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57808-351-0. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  • Stevens, Peter Francis (1994). The development of biological systematics: Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu, nature, and the natural system. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-06440-8. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  • Williams, D. M.; Knapp, Sandra, eds. (2010). Beyond Cladistics: The Branching of a Paradigm. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26772-5. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  • RJ Willis. Augustin Pyramus de Candolle, and His Era; in The History of Allelopathy. Springer 2007
Encyclopaedias
Articles
  • Brewster, David; Taylor, Richard; Phillips, Richard; Kane, Robert (March 1842). "Proceedings of Learned Societies: Royal Society Obituary Notice". Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 20.
  • Eckardt, Nancy A. (2005). "Temperature Entrainment of the Arabidopsis Circadian Clock". The Plant Cell. 17 (3): 645–647. doi:10.1105/tpc.104.031336. PMC 1069688.
  • Emerson, George B (1842). "A Notice of Prof. Augustine Pyrame de Candolle". The American Journal of Science and Arts. 42: 217–226. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  • Martius, Carl Friedrich (July 1843). "Notice of the Life and Labours of DeCandolle". The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Including Zoology, Botany, and Geology. 12 (74): 1–20.
  • McClung, C. Robertson (2006). "Plant Circadian Rhythms". The Plant Cell. 18 (4): 792–794. doi:10.1105/tpc.106.040980. PMC 1425852. PMID 16595397.
  • Moore, Robert; Eichler, Victor (July 1972). "Loss of a circadian adrenal corticosterone rhythm following suprachiasmatic lesions in the rat". Brain Research. 42 (1): 201–206. doi:10.1016/0006-8993(72)90054-6. PMID 5047187.
  • Moore-Ede, MC. (1986). "Physiology of the circadian timing system: predictive versus reactive homeostasis". American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology. 250 (5): R737–R752. doi:10.1152/ajpregu.1986.250.5.r737. PMID 3706563.
  • Johnson, Maynard S (1926). "Activity and distribution of certain wild mice in relation to biotic communities". Journal of Mammalogy. 7 (2): 245–277. doi:10.2307/1373575. JSTOR 1373575.
  • Stephan, Friedrich K; Zucker, Irving (1972). "Circadian Rhythms in Drinking Behavior and Locomotor Activity of Rats Are Eliminated by Hypothalamic Lesions". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 69 (6): 1583–1586. Bibcode:1972PNAS...69.1583S. doi:10.1073/pnas.69.6.1583. PMC 426753. PMID 4556464.
  • Trelease, William (July 1924). "Four Generations of Memorable Botanists". The Scientific Monthly. 19 (1): 53–62. Bibcode:1924SciMo..19...53T. JSTOR 7220.
Websites
  • "de Candolle, Augustin Pyramus (1778–1841)". International Plant Names Index. 7 January 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  • "Candollea". Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques. Ville de Genève. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  • Waggoner, Ben (7 July 2000). "Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778)". University of California Museum of Paleontology. University of California. from the original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2011. Linnaeus freely admitted that this produced an "artificial classification", not a natural one, which would take into account all the similarities and differences between organisms.

External links edit

augustin, pyramus, candolle, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, candolle, alphonse, pyramus, candolle, augustin, pyramus, pyrame, candolle, ɔː, french, dɔl, february, 1778, september, 1841, swiss, botanist, rené, louiche, desfontaines, launched, can. DC redirects here For other uses see DC disambiguation For A L P P de Candolle see Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle Augustin Pyramus or Pyrame de Candolle UK k ae n ˈ d ɒ l US k ɒ ˈ d ɔː l French kɑ dɔl 4 February 1778 9 September 1841 was a Swiss botanist Rene Louiche Desfontaines launched de Candolle s botanical career by recommending him at a herbarium Within a couple of years de Candolle had established a new genus and he went on to document hundreds of plant families and create a new natural plant classification system Although de Candolle s main focus was botany he also contributed to related fields such as phytogeography agronomy paleontology medical botany and economic botany Augustin Pyramus de CandolleBorn 1778 02 04 4 February 1778Geneva Republic of GenevaDied9 September 1841 1841 09 09 aged 63 Geneva SwitzerlandNationalityGenevan then Swiss 1815 Other namesAugustin Pyrame de CandolleEducationCollege de GeneveKnown forSystem of Taxonomy Principle of Nature s War ParentsAugustin de Candolle father Louise Eleonore Briere mother RelativesAlphonse Pyramus de Candolle son Casimir de Candolle grandson Richard Emile Augustin de Candolle great grandsonAwardsRoyal Medal 1833 associate member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and SciencesScientific careerFieldsBotany agronomy phytogeography chronobiologyInstitutionsUniversity of Montpellier College de GenevePatronsGeorges CuvierAuthor abbrev botany DC De Candolle originated the idea of Nature s war which influenced Charles Darwin and the principle of natural selection 1 de Candolle recognized that multiple species may develop similar characteristics that did not appear in a common evolutionary ancestor a phenomenon now known as convergent evolution During his work with plants de Candolle noticed that plant leaf movements follow a near 24 hour cycle in constant light suggesting that an internal biological clock exists Though many scientists doubted de Candolle s findings experiments over a century later demonstrated that the internal biological clock indeed exists De Candolle s descendants continued his work on plant classification son Alphonse and grandson Casimir de Candolle contributed to the Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis a catalog of plants begun by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle Contents 1 Early life 2 Career in botany 3 Later life 4 Legacy 4 1 Classification system 4 2 Chronobiology 5 Published works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life editAugustin Pyramus de Candolle was born on 4 February 1778 in Geneva Republic of Geneva to Augustin de Candolle a former official and his wife Louise Eleonore Briere His family descended from one of the ancient families of Provence in France but relocated to Geneva at the end of the 16th century to escape religious persecution 2 At age seven de Candolle contracted a severe case of hydrocephalus which significantly affected his childhood 3 Nevertheless he is said to have had great aptitude for learning distinguishing himself in school with his rapid acquisition of knowledge in classical and general literature and his ability to write fine poetry In 1794 he began his scientific studies at the College de Geneve where he studied under Jean Pierre Etienne Vaucher who later inspired de Candolle to make botanical science the chief pursuit of his life 2 Career in botany editHe spent four years at the Geneva Academy studying science and law according to his father s wishes In 1798 he moved to Paris after Geneva had been annexed to the French Republic His botanical career formally began with the help of Rene Louiche Desfontaines who recommended de Candolle for work in the herbarium of Charles Louis L Heritier de Brutelle during the summer of 1798 4 The position elevated de Candolle s reputation and also led to valuable instruction from Desfontaines himself 4 de Candolle established his first genus Senebiera in 1799 4 De Candolle s first books Plantarum historia succulentarum 4 vols 1799 and Astragalogia 1802 brought him to the notice of Georges Cuvier and Jean Baptiste Lamarck de Candolle with Cuvier s approval acted as deputy at the College de France in 1802 Lamarck entrusted him with the publication of the third edition of the Flore francaise 1805 1815 a 2 6 and in the introduction entitled Principes elementaires de botanique de Candolle proposed a natural method of plant classification as opposed to the artificial Linnaean method 7 2 The premise of de Candolle s method is that taxa do not fall along a linear scale they are discrete not continuous 8 Lamarck had originally published this work in 1778 with a second edition in 1795 The third edition which bears the name of both Lamarck and de Candolle was in reality the work of the latter the former having only lent his name and access to his collection 9 In 1804 de Candolle published his Essai sur les proprietes medicales des plantes and was granted a doctor of medicine degree by the medical faculty of Paris Two years later he published Synopsis plantarum in flora Gallica descriptarum de Candolle then spent the next six summers making a botanical and agricultural survey of France at the request of the French government which was published in 1813 In 1807 he was appointed professor of botany in the medical faculty of the University of Montpellier where he would later become the first chair of botany in 1810 His teaching at the University of Montpellier consisted of field classes attended by 200 300 students starting at 5 00 am and finishing at 7 00 pm 10 During this period de Candolle became a close acquaintance of the Portuguese polymath Jose Correia da Serra who was Portuguese ambassador to Paris and who circulated in an international network of thinkers ranging from the Briton Joseph Banks to the Americans Thomas Jefferson and William Bartram and the French scholars Antoine Laurent de Jussieu and Georges Cuvier Correia s endorsement of the idea of emphasizing similarity and symmetry in classifying plants influenced de Candolle who acknowledged as much in his writing 11 12 While in Montpellier de Candolle published his Theorie elementaire de la botanique Elementary Theory of Botany 1813 2 which introduced a new classification system and the word taxonomy 13 Candolle moved back to Geneva in 1816 and in the following year was invited by the government of the Canton of Geneva to fill the newly created chair of natural history 2 nbsp de Candolle family home in GenevaDe Candolle spent the rest of his life in an attempt to elaborate and complete his natural system of botanical classification de Candolle published initial work in his Regni vegetabillis systema naturale but after two volumes he realized he could not complete the project on such a large scale Consequently he began his less extensive Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis in 1824 However he was able to finish only seven volumes or two thirds of the whole 2 Even so he was able to characterize over one hundred families of plants helping to lay the empirical basis of general botany 14 Although de Candolle s main focus was botany throughout his career he also dabbled in fields related to botany such as phytogeography agronomy paleontology medical botany and economic botany 15 In 1827 he was elected an associated member of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands 16 Later life editAugustin de Candolle was the first of four generations of botanists in the de Candolle dynasty 17 He married Mademoiselle Torras and their son Alphonse Pyramus de Candolle eventually succeeded to his father s chair in botany and continued the Prodromus 2 Casimir de Candolle Augustin de Candolle s grandson also contributed to the Prodromus through his detailed extensive research and characterization of the plant family Piperaceae 18 Augustin de Candolle s great grandson Richard Emile Augustin de Candolle was also a botanist 19 Augustin de Candolle died on 9 September 1841 in Geneva after being sick for many years 2 That same year he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society 20 In 2017 a book 21 was written in French about his life and one of his greatest contributions the Botanical Garden of Geneva Legacy editHe is remembered in the plant genera Candollea and Candolleodendron 22 several plant species like Eugenia candolleana or Diospyros candolleana and the mushroom Psathyrella candolleana 23 Candollea a scientific journal that publishes papers on systematic botany and phylotaxonomy 24 was named after de Candolle and his descendants in honor of their contribution to the field of botany 18 He was a mentor to the French Mexican botanist Jean Louis Berlandier and is credited with encouraging Marie Anne Libert to investigate cryptogamic flora 25 de Candolle also had the unexpected distinction of triggering the adoption of pre paid postage in the Canton and City of Geneva in a long address which he gave to the governing council in 1843 This led to them issuing Switzerland s second postage stamp the famous Double Geneva later in that year 26 see also postage stamps and postal history of Switzerland Classification system edit Main article De Candolle system De Candolle was the first to put forward the idea of Nature s war 1 writing of plants being at war one with another with the meaning of different species fighting each other for space and resources 27 Charles Darwin studied de Candolle s natural system of classification in 1826 when at the University of Edinburgh 28 and in the inception of Darwin s theory in 1838 he considered the warring of the species adding that it was even more strongly conveyed by Thomas Malthus 29 producing the pressures that Darwin later called natural selection 27 In 1839 de Candolle visited Britain and Darwin invited him to dinner allowing the two scientists the opportunity to discuss the idea 1 De Candolle was also among the first to recognize the difference between the morphological and physiological characteristics of organs He ascribed plant morphology as being related to the number of organs and their positions relative to each other rather than to their various physiological properties Consequently this made him the first to attempt to attribute specific reasons for structural and numerical relationships amongst organs and thus to distinguish between major and minor aspects of plant symmetry 14 To account for modifications of symmetry in parts of different plants an occurrence that could hinder the discovery of an evolutionary relationship de Candolle introduced the concept of homology 30 Chronobiology edit Further information Chronobiology and Circadian rhythm De Candolle also made contributions to the field of chronobiology Building upon earlier work on plant circadian leaf movements contributed by such scientists as Jean Jacques d Ortous de Mairan and Henri Louis Duhamel du Monceau de Candolle observed in 1832 that the plant Mimosa pudica had a free running period of leaf opening and closing of approximately 22 23 hours in constant light significantly less than the approximate 24 hour period of the Earth s light dark cycles 31 32 Since the period was shorter than 24 hours he hypothesized that a different clock had to be responsible for the rhythm the shortened period was not entrained coordinated by environmental cues thus the clock appeared to be endogenous 33 Despite these findings a number of scientists continued to search for factor X an unknown exogenous factor associated with the earth s rotation that was driving circadian oscillations in the absence of a light dark schedule until the mid twentieth century 34 In the mid 1920s Erwin Bunning repeated Candolle s findings and came to similar conclusions and studies that showed the persistence of circadian rhythm in the South Pole and in a space lab further confirmed the existence of oscillations in the absence of environmental cues 34 Published works editReticularia rosea 1798 Historia Plantarum Succulentarum 4 vols 1799 Archived 2 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Astragalogia 1802 de Lamarck Jean Baptiste de Candolle AP 1815 1805 Flore francaise ou descriptions succinctes de toutes les plantes qui croissent naturellement en France disposees selon une nouvelle methode d analyse et precedees par un expose des principes elementaires de la botanique in French 3rd ed Paris Desray Introduction Principes elementaires de botanique p 61 also published separately as de Lamarck Jean Baptiste de Candolle Augustin Pyramus 1805 Principes elementaires de botanique et de physique vegetale extract 3rd ed Paris Desray vol I vol II vol III vol IV Part I Lamarck Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet de Candolle Augustin Pyramus de 1815 FLORE FRANCAISE OU Descriptions succinctes de toutes les plantes qui croissent naturellement en France disposees selon une nouvelle methode d analyse et precedees par un expose des principes elementaires de la botanique SHORT DESCRIPTIONS OF ALL PLANTS WHICH ARE NATURALLY GROWING IN FRANCE ARRANGED ACCORDING TO A NEW METHOD OF ANALYSIS And preceded by a Statement of Elementary Principles of Botany in French Vol 1 Desray vol V Supplementary volume volume index page 650 Les liliacees vols 1 4 1805 1808 Archived 19 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine of 8 Essai sur les proprietes medicales des plantes comparees avec leurs formes exterieures et leur classification naturelle 1804 Synopsis plantarum in flora Gallica descriptarum 1806 Memoire sur la Geographie des Plantes de France Consideree dans Ses Rapports avec la Hauteur Absolue 1817 de Candolle AP 1819 1813 Theorie elementaire de la botanique ou exposition des principes de la classification naturelle et de l art de decrire et d etudier les vegetaux 2nd ed Deterville 2nd ed 1819 Flore du Mexique 1819 transcribed in Herve M Burdet Le recit par Augustin Pyramus de Candolle de l elaboration de la Flore du Mexique dite aussi Flore des dames de Geneve Anales del Jardin Botanico de Madrid 54 1996 575 88 de Candolle Augustin Pyramus 1818 1821 Regni vegetabilis systema naturale sive Ordines genera et species plantarum secundum methodi naturalis normas digestarum et descriptarum 2 vols Paris Treuttel et Wurtz Essai Elementaire de Geographie Botanique 1820 A P de Candolle and K Sprengel Elements of the philosophy of plants containing the principles of scientific botany W Blackwood Edinburgh 1821 de Candolle A P 1824 1873 Prodromus systematis naturalis regni vegetabilis sive Enumeratio contracta ordinum generum specierumque plantarum huc usque cognitarium juxta methodi naturalis normas digesta 17 vols Paris Treuttel et Wurtz First seven volumes 1824 1839 continued by Alphonse Pyramus de CandolleSee also editCategory Taxa named by Augustin Pyramus de CandolleThe standard author abbreviation DC is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 35 Notes edit The Flore francaise third edition was published in 1805 in 5 volumes and reissued in 1815 together with a sixth volume as a supplement 5 References edit a b c Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 283 a b c d e f g h i Chisholm 1911 Brewster et al 1842 p 253 a b c Gray amp Sargent 1889 pp 292 293 de Lamarck amp de Candolle 1815 Williams amp Knapp 2010 p 181 Waggoner 2000 Stevens 1994 p 79 Martius 1843 de Candolle Augustin Pyramus Candaux Jean Daniel Drouin Jean Marc Autumn 2004 Memoires et Souvenirs 1878 1841 Journal of the History of Biology 37 3 603 604 JSTOR 4331909 Diogo Maria Paula Carneiro Ana Simoes Ana 1 June 2001 The Portuguese naturalist Correia da Serra 1751 1823 and his impact on early nineteenth century botany Journal of the History of Biology 34 2 353 393 doi 10 1023 A 1010350218005 ISSN 1573 0387 S2CID 14138084 American Catholic Historical Researches 1905 Abbe Correa de Serra the Priest Ambassador of Portugal to the United States The Most Enlightened Foreigner That Ever Visited This Country The Most Extraordinary Man Living and Claimed as One of the Fathers of Our Country The American Catholic Historical Researches 1 1 30 43 Singh 2004 p 20 a b Sachs Balfour amp Garsney 1890 pp 127 128 Emerson 1842 pp 225 226 Augustin Pyramus de Candolle 1778 1841 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 5 October 2016 Trelease 1924 p 55 a b Trelease 1924 p 60 Trelease 1924 p 61 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 12 April 2021 P Bungener P Mattille amp M W Callmander 2017 Augustin Pyramus de Candolle une passion un Jardin Lausanne Geneve editions Favre amp CJBG http www editionsfavre com info php isbn 978 2 8289 1644 2 Isely 2002 p 147 Evenson VS 1997 Mushrooms of Colorado and the Southern Rocky Mountains Big Earth Publishing p 136 ISBN 978 1 56579 192 3 Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques Maroske Sara May Tom W 1 March 2018 Naming names the first women taxonomists in mycology Studies in Mycology Leading women in fungal biology 89 63 84 doi 10 1016 j simyco 2017 12 001 ISSN 0166 0616 PMC 6002341 PMID 29910514 P Mirabaud amp A de Reuterskiold The postage stamps of Switzerland 1842 1862 1898 facsimile reprint 1975 Quarterman Publications Laurence Massachusetts a b Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 265 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 43 Darwin transmutation notebook D pp 134e 135e Retrieved 10 September 2022 Allaby 2010 p 87 McClung 2006 Eckardt 2005 Moore Ede 1986 pp R741 R742 a b Albrecht 2010 pp 3 4 International Plant Names Index DC Bibliography editBooksAlbrecht Urs 2010 A History of Chronobiological Concepts The Circadian Clock Springer New York pp 1 35 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 1262 6 1 ISBN 978 1 4419 1262 6 Allaby Michael 2010 Plants Food Medicine and the Green Earth Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 6102 0 Buek H W 1840 1874 Genera species et synonyma Candolleana alphabetico ordine disposita seu Index generalis et specialis ad A P Decandolle Prodromum systematis naturalis regni vegetabilis Berlin Sumptibus librariae Nauckianae Desmond Adrian Moore James 1991 Darwin London Michael Joseph Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 7181 3430 3 Gray Asa Sargent Charles 1889 Scientific papers of Asa Gray Selected by Charles Sprague Sargent Houghton Mifflin p 292 Retrieved 15 May 2011 Isely Duane 2002 One Hundred and One Botanists Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 283 1 Retrieved 13 April 2011 Sachs Julius Balfour Isaac Bayley Garsney Henry Edward Fowler 1890 History of Botany 1530 1860 Oxford Clarendon Press Retrieved 6 May 2011 Singh Gurcharan 2004 Plant systematics an integrated approach Science Publishers ISBN 978 1 57808 351 0 Retrieved 13 April 2011 Stevens Peter Francis 1994 The development of biological systematics Antoine Laurent de Jussieu nature and the natural system Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 06440 8 Retrieved 13 April 2011 Williams D M Knapp Sandra eds 2010 Beyond Cladistics The Branching of a Paradigm University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 26772 5 Retrieved 15 February 2014 RJ Willis Augustin Pyramus de Candolle and His Era in The History of Allelopathy Springer 2007Encyclopaedias nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Candolle Augustin Pyrame de Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 180 181 ArticlesBrewster David Taylor Richard Phillips Richard Kane Robert March 1842 Proceedings of Learned Societies Royal Society Obituary Notice Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 20 Eckardt Nancy A 2005 Temperature Entrainment of the Arabidopsis Circadian Clock The Plant Cell 17 3 645 647 doi 10 1105 tpc 104 031336 PMC 1069688 Emerson George B 1842 A Notice of Prof Augustine Pyrame de Candolle The American Journal of Science and Arts 42 217 226 Retrieved 16 May 2011 Martius Carl Friedrich July 1843 Notice of the Life and Labours of DeCandolle The Annals and Magazine of Natural History Including Zoology Botany and Geology 12 74 1 20 McClung C Robertson 2006 Plant Circadian Rhythms The Plant Cell 18 4 792 794 doi 10 1105 tpc 106 040980 PMC 1425852 PMID 16595397 Moore Robert Eichler Victor July 1972 Loss of a circadian adrenal corticosterone rhythm following suprachiasmatic lesions in the rat Brain Research 42 1 201 206 doi 10 1016 0006 8993 72 90054 6 PMID 5047187 Moore Ede MC 1986 Physiology of the circadian timing system predictive versus reactive homeostasis American Journal of Physiology Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology 250 5 R737 R752 doi 10 1152 ajpregu 1986 250 5 r737 PMID 3706563 Johnson Maynard S 1926 Activity and distribution of certain wild mice in relation to biotic communities Journal of Mammalogy 7 2 245 277 doi 10 2307 1373575 JSTOR 1373575 Stephan Friedrich K Zucker Irving 1972 Circadian Rhythms in Drinking Behavior and Locomotor Activity of Rats Are Eliminated by Hypothalamic Lesions Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 69 6 1583 1586 Bibcode 1972PNAS 69 1583S doi 10 1073 pnas 69 6 1583 PMC 426753 PMID 4556464 Trelease William July 1924 Four Generations of Memorable Botanists The Scientific Monthly 19 1 53 62 Bibcode 1924SciMo 19 53T JSTOR 7220 Websites de Candolle Augustin Pyramus 1778 1841 International Plant Names Index 7 January 2009 Retrieved 6 May 2011 Candollea Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques Ville de Geneve Retrieved 6 May 2011 Waggoner Ben 7 July 2000 Carl Linnaeus 1707 1778 University of California Museum of Paleontology University of California Archived from the original on 30 April 2011 Retrieved 6 May 2011 Linnaeus freely admitted that this produced an artificial classification not a natural one which would take into account all the similarities and differences between organisms External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Augustin Pyramus de Candolle Works by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle at Biodiversity Heritage Library nbsp Works by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle at Open Library nbsp Works by or about Augustin Pyramus de Candolle at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Augustin Pyramus de Candolle amp oldid 1179835661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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