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Katherine Esau

Katherine Esau (3 April 1898 – 4 June 1997) was a pioneering German-American botanist who studied plant anatomy and the effects of viruses. Her books Plant Anatomy (1953, 1965, 2006)[1] and Anatomy of Seed Plants (1960,[2] 1977) are key texts. In 1989, Esau received the National Medal of Science "In recognition of her distinguished service to the American community of plant biologists, and for the excellence of her pioneering research, both basic and applied, on plant structure and development, which has spanned more than six decades; for her superlative performance as an educator, in the classroom and through her books; for the encouragement and inspiration she has given to a legion of young, aspiring plant biologists; and for providing a special role model for women in science." When Katherine Esau died in year 1997. Peter Raven 'Director of Anatomy and Morphology' of 'Missouri Botanical Garden' remembered that she absolutely dominated the field of plant Biology even at the age of 99.

Katherine Esau
Born3 April 1898 (1898-04-03)
Yekaterinoslav,, Ukraine Russian Empire
Died4 June 1997(1997-06-04) (aged 99)
NationalityGerman, American
Alma materUniversity of California, Davis
AwardsNational Medal of Science (1989)
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
ThesisSome pathological changes in the anatomy of leaves of the sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) affected by the curly-top disease (1931)


[3]

[4]

Personal life and education edit

Esau was born on 3 April 1898 in Ekaterinoslav, Russian Empire (now Dnipro, Ukraine) to a family of Mennonites of German descent, so-called "Russian Mennonites". She attended a Mennonite Parish school prior to entering secondary school. Esau began studying agriculture in 1916 at the Golitsin Women's Agricultural College in Moscow, but returned home at the end of her second semester due to the Bolshevik Revolution.[3][5][4]

Katherine's father, John Esau, was the mayor of Ekaterinoslav. The revolution placed the family at risk due to their wealth, position, and nationality. Esau was considered a "counterrevolutionary bourgeoisie".[3] The family managed to escape by boarding a German troop train in Ekaterinoslav on 20 December 1918, reaching Berlin on 5 January 1919 after a two-week trip.[3]

Although Berlin was still in conflict, Katherine became a student at the Berlin Landwirtschaftliche Hochschule (Agricultural College of Berlin). She studied farm management with Friedrich Aereboe [de] and plant breeding with geneticist Erwin Baur.[3]

In 1922, the Esau family moved to Reedley, California, a Mennonite community. Esau worked briefly as a housekeeper and cook for a family in Fresno. In 1923, she worked for a seed production ranch, raising and studying sugar beets in Oxnard, California. After that company failed, Esau worked for the Spreckels Sugar Company on sugar beet resistance to curly top virus.[3][6]: 33–34  [7]

In 1927, Spreckels was visited by Wilfred William Robbins, from the University Farm of the Northern Branch of the College of Agriculture (now University of California, Davis), and Henry A. Jones of the Davis Division of Truck Crops. Esau showed them her beet fields and asked about the graduate program at Davis. Robbins accepted her and employed her as a graduate assistant in the Botany Division. Esau resumed her education at the University of California, Davis in 1928.[3] Since Davis did not grant graduate degrees at that time, she officially registered for the Ph.D. program through the University of California Berkeley. Her doctoral committee were W.W. Robbins, (botanist and the chair), T.H. Goodspeed, cytologist, and T.E. Rawlins, plant pathologist. Esau was formally awarded a doctorate in 1931 which was granted by UC Berkeley in 1932. She was also elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society in 1932.[4][8]

Esau then joined the faculty in the new post of Junior Botanist in the Agricultural Experiment Station in the College of Agriculture. She taught at the University of California, Davis from 1932 to 1963. In 1963 she moved to University of California, Santa Barbara to better continue collaborative work with Vernon I. Cheadle.[3]

Esau died on 4 June 1997 in Santa Barbara, California, USA.[9]

Research edit

Esau was a pioneering plant anatomist and her books Plant Anatomy (1953) and Anatomy of Seed Plants (1960) are considered "iconic texts" in plant structural biology.[1] Her early work in plant anatomy focused on the effect of viruses on plants, specifically on plant tissue and development. Her doctoral research had changed from field to laboratory study of curly top virus disease of sugar beet because of the difficulty of containing field infections with the disease. This led to her focus on plant anatomy and especially phloem tissue that was the subject of her scientific career. She soon discovered that the virus spread through the plants along the phloem. She began applying electron microscopy to her research in 1960.[10]

While teaching at the University of California, Davis, she continued her research on viruses and specifically phloem, the food conducting tissue in plants. In the 1950s, she collaborated with botanist Vernon Cheadle on more phloem research. Her treatise The Phloem (1969) was published as Volume 5 of the Handbuch der Pflanzenanatomie. This volume has been recognized as the most important of the series and was a definitive source of information about phloem.[11]

Esau continued research well into her 90s, publishing a total of 162 articles and five books. Her papers are held by the Department of Special Collections in the Davidson Library at the University of California, Santa Barbara.[12] She was official mentor to only 15 doctoral students but her exceptional ability as a teacher was recognised and appreciated by many.[4] Ray Evert, one of Esau's graduate students, says: "The book Plant Anatomy brought to life what previously had seemed to me to be a rather dull subject. I was not the only one so affected. Plant Anatomy had an enormous impact worldwide, literally bringing about a revivification of the discipline."[10]

Esau did not seem to attach importance to the recognition accorded her, and she told David Russell, who compiled her oral history, "I don't know how I happened to be elected [for the National Medal of Science]. I have no idea what impressed them about me."[10] When asked by Elga Wasserman to reflect on her education and career, Esau wrote in 1973 that scientific activities dominated her career and added, "I found ways of maintaining spiritual independence while adjusting myself to established policies. . . . I have never felt that my career was being affected by the fact that I am a woman."[6]: 33–34  In addition that, after being asked in 1992 if she saw herself as a pioneer woman in science, Esau replied, "This is such a funny thing. I never worried about being a woman. It never occurred to me that that was an important thing. I always thought that women could do just as well as men. Of course, the majority of women are not trained to think that way. They are trained to be homemakers. And I was not a homemaker."[13]

Recognition edit

Legacy edit

Many of Esau's publications are housed and available for loan from the Cornelius Herman Muller library at the University of California, Santa Barbara's Cheadle Center for Biodiversity and Ecological Restoration.

In memory of her contributions as a lecturer, author and scientist, the Katherine Esau Award is awarded to the graduate student who presents the best paper in structural and developmental biology at the annual meeting of the Botanical Society of America.[17]

Esau established the Katherine Esau Fellowship Program in 1993 at the University of California, Davis. This supports post-doctoral, junior faculty and some summer graduate fellowships.[10]

Works edit

Her books modernised plant anatomy teaching and were in use into the twenty-first century:[10]

  • Esau, Katherine (1953). Plant Anatomy. (1st ed. 1954; 2nd ed. 1965; 3rd ed. 2006). McGraw-Hill, New York.
  • Esau, Katherine (2006). Evert, Ray Franklin (ed.). Esau's Plant anatomy : meristems, cells, and tissues of the plant body : their structure, function, and development (3rd ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley-Interscience. doi:10.1002/0470047380.fmatter. ISBN 978-0-471-73843-5.
  • Esau, Katherine (1960). Anatomy of Seed Plants. (2nd ed. 1977). John Wiley & Sons, New York, ISBN 0-471-24520-8
  • Esau, Katherine (1961). Plants, Viruses, and Insects. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
  • Esau, Katherine (1965). Vascular Differentiation in Plants. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 160pp
  • Esau, Katherine (1968). Viruses in Plant Hosts. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison 228pp
  • Esau, Katherine (1969). The Phloem. (Handbuch der Pflanzenanatomie, Histologie Band 5, Teil 2). Gebrüder Borntraeger, Berlin.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Chaffey, Nigel (2007). "Esau's Plant Anatomy, Meristems, Cells, and Tissues of the Plant Body: their Structure, Function, and Development. 3rd edn., revised by Ray F. Evert". Annals of Botany. 99 (4): 785–786. doi:10.1093/aob/mcm015. ISSN 0305-7364. PMC 2802946.
  2. ^ Heiser Jr., Charles B. (1960). "Reviewed work: Anatomy of Seed Plants, Katherine Esau". The American Biology Teacher. 22 (5): 301. doi:10.2307/4439344. JSTOR 4439344.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Thorsch, Jennifer A.; Evert, Ray F. (September 1998). "KATHERINE ESAU, 1898–1997". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 36 (1): 27–40. doi:10.1146/annurev.phyto.36.1.27. ISSN 0066-4286. PMID 15012491.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Evert, Ray F. (1999). "Katherine Esau 1898 – 1997". Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences (PDF). Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. pp. 1–13.
  5. ^ Stebbins, George Ledyard (1999). "Katherine Esau (3 April 1898-4 June 1997)". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 143 (4): 665–672. ISSN 0003-049X. JSTOR 3181994.
  6. ^ a b Wasserman, Elga (2000). The door in the dream: conversations with eminent women in science. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences, Joseph Henry Press. pp. 33–34. ISBN 9780309065689.
  7. ^ O'Hern, Elizabeth Moot (1996). "Profiles of Pioneer Women Scientists: Katherine Esau". Botanical Review. 62 (3): 209–271. doi:10.1007/BF02857081. ISSN 0006-8101. JSTOR 4354274. S2CID 32865520. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  8. ^ Esau, Katherine; Russell, David E. "Katherine Esau: A Life of Achievements" (PDF). University of California. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  9. ^ Freeman, Karen (18 June 1997). "Katherine Esau Is Dead at 99; A World Authority on Botany". The New York Times.
  10. ^ a b c d e . www-plb.ucdavis.edu. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  11. ^ Pigg, K.B. (2007). "Katherine Esau". In Koertge, N. (ed.). New Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 2. New York: MacMillan. pp. 413–416.
  12. ^ "Guide to the Katherine Esau Papers". University of California, Santa Barbara.
  13. ^ "Esau's Career as a Plant Anatomist | CCBER". ccber.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  14. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter E" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  15. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  16. ^ "The President's National Medal of Science: Recipient Details – NSF – National Science Foundation". nsf.gov.
  17. ^ . Botanical Society of America. Archived from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 15 October 2013.

katherine, esau, april, 1898, june, 1997, pioneering, german, american, botanist, studied, plant, anatomy, effects, viruses, books, plant, anatomy, 1953, 1965, 2006, anatomy, seed, plants, 1960, 1977, texts, 1989, esau, received, national, medal, science, reco. Katherine Esau 3 April 1898 4 June 1997 was a pioneering German American botanist who studied plant anatomy and the effects of viruses Her books Plant Anatomy 1953 1965 2006 1 and Anatomy of Seed Plants 1960 2 1977 are key texts In 1989 Esau received the National Medal of Science In recognition of her distinguished service to the American community of plant biologists and for the excellence of her pioneering research both basic and applied on plant structure and development which has spanned more than six decades for her superlative performance as an educator in the classroom and through her books for the encouragement and inspiration she has given to a legion of young aspiring plant biologists and for providing a special role model for women in science When Katherine Esau died in year 1997 Peter Raven Director of Anatomy and Morphology of Missouri Botanical Garden remembered that she absolutely dominated the field of plant Biology even at the age of 99 Katherine EsauBorn3 April 1898 1898 04 03 Yekaterinoslav Ukraine Russian EmpireDied4 June 1997 1997 06 04 aged 99 Santa Barbara CaliforniaNationalityGerman AmericanAlma materUniversity of California DavisAwardsNational Medal of Science 1989 Scientific careerFieldsBotanyThesisSome pathological changes in the anatomy of leaves of the sugar beet Beta vulgarisL affected by the curly top disease 1931 3 4 Contents 1 Personal life and education 2 Research 3 Recognition 4 Legacy 5 Works 6 ReferencesPersonal life and education editEsau was born on 3 April 1898 in Ekaterinoslav Russian Empire now Dnipro Ukraine to a family of Mennonites of German descent so called Russian Mennonites She attended a Mennonite Parish school prior to entering secondary school Esau began studying agriculture in 1916 at the Golitsin Women s Agricultural College in Moscow but returned home at the end of her second semester due to the Bolshevik Revolution 3 5 4 Katherine s father John Esau was the mayor of Ekaterinoslav The revolution placed the family at risk due to their wealth position and nationality Esau was considered a counterrevolutionary bourgeoisie 3 The family managed to escape by boarding a German troop train in Ekaterinoslav on 20 December 1918 reaching Berlin on 5 January 1919 after a two week trip 3 Although Berlin was still in conflict Katherine became a student at the Berlin Landwirtschaftliche Hochschule Agricultural College of Berlin She studied farm management with Friedrich Aereboe de and plant breeding with geneticist Erwin Baur 3 In 1922 the Esau family moved to Reedley California a Mennonite community Esau worked briefly as a housekeeper and cook for a family in Fresno In 1923 she worked for a seed production ranch raising and studying sugar beets in Oxnard California After that company failed Esau worked for the Spreckels Sugar Company on sugar beet resistance to curly top virus 3 6 33 34 7 In 1927 Spreckels was visited by Wilfred William Robbins from the University Farm of the Northern Branch of the College of Agriculture now University of California Davis and Henry A Jones of the Davis Division of Truck Crops Esau showed them her beet fields and asked about the graduate program at Davis Robbins accepted her and employed her as a graduate assistant in the Botany Division Esau resumed her education at the University of California Davis in 1928 3 Since Davis did not grant graduate degrees at that time she officially registered for the Ph D program through the University of California Berkeley Her doctoral committee were W W Robbins botanist and the chair T H Goodspeed cytologist and T E Rawlins plant pathologist Esau was formally awarded a doctorate in 1931 which was granted by UC Berkeley in 1932 She was also elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society in 1932 4 8 Esau then joined the faculty in the new post of Junior Botanist in the Agricultural Experiment Station in the College of Agriculture She taught at the University of California Davis from 1932 to 1963 In 1963 she moved to University of California Santa Barbara to better continue collaborative work with Vernon I Cheadle 3 Esau died on 4 June 1997 in Santa Barbara California USA 9 Research editEsau was a pioneering plant anatomist and her books Plant Anatomy 1953 and Anatomy of Seed Plants 1960 are considered iconic texts in plant structural biology 1 Her early work in plant anatomy focused on the effect of viruses on plants specifically on plant tissue and development Her doctoral research had changed from field to laboratory study of curly top virus disease of sugar beet because of the difficulty of containing field infections with the disease This led to her focus on plant anatomy and especially phloem tissue that was the subject of her scientific career She soon discovered that the virus spread through the plants along the phloem She began applying electron microscopy to her research in 1960 10 While teaching at the University of California Davis she continued her research on viruses and specifically phloem the food conducting tissue in plants In the 1950s she collaborated with botanist Vernon Cheadle on more phloem research Her treatise The Phloem 1969 was published as Volume 5 of the Handbuch der Pflanzenanatomie This volume has been recognized as the most important of the series and was a definitive source of information about phloem 11 Esau continued research well into her 90s publishing a total of 162 articles and five books Her papers are held by the Department of Special Collections in the Davidson Library at the University of California Santa Barbara 12 She was official mentor to only 15 doctoral students but her exceptional ability as a teacher was recognised and appreciated by many 4 Ray Evert one of Esau s graduate students says The book Plant Anatomy brought to life what previously had seemed to me to be a rather dull subject I was not the only one so affected Plant Anatomy had an enormous impact worldwide literally bringing about a revivification of the discipline 10 Esau did not seem to attach importance to the recognition accorded her and she told David Russell who compiled her oral history I don t know how I happened to be elected for the National Medal of Science I have no idea what impressed them about me 10 When asked by Elga Wasserman to reflect on her education and career Esau wrote in 1973 that scientific activities dominated her career and added I found ways of maintaining spiritual independence while adjusting myself to established policies I have never felt that my career was being affected by the fact that I am a woman 6 33 34 In addition that after being asked in 1992 if she saw herself as a pioneer woman in science Esau replied This is such a funny thing I never worried about being a woman It never occurred to me that that was an important thing I always thought that women could do just as well as men Of course the majority of women are not trained to think that way They are trained to be homemakers And I was not a homemaker 13 Recognition editShe was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1949 14 In 1951 she was President of the Botanical Society of America 4 In 1956 the Botanical Society of America awarded her a Certificate of Merit in its Golden Jubilee celebrations 4 In 1957 she was the sixth woman elected as a member of the National Academy of Sciences 4 In 1962 she was awarded an honorary degree by Mills College Oakland 4 In 1964 she was elected to the American Philosophical Society 15 In 1989 President George Bush awarded Esau the National Medal of Science 16 Legacy editMany of Esau s publications are housed and available for loan from the Cornelius Herman Muller library at the University of California Santa Barbara s Cheadle Center for Biodiversity and Ecological Restoration In memory of her contributions as a lecturer author and scientist the Katherine Esau Award is awarded to the graduate student who presents the best paper in structural and developmental biology at the annual meeting of the Botanical Society of America 17 Esau established the Katherine Esau Fellowship Program in 1993 at the University of California Davis This supports post doctoral junior faculty and some summer graduate fellowships 10 Works editHer books modernised plant anatomy teaching and were in use into the twenty first century 10 Esau Katherine 1953 Plant Anatomy 1st ed 1954 2nd ed 1965 3rd ed 2006 McGraw Hill New York Esau Katherine 2006 Evert Ray Franklin ed Esau s Plant anatomy meristems cells and tissues of the plant body their structure function and development 3rd ed Hoboken N J Wiley Interscience doi 10 1002 0470047380 fmatter ISBN 978 0 471 73843 5 Esau Katherine 1960 Anatomy of Seed Plants 2nd ed 1977 John Wiley amp Sons New York ISBN 0 471 24520 8 Esau Katherine 1961 Plants Viruses and Insects Harvard University Press Cambridge Esau Katherine 1965 Vascular Differentiation in Plants Holt Rinehart amp Winston 160pp Esau Katherine 1968 Viruses in Plant Hosts University of Wisconsin Press Madison 228pp Esau Katherine 1969 The Phloem Handbuch der Pflanzenanatomie Histologie Band 5 Teil 2 Gebruder Borntraeger Berlin References edit a b Chaffey Nigel 2007 Esau s Plant Anatomy Meristems Cells and Tissues of the Plant Body their Structure Function and Development 3rd edn revised by Ray F Evert Annals of Botany 99 4 785 786 doi 10 1093 aob mcm015 ISSN 0305 7364 PMC 2802946 Heiser Jr Charles B 1960 Reviewed work Anatomy of Seed Plants Katherine Esau The American Biology Teacher 22 5 301 doi 10 2307 4439344 JSTOR 4439344 a b c d e f g h Thorsch Jennifer A Evert Ray F September 1998 KATHERINE ESAU 1898 1997 Annual Review of Phytopathology 36 1 27 40 doi 10 1146 annurev phyto 36 1 27 ISSN 0066 4286 PMID 15012491 a b c d e f g h Evert Ray F 1999 Katherine Esau 1898 1997 Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences PDF Washington DC The National Academies Press pp 1 13 Stebbins George Ledyard 1999 Katherine Esau 3 April 1898 4 June 1997 Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 143 4 665 672 ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 3181994 a b Wasserman Elga 2000 The door in the dream conversations with eminent women in science Washington DC National Academy of Sciences Joseph Henry Press pp 33 34 ISBN 9780309065689 O Hern Elizabeth Moot 1996 Profiles of Pioneer Women Scientists Katherine Esau Botanical Review 62 3 209 271 doi 10 1007 BF02857081 ISSN 0006 8101 JSTOR 4354274 S2CID 32865520 Retrieved 16 March 2023 Esau Katherine Russell David E Katherine Esau A Life of Achievements PDF University of California Retrieved 9 March 2022 Freeman Karen 18 June 1997 Katherine Esau Is Dead at 99 A World Authority on Botany The New York Times a b c d e Remembering Katherine Esau www plb ucdavis edu Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Pigg K B 2007 Katherine Esau In Koertge N ed New Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 2 New York MacMillan pp 413 416 Guide to the Katherine Esau Papers University of California Santa Barbara Esau s Career as a Plant Anatomist CCBER ccber ucsb edu Retrieved 13 December 2020 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter E PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 29 July 2014 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 11 October 2022 The President s National Medal of Science Recipient Details NSF National Science Foundation nsf gov The Katherine Esau Award Botanical Society of America Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 15 October 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Katherine Esau amp oldid 1183102360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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