Wilhelm Heering

Wilhelm Christian August Heering (6 September 1876, Altona 26 May 1916, Verdun) was a German botanist.

He studied natural sciences at the universities of Munich, Halle and Kiel, receiving his doctorate in 1899. While a student, he began expansion of a herbarium that was formerly maintained by apothecary Johann Jacob Meyer from 1812 to 1834. The herbarium is now kept at the botanical institute of the University of Hamburg.[1]

Beginning in 1899 he focused on studies of freshwater algae, providing information on a wide variety of algae found in the Eppendorfer Moor. In 1902 he began teaching classes at a secondary school in Ottensen, and in 1909 became associated with the Schleswig-Holstein provincial office for nature conservation. From 1911 he worked as a research assistant at the Botanical State Institute in Hamburg, during which time he also conducted lectures at the Colonial Institute. While serving as a deputy officer in World War I, he died on the Western Front in May 1916.[1]

As a taxonomist he circumscribed numerous species within the botanical genus Baccharis.[2]

Selected works

Also, he made contributions involving the green algae class Chlorophyceae to the series Die süsswasser-flora Deutschlands, Österreichs und der Schweiz.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 Hamburgische Biografie-Personenlexikon, Volume 2 edited by Franklin Kopitzsch, Dirk Brietzke
  2. IPNI List of plants described and co-described by Heering
  3. WorldCat Search published works.
  4. IPNI.  Heering.
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