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Eduard Strasburger was born in Warsaw, Congress Poland, the son of Anna Karoline (von Schütz) and Eduard Gottlieb Strasburger (1803–1874). [2] [3] In 1870, he married Alexandra Julia ("Alexandrine") Wertheim (1847–1902), they had two children: Anna (1870–1942) and Julius (1871–1934).
Symplastic transport was first realized by Eduard Tangl in 1879, who also discovered plasmodesmata, [2] a term coined by Eduard Strasburger, 1901. [3] [4] In 1880, Hanstein coined the term symplast. [5] The contrasting terms apoplast and symplast were used together in 1930 by Münch. [6] [7]
Eduard Strasburger (1844–1912) Crossosomatales: Bu [388] Strelitziaceae: Strelitzia: P Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1744–1818) Zingiberales [389] Stylidiaceae: Stylidium: G little pillar (the style and stamens form a column) Asterales: St [390] Styracaceae: Styrax: L Greek and Latin name, from an Arabic plant name: Ericales: CS [391 ...
Polish-German botanist and namer of nucleoplasm, Eduard Strasburger.. The existence of the nucleus, including the nucleoplasm, was first documented as early as 1682 by the Dutch microscopist Leeuwenhoek and was later described and drawn by Franz Bauer. [5]
Each theory was improved in the following decades: the apposition (or lamination) theory by Eduard Strasburger (1882, 1889), and the intussusception theory by Julius Wiesner (1886). [7] In 1930, Ernst Münch coined the term apoplast in order to separate the "living" symplast from the "dead" plant region, the latter of which included the cell ...
Chloroplasts in leaf cells of the moss Mnium stellare. Plant anatomy or phytotomy is the general term for the study of the internal structure of plants.Originally, it included plant morphology, the description of the physical form and external structure of plants, but since the mid-20th century, plant anatomy has been considered a separate field referring only to internal plant structure.
The name gamete was introduced by the German cytologist Eduard Strasburger in 1878. [3] Gametes of both mating individuals can be the same size and shape, a condition known as isogamy. By contrast, in the majority of species, the gametes are of different sizes, a condition known as anisogamy or heterogamy that applies to humans and other ...
This initiated the new field of comparative morphology which, largely through the combined work of William Farlow (1844–1919), Nathanael Pringsheim (1823–1894), Frederick Bower, Eduard Strasburger and others, established that an "alternation of generations" occurs throughout the plant kingdom. [92]