Nicolai Stepanowitsch Turczaninow

Nicolai Stepanowitsch Turczaninow (1796 - 1863) was a Russian botanist. He was born in Nikitovka, in the south of European Russia near the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. He first identified several genera and many species of plants. Several species have been named after him.

Nicolai Stepanowitsch Turczaninow
Photo of Nikolai Turczaninow
Photo of Nikolai Turczaninow
Born1796
Nikitovka, Russia
Died1863 (aged 66–67)
Kharkiv, Russia
NationalityRussia
Alma materUniversity of Kharkiv
Known forFlora Baikalensi-Dahurica
AwardsDemidov Prize (1857)
Scientific career
FieldsBotany
Institutions
Author abbrev. (botany)Turcz.

He is also known as Nikolai Stepanovich Turchaninov and Nikolaus von Turczaninow.[1]

Biography

Early life and education

Turczaninow was born in 1796 (probably in May[2]) in the town of Nikitovka, Voronezh Oblast (now in the Krasnogvardeysky District, Belgorod Oblast), Russian Empire.

In 1810 he was in high school in the city of Voronezh and later studied in the University of Kharkiv. In 1814 he graduated from Kharkiv and went to Saint Petersburg (St. Petersburg) to work with the government.[3]

While he was in St. Petersburg, Turczaninow studied the plants of the area of that city and, in 1825, he published a "List of plants of the area of Saint Petersburg" with 646 species of plants that he found.[2]

Work in Siberia

In 1828, Turczaninow was sent to Irkutsk, eastern Siberia, to work with the government of the region. In his free time he could travel around the Lake Baikal area, collecting many plants that later he sent some to St. Petersburg and keeping the rest for his own herbarium.[3]

He became a "Fellow" of the Imperial Botanical Garden of St. Petersburg in 1830 so he could explore the Siberian region between the "Altai Mountains and the eastern ocean" (Pacific Ocean).[3]

He collected plants in the Lake Baikal region and other regions, including northern China and Mongolia. He sent the collected plants and seeds to the St. Petersburg Botanical Garden, keeping some copies in his herbarium.[2] In 1831, 1832 and 1834 Turczaninov wrote some articles in the "Bulletin de la Société impériale des naturalistes de Moscou" ("Bulletin of the Imperial Society of Naturalists of Moscow") on the botany of Siberia and Mongolia.[3]

In 1837 he was sent more to west to the town of Krasnoyarsk, and later he became Governor of the region. In Krasnioarsk, Turczaninov began to publish Flora Baikalensi-Dahurica in separate parts from 1842 to 1857 in the Bulletin de la Société impériale des naturalists de Moscow. He wrote those articles in Latin. Later all these articles were published in 2 volumes with the first part (introduction) written in French.[3]

 
Ugni molinae Turcz. - a plant species named by Turczaninow

In Taganrog

When he was 49 years old, in 1845, and after 17 years in Siberia, Turczaninov went to live in Taganrog on the Sea of Azov near the Black Sea. In Taganrog, Turczaninov fell from a ladder and broke one leg; this affected his life and he could not travel to South America as he wanted. In 1847, Turczaninov move to the city of Kharkiv to work in the herbarium of the University of Kharkiv.[3]

Turczaninov died in Kharkiv on 26 December 1863.[n 1]

Honours

In 1857, The Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburg gave him the Demidov Prize because of his contribution to Russian botany. And the University of Kharkiv named him a member of honour.[2]

Several species of plantas are named after Turczaninov, and the Altai State University publishes the bulletin Turczaninowia (ISSN 1560-7259 for the printed version and ISSN 1560-7267 for the electronic version).

Notes

  1. Till 1918, in Russia was used the Julian calendar (Old Style) so the date of his death in the Gregorian calendar (New Style) is 7 January 1864.

References

  1. "HUH - Databases - Botanist Search". Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Камелин, Р.В. и Сытин, А.К. "Николай Степанович Турчанинов, русский ботаник" (Word) (in Russian). Retrieved 2013-03-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 [1], Marchant, N. G. (1988) "The contribution of the Russian botanist Turczaninov to Australian plant taxonomy" in Short, P.S. (ed.) (1990) History of Systematic Botany in Australasia: Proceedings of a Symposium Held at the University of Melbourne, 25–27 May 1988 Australian Systematic Botany Society, Melbourne, pp. 121–130, ISBN 0-7316-8463-X

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