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Rudolf Goerz (sometimes spelled Rudolph) (born 1879 and died 1935) was a German botanist.
He was particularly interested in spermatophytes. [1] Goerz edited and distributed two exsiccatae, namely Salices Brandenburgenses selectae and Salicaceae Asiaticae. [2] [3] [4]
Jakob Friedrich Ehrhart was a German botanist, a pupil of Carl Linnaeus at Uppsala University, and later director of the Botanical Garden of Hannover, where he produced several major botanical works between 1780 and 1793. Ehrhart was the first author to use the rank of subspecies in botanical literature, and he published many subspecific names between 1780 and 1789. Ehrhart issued several exsiccatae, the first one Phytophylacium Ehrhartianum, continens plantas, quas in locis earum natalibus collegit et exsiccavit Fridericus Ehrhart (1780-1785).
John Cocks (1787–1861) was a British phycologist.
Karl Wilhelm Gottlieb Leopold Fuckel was a German botanist who worked largely on fungi.
William Baxter ALS, FHS, was a British botanist, author of British Phaenogamous Botany and appointed curator of the Oxford Botanic Garden in 1813. From 1825 to 1828 he issed the exsiccata series Stirpes cryptogamae Oxonienses, or dried specimens of cryptogamous plants collected in the vicinity of Oxford. With Philip Burnard Ayres he distributed another exsiccata under the title Flora Thamnensis.
David Heinrich Hoppe was a German pharmacist, botanist, entomologist and physician. He is remembered for contributions made to the study of alpine flora.
Christian Friedrich Heinrich Wimmer was a German botanist and educator who was a native of Breslau.
Heinrich Emanuel Grabowski was a German botanist and pharmacist of Polish heritage. He was a native of Leobschütz.
Wilhelm G. Solheim I (1898–1978) was a botanist after whom the Wilhelm G. Solheim Mycological Herbarium at the University of Wyoming is named. He issued the exsiccata series Mycoflora Saximontanensis exsiccata (1934-1977), several fascicles (cent.) with George Baker Cummins. His son, Wilhelm G. Solheim II was an archeologist and a senior practitioner of archaeology in Southeast Asia.
Friedrich Wilhelm Schultz was a German pharmacist and botanist who was a native of Zweibrücken.
Nicolas Charles Seringe was a French physician and botanist born in Longjumeau.
Heinrich Gustav Flörke was a German botanist and lichenologist. The standard author abbreviation Flörke is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.
Jean-Maurice Casimir Arvet-Touvet (1841–1913) was a French botanist born in Gières.
Otto Christian Blandow was a German apothecary and botanist, specializing in the field of bryology.
Jean Jacques Timothée Puel was a French physician and botanist.
Alphonse Maille was a French botanist.
Henri L. Sudre was a French botanist.
Adriano Fiori was an Italian botanist.
Renato Pampanini (1875-1949) was an Italian botanist and mycologist.
Johann Christian Carl Günther was a German botanist, pharmacist, batologist, and author.
Exsiccata is a work with "published, uniform, numbered set[s] of preserved specimens distributed with printed labels". Typically, exsiccatae are numbered collections of dried herbarium specimens or preserved biological samples published in several duplicate sets with a common theme or title, such as Lichenes Helvetici. Exsiccatae are regarded as scientific contributions of the editor(s) with characteristics from the library world and features from the herbarium world. Exsiccatae works represent a special method of scholarly communication. The text in the printed matters/published booklets is basically a list of labels (schedae) with information on each single numbered exsiccatal unit. Extensions of the concept occur.