William Tyrer Gerrard

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Tyrer_Gerrard an entity of type: Thing

William Tyrer Gerrard (c. 1831, Ciudad del Cabo - 1866) fue un botánico, pteridólogo, y explorador anglo-sudafricano, recolector en Colonia de Natal y Madagascar en los 1860s. rdf:langString
William Tyrer Gerrard (1831 – 9 July 1866) was an English botanical collector in Natal and Madagascar in the 1860s. The genus Gerrardanthus is named in his honor. Gerrard was born in Knowsley, Merseyside, England, and died at age 34 of yellow fever in July 1866, in Foulepointe (now Mahavelona), Madagascar. He was active as a botanical collector in Australia and then Natal, where he first collected several genera and over 150 previously unknown species, and from which he sent a stuffed aardvark to the . He left Natal in April 1865 for coastal Madagascar, where he made large collections of plants, insects, and birds, before succumbing to illness. He last bequest of specimens to Derby Museum in Liverpool was in 1867. The standard author abbreviation Gerrard is used to indicate this person as rdf:langString
rdf:langString William Tyrer Gerrard
rdf:langString William Tyrer Gerrard
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xsd:integer 927724158
rdf:langString William Tyrer Gerrard (c. 1831, Ciudad del Cabo - 1866) fue un botánico, pteridólogo, y explorador anglo-sudafricano, recolector en Colonia de Natal y Madagascar en los 1860s.
rdf:langString William Tyrer Gerrard (1831 – 9 July 1866) was an English botanical collector in Natal and Madagascar in the 1860s. The genus Gerrardanthus is named in his honor. Gerrard was born in Knowsley, Merseyside, England, and died at age 34 of yellow fever in July 1866, in Foulepointe (now Mahavelona), Madagascar. He was active as a botanical collector in Australia and then Natal, where he first collected several genera and over 150 previously unknown species, and from which he sent a stuffed aardvark to the . He left Natal in April 1865 for coastal Madagascar, where he made large collections of plants, insects, and birds, before succumbing to illness. He last bequest of specimens to Derby Museum in Liverpool was in 1867. The standard author abbreviation Gerrard is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1671

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