Yasuyoshi Shirasawa: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Yasumi Shirasawa.jpg|thumb|Portrait of Yasumi Shirasawa]] |
[[File:Yasumi Shirasawa.jpg|thumb|Portrait of Yasumi Shirasawa]] |
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{{nihongo|'''Yasuyoshi Shirasawa'''|白沢 保美|Shirasawa Yasuyoshi|extra=1868 – December 20, 1947}} was a Japanese [[botanist]] who worked alongside [[Tomitaro Makino]] 'The Father of Japanese Botany', at the [[University of Tokyo]]. Shirasawa named numerous native plants, notably the endangered ''[[Picea koyamae]]'' and (with Makino) the Kyūshū Lime ''[[Tilia kiusiana]]''. |
{{nihongo|'''Yasuyoshi Shirasawa'''|白沢 保美|Shirasawa Yasuyoshi|extra=1868 – December 20, 1947}}, also known as '''Homi Shirasawa''',<ref>{{cite web |title=Shirasawa, Homi (Yasuyoshi) |url=https://www.ipni.org/a/9583-1 |website=International Plant Names Index |access-date=25 January 2023}}</ref> was a Japanese [[botanist]] who worked alongside [[Tomitaro Makino]] 'The Father of Japanese Botany', at the [[University of Tokyo]]. Shirasawa named numerous native plants, notably the endangered ''[[Picea koyamae]]'' and (with Makino) the Kyūshū Lime ''[[Tilia kiusiana]]''. |
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Revision as of 02:57, 25 January 2023
Yasuyoshi Shirasawa (白沢 保美, Shirasawa Yasuyoshi, 1868 – December 20, 1947), also known as Homi Shirasawa,[1] was a Japanese botanist who worked alongside Tomitaro Makino 'The Father of Japanese Botany', at the University of Tokyo. Shirasawa named numerous native plants, notably the endangered Picea koyamae and (with Makino) the Kyūshū Lime Tilia kiusiana.
References
- ^ "Shirasawa, Homi (Yasuyoshi)". International Plant Names Index. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
- ^ International Plant Names Index. Shiras.