https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rose_cultivars_named_after_people
B
M
W
This is a list of marine biologists.
Jacques-Yves Cousteau, co-inventor of the aqua-lung, is well known for popularizing marine biology.
- Donald Putnam Abbott (1920–1986), American marine invertebrate zoologist
- Isabella Aiona Abbott (1919–2010), American marine botanist
- Ali Abdelghany (born 1944), Egyptian marine biologist
- Jakob Johan Adolf Appellöf (1857–1921), Swedish marine zoologist
- Leanne Armand (born 1968), Australian marine scientist
- Samuel Stillman Berry (1887–1984), American marine zoologist
- Henry Bryant Bigelow (1879–1967), American marine biologist
- Jean Bouillon (1926–2009), Belgian marine zoologist
- Rachel Carson (1907–1964), American marine biologist and author
- Carl Chun (1852–1914), German marine biologist
- Eugenie Clark (1922–2015), American marine biologist
- Malcolm Clarke (1930–2013), British cephalopod expert
- Jacques-Yves Cousteau (1910–1997), French marine explorer, conservationist, and filmmaker
- Rose Crichton (born 1983), British marine biologist
- Charles Darwin (1809–1882), wrote Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs (1842) while aboard HMS Beagle
- Paul K. Dayton (born 1941), American benthic marine ecologist noted for work in kelp forest ecology
- Finn Devold (1902–1977), Norwegian marine biologist
- Anton Dohrn (1840–1909), German marine biologist
- Nicole Dubilier, American marine microbiologist, head of Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology
- Patricia Louise Dudley (1929–2004) American zoologist specializing in copepods
- Sylvia Earle (born 1935), American oceanographer
- Austin Gallagher, marine biologist
- Ruth Gates (1962–2018), American marine biologist noted for work on coral reefs
- J. Frederick Grassle (1939–2018), American marine biologist
- Gordon Gunter (1909–1998), American marine biologist and fisheries scientist notable for pioneering fisheries research in the northern Gulf of Mexico
- Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919), German physician, zoologist, marine biologist and evolutionist
- Benjamin Halpern, American marine conservationist
- Hans Hass (born 1919), Austrian marine biologist and diving pioneer
- Gotthilf Hempel (born 1929), German marine biologist
- Stephen Hillenburg (1961–2018), American animator (creator of SpongeBob SquarePants); previously worked as a marine biology teacher for several years[1]
- Hirohito, the Shōwa Emperor (1901–1989), jellyfish taxonomist
- Johan Hjort (1869–1948), Norwegian marine zoologist and one of the founders of ICES
- Bruno Hofer (1861–1916), German fisheries scientist
- Martin W. Johnson (1893–1984), American marine biologist and biological oceanographer
- Benjamin Kahn (born 1955), Israeli marine biologist and environmental activist
- Uwe Kils (born 1951), German marine biologist
- Otto Kinne (born 1923), German marine biologist
- Nancy Knowlton, coral reef biologist and author of Citizens of the Sea (2010)
- August David Krohn (1803–1891), Russian/German zoologist
- Paul L. Kramp (1887–1975), Danish zoologist working on jellyfish
- William Elford Leach (1790–1836), English zoologist and marine biologist
- Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai (1846–1888), Russian marine biologist and anthropologist
- Sir John Murray (1841–1914), Scots-Canadian marine biologist
- Anders Sandøe Ørsted (1816–1872), Danish marine botanist studied arctic nematodes and marine algae
- Robert T. Paine (1933–2016), American marine zoologist known for developing the "keystone species" concept
- Joseph R. Pawlik (born 1960), American marine biologist
- Ronald C. Phillips (1932–2005), American marine botanist, co-author of Seagrasses (1980); worldwide development of seagrass science told in autobiographical Travels with Seagrass (2013)
- Syed Zahoor Qasim (born 1926), Indian marine biologist
- Ed Ricketts (1897–1948), American marine biologist noted for a pioneering study of intertidal ecology
- Harald Rosenthal (born 1937), German hydrobiologist known for his work in fish farming and ecology
- Anne Rudloe (1947–2012), American co-founder of Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory
- Jack Rudloe (born 1943), American co-founder of Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory and writer of several popular works on the sea including The Sea Brings Forth, and The Erotic Ocean.
- Frederick Stratten Russell (1897–1984), British marine biologist known for his work on zooplankton.
- Georg Sars (1837–1927), Norwegian marine biologist
- Michael Sars (1809–1869), Norwegian theologian and biologist
- Oscar Elton Sette (1900–1972), American fisheries scientist notable for pioneering modern fisheries science and fisheries oceanography
- Bell M. Shimada (1922–1958), American fisheries scientist notable for pioneering studies of tuna stocks in the equatorial Pacific Ocean
- Ronald Shimek (born 1948), American marine biologist noted mainly for his work on scaphopods and turrid gastropods
- Charles Wyville Thompson (1832–1882), Scottish marine biologist
- Gunnar Thorson (1906–1971), Danish marine biologist
- Anne Thynne (1800–1866), British marine zoologist
- Takasi Tokioka (1913–2001), Japanese marine biologist known for his work on soft bodied zooplankton and tunicates
- Ruth Turner (1915–2000), marine biologist
- Anna Weber-van Bosse (1852–1942), marine phycologist
I
- Ibn al-A'rabi
-
K
- R. Kanagasuntheram
-
J
Z
A
- Hisashi Abe
- Yoshio Abe
- William Adam (malacologist)
- Leopold Adametz
- Igor Akimushkin
- Anastasio Alfaro
- Céline Allewaert
- Angelo Andres
- William John Ansorge
- Orazio Antinori
- Grigore Antipa
- István Apáthy
- Federigo Luigi Appelius
- Francisco Aranda Millán
- Francis Archer
- Edwin Nicholas Arnold
- Arthur Urquhart
- Peter Ascanius
- Sven Magnus Aurivillius
B
C
D
G
H
J
K
L
M
P
R
- C. R. Narayan Rao
- Halvor Heyerdahl Rasch
- Francis Ratcliffe
- Robert Raven
- Johannes Theodor Reinhardt
- Roberto Esser dos Reis
- William David Lindsay Ride
- Gilberto Righi
- Oscar Ringdahl
- Coleman Townsend Robinson
- Boris Rohdendorf
- Roman Wojtusiak
- Mithan Lal Roonwal
- Roch Roszczak
- Jean Louis Florent Polydore Roux
S
- Michael Saaristo
- S. T. Satyamurthi
- Henri Schouteden
- Peter J. Schwendinger
- Marco Antonio Serna Díaz
- Nikolai Severtzov
- Philip Sheppard
- Sara Shettleworth
- Maria Nazareth F. da Silva
- James Jenkins Simpson
- Anindya Sinha
- Ludwik Sitowski
- Boris Sket
- Stanisław Smreczyński
- George Brettingham Sowerby III
- Yaroslav Starobogatov
- David George Stead
- Robert Edwards Carter Stearns
- Victor Sterki
- Samuel Stevens (naturalist)
- Michele Stossich
- Alexander Strauch
- Nicolaas Jan van Strien
- Pellegrino Strobel
- Hans Strøm
- Carl Jakob Sundevall
- Szymon Syrski
- Mykola Szczerbak
T
W
W
Z
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Category:Zoologist_stubs&pagefrom=Wood%2C+Christopher%0AChristopher+Wood+%28biologist%29#mw-pages
A
B
- Alfred Balachowsky
- Andreas Bang-Haas
- Otto Bang-Haas
- Constant Bar
- Nikolaj Iljitsch Baranov
- Pietro Bargagli
- Max Bartel
- Carlo Bassi
- Flaminio Baudi di Selve
- Johann Becker (entomologist)
- Max Beier
- Luigi Bellardi
- Jean Étienne Bercé
- Lucien Berland
- Grigory Bey-Bienko
- Czesław Bieżanko
- Hans Bischoff
- Clas Bjerkander
- Charles Theodore Blachier
- Émile Blanchard
- Raphaël Blanchard
- Stanisław Błeszyński
- August Victor Paul Blüthgen
- Ignacio Bolívar
- Franco Andrea Bonelli
- Pierre Joseph Bonnaterre
- Gabriel Bonsdorff
- Moritz Balthasar Borkhausen
- Carl Julius Bernhard Börner
- August Friedrich Böttcher
- Nérée Boubée
- Nikolaus Joseph Brahm
- Fred Hermann Brandt
- Gustav Breddin
- Otto Vasilievich Bremer
- Johann Jacob Bremi-Wolf
- Stephan von Breuning (entomologist)
- Johann Philipp Breyne
- Charles N. F. Brisout
- Henry Wilfred Brolemann
- Charles Jules Edmée Brongniart
- Edwin Brown (naturalist)
- Tom Browning (entomologist)
- Emil von Brück
- Felix Bryk
- Jean Baptiste Lucien Buquet
- Heinrich Christian Burckhardt
- Otto Bütschli
C
- Lorenzo Camerano
- Silvano Canzoneri
- Aristide Caradja
- Julius Victor Carus
- José Cândido de Melo Carvalho
- Guelfo Cavanna
- Giacinto Cestoni
- Toussaint de Charpentier
- Maximilien Chaudoir
- Tikhon Chicherin
- Pierre Chrétien
- Hugo Theodor Christoph
- Alexandre Constant
- Jean Antoine Coquebert de Montbret
- Luis Ceballos y Fernández de Córdoba
- Emilio Cornalia
- Ângelo Moreira da Costa Lima
- Oronzio Gabriele Costa
- Ernő Csíki
- Jules Culot
- Antonio Curò
D
- Franz Dannehl
- David Rosen (entomologist)
- William de Alwis
- Marius Descamps
- Eugène Anselme Sébastien Léon Desmarest
- Thierry Deuve
- Charles Joseph Devillers
- Achille Deyrolle
- Georg Dieck
- Paul Dognin
- Carl August Dohrn
- Henri Donckier de Donceel
- Jean Antoine Dours
- Auguste Drapiez
- Alexander Kirilow Drenowski
- Abel Dufrane
- Caspar Erasmus Duftschmid
- Lionel Jack Dumbleton
- Philogène Auguste Joseph Duponchel
- Gabriel Dupuy
- Henryk Dziedzicki
E
F
- Olof Immanuel von Fåhraeus
- Josef Fahringer
- Léon Fairmaire
- Carl Fredrik Fallén
- Jules Ferdinand Fallou
- Anton Hermann Fassl
- Charles Adolphe Albert Fauvel
- Rudolf Felder
- Raimondo Feletti
- Sámuel Fenichel
- François-Robert Fenwick Brown
- Johann Angelo Ferrari
- François Josephe Fettig
- Maximilian Fischer
- Warren Samuel Fisher
- Ernst Josef Fittkau
- Edmond Jean-Baptiste Fleutiaux
- Gustav Flor
- Egide Fologne
- Walter Forster (entomologist)
- Gédéon Foulquier
- Bengt Fredrik Fries
- Heinrich Friese
- Hans Fruhstorfer
- Waldemar Fuchs
G
- Henri Gadeau de Kerville
- Charles Joseph Gahan
- Ludwig Ganglbauer
- Otto Garlepp
- Hans Gebien
- Joseph Jean Baptiste Géhin
- Paul Bernhard Gerhard
- Ernst Friedrich Germar
- Carl Eduard Adolph Gerstaecker
- Carl Geyer
- Mohammed Sultan Khan Ghauri
- Benjamin August Gimmerthal
- Jean-Étienne Girard
- Ernst August Girschner
- Maurice Emile Marie Goetghebuer
- Hippolyte Louis Gory
- Maurice Gilbert Perrot des Gozis
- Carl Grabow
- Mariano de la Paz Graëlls y de la Aguera
- Ludwig Carl Friedrich Graeser
- Marta Grandi
- Adolphe Hercule de Graslin
- Antoine Henri Grouvelle
- Karl Grünberg
- Achille Guenée
- Guido of Pisa
- Antoine Barthélemy Jean Guillemot
- Vsevolod Gussakovskiy
H
- Erich Haase
- Paul Hahnel
- James Nathaniel Halbert
- Richard Hanitsch
- Frank Hannyngton
- Hans Brauns
- Johann Wilhelm Adolf Hansemann
- J. Richard Harris
- Hermann Haupt
- Ernst Heeger
- Ole Engel Heie
- Karl Borromaeus Maria Josef Heller
- Hem Singh Pruthi
- Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Herbst
- Jean-Frédéric Hermann
- Gottlieb August Wilhelm Herrich-Schäffer
- Carl von Heyden
- Lucas Friedrich Julius Dominikus von Heyden
- Alexander Heyne
- Ernst Heyne
- Hans Hirschke
- Ottmar Hofmann
- Gabriel Höfner
- Nicolas Josef Eugene Holl
- August Holmgren
- Eduard Honrath
- Marianne Horak
- Adolf Horion
- Géza Horváth
J
K
- William Francis de Vismes Kane
- Friedrich Kipp
- Leopold Anton Kirchner
- Theodor Franz Wilhelm Kirsch
- Josef Wilhelm Klimesch
- Alexander Barrett Klots
- Jan Krzysztof Kluk
- Eduard Knirsch
- Carl Ludwig Koch
- Ludwig Carl Christian Koch
- Hiromichi Kono
- Friedrich Wilhelm Konow
- Hans Kotzsch
- Ernst Gustav Kraatz
- Joseph Kriechbaumer
- Theodor Johannes Krüper
- Oleg Leonidovich Kryzhanovsky
- Johann Gottlieb Kugelann
- Philippe Alexandre Jules Künckel d'Herculais
- Kurimoto Masayoshi
- August Ferdinand Kuwert
L
- Joseph Alexandre Laboulbène
- François Clément Lafaury
- Johann Nepomuk von Laicharting
- Auguste Lameere
- Jakob Heinrich Laspeyres
- Ferdinand Le Cerf
- Charles Le Doux
- Alexandre Louis Lefèbvre de Cérisy
- Édouard Lefèvre
- Gustavo Leonardi
- Amédée Louis Michel le Peletier, comte de Saint-Fargeau
- Charles Eugène Leprieur
- Victoria Lieu
- Erwin Lindner
- Pierre Joseph Michel Lorquin
- Hippolyte Lucas
- Paolo Luigioni
- William Lundbeck
- Carl August Lundström
M
- Joseph Émile Macker
- Maeda Toshiyasu (Toyama)
- August Wilhelm Malm
- Oldřich Marek
- Pavel Iustinovich Marikovsky
- Emmanuel Martin
- Andrey Vasilyevich Martynov
- Loïc Matile
- Shōnen Matsumura
- C. A. E. Matzek
- Samarendra Maulik
- Anna Maurizio
- Gustav Mayr
- Niall McNeill
- Oskar Meder
- Johann Carl Megerle von Mühlfeld
- Jean Pierre Mégnin
- Johannes C. H. de Meijere
- Frederik Vilhelm August Meinert
- Anton Menge
- Auguste Eugène Méquignon
- George Meyer-Darcis
- Rudolf Ludwig Meyer-Dür
- Otto Michael
- Johann Christian Mikan
- David Miller (entomologist)
- Pierre-Aimé Millet
- Pierre Millière
- Wilhelm Mink
- Jun Mitsuhashi
- Alexander Mocsáry
- Adolph Modéer
- Wilhelm Möllenkamp
- Montague Arthur Fenton
- Arnold Lucien Montandon
- Heinrich Benno Möschler
- Maxwell Sydney Moulds
- Philipp Wilbrand Jacob Müller
- Johann Müller-Rutz
- Étienne Mulsant
- Eugene G. Munroe
N
O
P
- Arnold Pagenstecher
- André Paillot
- Auguste Simon Paris
- Gustaf von Paykull
- John Frederick Perkins
- Edouard Perris
- Benoît-Philibert Perroud
- Fritz Peus
- André Peyriéras
- Ernst Pfeiffer
- Fernandino Maria Piccioli
- Leonello Picco
- Alexandre Pierret
- Raniero Alliata di Pietratagliata
- Carl Plötz
- Nikolaus Poda von Neuhaus
- Giuseppe Saverio Poli
- Giuseppe Sigismondo Ala Ponzone
- Gustave Arthur Poujade
- Jan Daniel Preysler
- Rudolf Püngeler
R
- Oktawiusz Radoszkowski
- Jules Pierre Rambur
- Willy Adolf Theodor Ramme
- Józef Razowski
- Louis Jérôme Reiche
- Alexander Julius Reichert
- Hermann Reinhard
- Carl Heinrich Reutti
- Claudius Rey
- Carl Ribbe
- Heinrich Ribbe
- Christoph Friedrich Richter
- Edgar Riek
- Oscar Ringdahl
- Louis Eugène Robert
- Alois Friedrich Rogenhofer
- Julius Roger
- Per Abraham Roman
- Joseph Pierre Rondou
- Karl Ludwig Friedrich von Roser
- Pietro Rossi (scientist)
- Adolph Rössler
- Karl Rost
- S. A. von Rottemburg
- Fritz Rühl
S
- Pius Sack
- Carl Reinhold Sahlberg
- Felix Santschi
- Gyula Sáringer
- Johann Gottlieb Schaller
- Georg Ludwig Scharfenberg
- Ludwig Wilhelm Schaufuss
- Hermann Rudolph Schaum
- Otto Scheerpeltz
- Johann Rudolph Schellenberg
- Sigmund Schenkling
- Ignaz Schiffermüller
- Jørgen Matthias Christian Schiødte
- Wilhelm Schlüter
- Otto Schmiedeknecht
- Hermann Schmitz (entomologist)
- Johann Andreas Schnabl
- Heinrich Scholz (entomologist)
- Henri Schouteden
- Thor Hiorth Schøyen
- Wilhelm Maribo Schøyen
- Franz von Paula Schrank
- Theodor Emil Schummel
- Eugène Séguy
- Georg Semper
- Andrey Semyonov-Tyan-Shansky
- Takashi Shirozu
- Filippo Silvestri
- Julian Simashko
- Bror Yngve Sjöstedt
- Samuel Constantinus Snellen van Vollenhoven
- Pieter Cornelius Tobias Snellen
- Antoine Joseph Jean Solier
- Árpád Soós
- Ludwig Friedrich Sorhagen
- Adolph Speyer
- Arnold Spuler
- Philipp Ludwig Statius Müller
- Paul Stein (entomologist)
- Christian Stenhammar
S
T
- Sadao Takagi
- Rudolf Tancré
- Ernst Otto Wilhelm Taschenberg
- Johan Martin Jakob von Tengström
- Amedeo John Engel Terzi
- Oskar Theodor
- Theodor Otto Thieme
- Carl Gustaf Thomson
- Friedrich Thurau
- George Henry Kendrick Thwaites
- Mario Tirelli
- André Léon Tonnoir
- Henri Tournier
- Lambertus Johannes Toxopeus
- Alessandro Trotter
- Filip Trybom
- Frank Turk (biologist)
V
W
- Peter Fredrik Wahlberg
- Rudolf Graf Walderdorff
- Hans Daniel Johan Wallengren
- John Braithwaite Wallis
- Joseph Waltl
- John Walton (entomologist)
- Brisbane Charles Somerville Warren
- Erich Wasmann
- Julius Weise
- Emil Weiske
- Hermann Wernicke
- Fritz Ludwig Otto Wichgraf
- Janusz Wojtusiak
- Heinrich Wolf (entomologist)
- Johann Friedrich Wolff
- John Henry Wood
- William Wood (zoologist)
- Frederik Maurits van der Wulp
- Petr Wolfgang Wygodzinsky
Z
- Aleksei Konstantinovich Zagulyaev
- Dmytro Zajciw
- Emil Hermann Zeck
- Christian Daniel Zenker
- Johann Leopold Theodor Friedrich Zincken
- Jadwiga Złotorzycka
- Johann Jacob Zschach
- Fritz Konrad Ernst Zumpt
Y
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Subfields_of_zoology
W
Z
A
B
- James Eustace Bagnall
- John Hutton Balfour
- Charles Reid Barnes
- Edwin Bunting Bartram
- Richard Austin Bastow
- Palisot de Beauvois
- Thomas W. Naylor Beckett
- Friedrich von Berchtold
- Miles Joseph Berkeley
- Edward W. Berry
- Émile Bescherelle
- Otto Christian Blandow
- Hugo Leander Blomquist
- Carl Ludwig Blume
- Jean-Nicolas Boulay
- Robert Braithwaite (bryologist)
- Louis Alphonse de Brébisson
- Samuel Elisée Bridel-Brideri
- Elizabeth Gertrude Britton
- Nathaniel Lord Britton
- James Brodie (botanist)
- Viktor Ferdinand Brotherus
- Robert Brown (botanist, born 1773)
- Philipp Bruch
C
D
F
G
H
K
L
- Pierre Marie Édouard Lamy de la Chapelle
- Maurice Langeron
- Auguste François Le Jolis
- John Bernhard Leiberg
- Hubert Leitgeb (botanist)
- Leo Lesquereux
- Henry William Lett
- Francis Lewis (botanist)
- Karl Gustav Limpricht
- Harald Lindberg
- Johann Bernhard Wilhelm Lindenberg
- John Lindley
- Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link
- Carl Linnaeus
- Leopold Loeske
- Wilhelm Lorch
- Paul Günther Lorentz
M
- John Macoun
- Caro Benigno Massalongo
- Karl Maximovich
- David Meese
- Archibald Menzies
- Franz Meyen
- Charles Meylan
- André Michaux
- Carl August Julius Milde
- Conrad Moench
- Hugo von Mohl
- Daniel Matthias Heinrich Mohr
- Wilhelm Mönkemeyer
- Camille Montagne
- Ferdinand von Mueller
- Heinrich Gustav Mühlenbeck
- Karl Müller (bryologist)
- Walther Otto Müller
R
S
- Lidija Ivanovna Savic-Ljubickaja
- Victor Félix Schiffner
- Karl Schliephacke
- Franz von Paula Schrank
- Christian Friedrich Schwägrichen
- Aaron John Sharp
- Thomas Robertson Sim
- John Kunkel Small
- Annie Morrill Smith
- James Edward Smith
- Kurt Polycarp Joachim Sprengel
- Richard Spruce
- William C. Steere
- Kaspar Maria von Sternberg
- James Stirling (judge)
- Ilma Grace Stone
- William Starling Sullivant
W
- Carl Friedrich Warnstorf
- William Walter Watts
- Fritz von Wettstein
- William Weymouth
- Harold Leslie Keer Whitehouse
- William Robert Sherrin
- Robert Statham Williams
- William Withering
H
H
Z
M
T
- Isabella Abbott
- Robert Bye
- Paul Alan Cox
- Tony Cunningham
- Wade Davis
- James A. Duke
- Nina Etkin
- Maria Fadiman
- Erna Gunther
- Kathleen Harrison
- John William Harshberger
- Dennis McKenna
- Terence McKenna
- Gary Paul Nabhan
- Jonathan Ott
- Keewaydinoquay Peschel
- Andrea Pieroni
- Luigi Piacenza
- Mark Plotkin
- Timothy Plowman
- Cassandra L. Quave
- Jan Salick
- Giorgio Samorini
- Richard Evans Schultes
- Daniel Siebert
- Constantino Manuel Torres
- Nancy Turner
- Ina Vandebroek
- Gustav Vilbaste
- Ulrich Willerding
- James Wong
P
Z
Notable gardeners
The list follows gardeners or garden designers by occupation. It includes garden designers and landscape gardeners involved chiefly in garden design, and expert writers or broadcasters on the subject.
- John Abercrombie (1726–1806), Scottish horticulturalist and garden writer
- Chris Baines (living), English horticulturalist and naturalist
- Luis Barragán (1902–1988), Mexican planner of public gardens
- Peter Beales (1936–2013), English rose grower
- Chris Beardshaw (born 1969), English garden designer, writer and broadcaster
- Edward Augustus Bowles (1865–1954), English horticulturalist, plantsman and writer
- Lancelot "Capability" Brown (1716–1783), English landscape architect
- Toby Buckland (born 1969), English gardener, broadcaster and writer
- Stefan Buczacki (born 1945), English horticulturalist, botanist and broadcaster
- Edward Ashdown Bunyard (1878–1939), English apple breeder and market gardener
- Susan Campbell (living), English writer on kitchen gardens
- Percival Stephen Cane (1881–1976), English garden designer and writer
- Alan Chadwick (1909–1980), English master gardener and organic farmer
- Beth Chatto (1926–2018), English creator of gardens at Elmstead Market showing gardening under extreme conditions
- Harold Basil Christian (1871–1950), South African/Rhodesian farmer, botanist and gardener
- Carolus Clusius (1526–1609), Flemish botanist and scientific horticulturist
- Nigel Colborn (living), garden broadcaster
- Brenda Colvin (1897–1981), landscape architect and garden designer
- Herbert Cowley (1885–1967), botanist and garden writer
- Rachel De Thame (born 1961), English gardener and broadcaster
- Esther Deans, Australian pioneer of "no-dig gardening"
- Emily Dickinson (1830–1886), American botanist and gardener
- Charlie Dimmock (born 1966), English gardener and broadcaster
- Harry Dodson (1919–2005), English kitchen gardener
- George Don (1798–1856), Scottish botanist
- Monty Don (born 1955), English garden broadcaster
- Andrew Jackson Downing (1815–1852), American landscape designer
- Henry Nicholson Ellacombe (1822–1916), English plantsman and garden writer
- Helena Rutherfurd Ely (1858–1920), American gardening author
- John Evelyn (1620–1706), English diarist, scholar and gardener
- Reginald Farrer (1880–1920), English plant collector and garden writer
- Jane Fearnley-Whittingstall (born 1939), English garden designer and landscape architect
- Xenia Field (1894–1998), English garden writer
- Ian Hamilton Finlay (1925–2006), Scottish artist and gardener
- Margery Fish (1892–1969), English cottage gardener and garden writer
- Bob Flowerdew (living), English organic gardener and broadcaster
- Alys Fowler (living), English gardener and broadcaster
- Robin Lane Fox (born 1946), English garden writer
- Robert Gathorne-Hardy (1902–1973), English garden writer
- Roy Genders (1913–1985), English garden writer
- Samuel Gilbert (died c. 1692), English writer on floriculture
- William Sawrey Gilpin (1761/1762–1843), English landscape designer
- Pippa Greenwood (living), English plant pathologist and broadcaster
- C. Z. Guest (1920–2003), New York Post gardening columnist
- Geoff Hamilton (1936–1996), English gardener, broadcaster and writer
- Ralph Hancock (1893–1950), Welsh landscape gardener and writer
- Joseph Harrison (1798–1856), English horticulturalist
- Robert Hart (1913–2000), English forest gardener
- Roy Hay (1910–1989), English horticulturalist and garden writer and broadcaster
- D. G. Hessayon (born 1928), English garden writer
- Shirley Hibberd (1825–1890), English garden writer
- Thomas Hill (born c. 1528), English garden writer
- Robert Hogg (1818–1897), Scottish nurseryman and botanist
- Percy Izzard (1877–1968), English garden writer
- Gertrude Jekyll (1843–1932), English garden designer
- Geoffrey Jellicoe (1900–1996), English landscape architect and garden designer
- Susan Jellicoe (1907–1986), English plantswoman and garden writer
- George William Johnson (1802–1886), English garden writer
- William Kent (c. 1685–1748), English landscape architect
- Louisa Boyd Yeomans King (1863–1948), American gardener and author
- Antony King-Deacon (1941–2005), English gardening writer
- Noel Kingsbury (living), English garden designer and writer
- Carol Klein (born 1945), English gardener, writer and broadcaster
- Roy Lancaster (born 1937), English plantsman and writer
- Batty Langley (1696–1751), English garden designer and writer
- André Le Nôtre (1613–1700), French landscape architect
- Peter Joseph Lenné (1789–1866), Prussian landscape architect
- Arabella Lennox-Boyd (born 1938), Italian-born English garden designer
- Roddy Llewellyn (born 1947), English gardener and author
- Christopher Lloyd (1921–2006), English gardener and garden writer
- Claire Loewenfeld (1899–1974), German-born English herbalist
- Tony Lord (living), English gardener and garden writer
- Jane C. Loudon (1807–1858), English garden writer
- Mary McMurtrie (1902–2003), Scottish botanical artist and horticulturalist
- Patrick Neill (1776–1851), Scottish naturalist and horticulturalist
- Beverley Nichols (1898–1983), English author of gardening and other books
- J. C. U. Niedermann (1810 – post-1865), American professional gardener in Wisconsin
- Frederick Law Olmsted (1822–1903), American designer and father of American landscape architecture
- Mirabel Osler (1925–2016), English garden designer and writer
- Russell Page (1906–1985), English landscape architect
- Anna Pavord (born 1940), English gardening writer
- Eleanor Perenyi (1918–2009), American gardener and author
- Frances Perry (1907–1993), English gardener, writer and broadcaster
- Sarah Raven (born 1963), English gardener and broadcaster
- John Rea (died 1681), English nursery gardener and writer
- Humphrey Repton (1752–1818), English landscape designer
- William Robinson (1838–1935), Irish gardener/journalist prompting English cottage garden movement
- Katie Rushworth (born 1983), English gardening designer and broadcaster
- Anne Scott-James (1913–2009), English gardening writer
- Peter Seabrook (born 1935), English garden writer and broadcaster
- Gay Search (living), English gardening broadcaster and writer
- Philip Morton Shand (1888–1960), English pomologist
- W. E. Shewell-Cooper (1900–1982), English no-dig, organic gardener
- George Sinclair (1787–1834), Scottish gardener
- Geoffrey Smith (1928–2009), English gardener and broadcaster
- Mary Spiller (1924–2019), English horticulturalist
- Andy Sturgeon (born 1965 or 1966), English garden designer and writer
- Joe Swift (born 1965), English garden designer and journalist
- Anne Swithinbank (born 1957), English horticulturalist and broadcaster
- Stephen Switzer (1682–1745), English garden designer and exponent of landscape gardening
- Patrick Synge (1910–1982), English botanist and plant hunter
- Christopher Thacker (1931–2018), English garden historian
- Theophrastus (c. 371 – c. 287 BCE), Greek author of Enquiry into Plants and On the Causes of Plants
- Graham Stuart Thomas (1909–2003), English botanist and rose gardener
- Percy Thrower (1913–1988), English gardener and broadcaster
- Alan Titchmarsh (born 1949), English gardener and broadcaster
- John Tradescant the Elder (1570s – 1638), English naturalist and gardener
- John Tradescant the younger (1608–1662), English botanist and gardener
- Inigo Triggs (1876–1923), English formal garden designer
- Roger Turner (living), English garden designer
- Rosemary Verey (1918–2001), English garden designer and writer
- Edna Walling (1896–1973), Australian garden designer, writer and photographer
- Rosamund Marriott Watson (1860–1911) English garden writer, The Heart of a Garden
- Edith Wharton (1862–1937), American novelist and landscape architect
- Thomas Whately (1726–1822), English landscape gardening writer
- Albert Wilson (1903–1996), American botanist, landscape architect, author and broadcaster
- Andrew Wilson (living), English garden designer
- Matthew Wilson (living), English garden designer and writer
- Frances Garnet Wolseley, 2nd Viscountess Wolseley (1872–1936), English garden writer and instructor
- Gabrielle van Zuylen (1933–20190), French gardener and garden writer
W
S
- Souseiseki
- Pomona Sprout
- Suiseiseki
-
V
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rose_breeders
A
- David C.H. Austin (1926–2018), British breeder of English-style roses including the 'Wife of Bath'
B
Henry Bennett (1823–1890)- René Barbier (1845–1931), of Barbier Frères & Compagnie, an early twentieth-century French company based near Orléans (France), produced some very popular Ramblers including 'Albéric Barbier' (1900), 'Paul Transom' (1901), 'Alexandre Girault' (1909), and 'Albertine' (1921). Most of Barbier's climbers can be found in the Roseraie de L'Haÿ in L'Haÿ-les-Roses near Paris.[1]
- Peter Beales was a specialist in classic and species roses, preserving many old and wild roses at his Norfolk nursery and also introducing 70 new cultivars. He was also the author of several classic books on roses.[2]
- Joséphine de Beauharnais (Empress Josephine) was the first great collector of roses in the modern Western world, and her horticulturalist André Dupont pioneered the development of new hybrids using controlled pollination at her Malmaison estate. She has been called the godmother of modern rosomaniacs.[3]
- Henry Bennett (1823–1890) was one of the first rosarians to systematically breed roses. His hybrids, between Teas and Hybrid Perpetuals, were called Hybrides de Thé or Hybrid Teas. Important cultivars are the Hybrid Tea 'Lady Mary Fitzwilliam' (1882), a parent of 'Mme. Caroline Testout' and the Hybrid Perpetuals 'Captain Hayward' (1893) and 'Mrs. John Laing' (1887).[4]
- Johannes Böttner (1861–1919), a German horticulturist who created several new rose cultivars, e.g. 'Frankfurt' and 'Fragezeichen'.
- Griffith Buck, professor of horticulture at Iowa State University from 1948 to 1985, hybridized nearly 90 rose varieties known for disease resistance and winter hardiness, including 'Applejack', 'Folksinger' and 'Prairie Princess'.[5]
- Georges Bugnet, French Canadian writer and plant hybridiser who spent 25 years breeding roses[6] which were hardy in the cold winters of Alberta. Introduced 'Thérèse Bugnet' (named after his sister) in 1950.[6][7]
C
The Hybrid Tea 'Just Joey' (Cants of Colchester 1972) was inducted in the Rose Hall of Fame in 1994- Cants of Colchester, in Essex, is the UK's oldest firm of commercial rose growers. Notable introductions include 'Mrs B.R. Cant' and 'Just Joey'.[8]
- Tom Carruth, who has worked for Jackson & Perkins, Armstrong Roses and Weeks Rose Growers, has created more than 100 rose varieties, including eleven All America Rose Selections (AARS). He is currently the E.L. and Ruth B. Shannon Curator of the Rose Collections at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California.[9]
- Alister Clark was an amateur nurseryman based near Melbourne, who introduced more than 130 new roses suitable for the Australian climate. Notable introductions include 'Lorraine Lee' and 'Squatter's Dream'.[10]
- Conard-Pyle Co. introduced the rose 'Peace' to the US and established the marque Star Roses. 'Peace' was bred by Meilland of France (where it was introduced as 'Mme A. Meilland'); Conard-Pyle acted as Meilland's US agents, and the rose was renamed for the US market when it was introduced at the end of the Second World War.
- Pierre Antoine Marie Crozy, of Avoux & Crozy, Lyon, was a nineteenth-century French rose breeder.
D
Pedro Dot (1885–1976)- Jackson Thornton Dawson, of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, created the first hybrids of Rosa wichurana and pioneered the use of R. rugosa and the species type of R. multiflora in rose breeding.
- De Ruiter Innovations based in De Kwakel, The Netherlands, is a company breeding and developing roses since the 1920s.[11]
- Georges Delbard of Allier, France is more famous for new varieties of fruit tree, but among his nursery's roses are 'Centenaire de Lourdes', 'Altissimo' and 'Papa Delbard'.[12]
- Dickson Roses, located near Belfast introduced its first roses in 1886, focusing on breeding Hybrid Teas that could stand up to the Irish climate. Successes include 'Shot Silk' and 'Grandpa Dickson' and, more recently, 'Elina' and 'Tequila Sunrise'.[13]
- Pedro Dot put Spanish rose growing on the map and is best known for the shrub 'Nevada' and his work to improve the flower shape of miniature varieties.[8][14]
- Claude and Marie Ducher were Lyon hybridisers and nurserymen (parents-in-law of Joseph Pernet-Ducher), whose roses include the noisette 'Rêve d'Or', the tea rose 'Marie van Houtte'.[15] and the award-winning polyantha 'Cécile Brünner'.
- André Dupont was a French horticulturalist who pioneered the creation of new rose cultivars through controlled pollination. He was employed by the Empress Josephine to use her collection of roses to create new roses, including the "Dupont rose" (R. 'Dupontii').[16]
F
- Olive Fitzhardinge was the first Australian rose breeder to patent her work. Her three surviving roses 'Warrawee', 'Lady Edgeworth David' and 'Lubra' can be seen in Australian collections.
- Eugenio Fojo was a Spanish rose breeder and the founder of 'La Florida', the most influential plant nursery and garden design firm in northern Spain and the Basque Country in the 1930s. His rose 'Irene Churruca' is still sold as one of the classic roses of that era.
- Fryer's Roses, based in Knutsford, Cheshire, UK, is a long-established family firm with notable international successes, including the All-America Rose Selection winners 'Warm Wishes' (also known as 'Sunset Celebration') and 'Day Breaker'.[8] They are also responsible for the award-winning pink and gold tea rose 'Britannia'.[17]
G
Rudolf Geschwind (1829–1910)- Rudolf Geschwind (1829–1910) was a Austro-Hungarian amateur rose breeder who introduced 140 new varieties, focusing on winter hardiness and vigour. His creations include 'Gruss an Teplitz', which was included into the Old Rose Hall of Fame in 2000, 'Zigeunerknabe' (synonym 'Gypsy Boy') Geschwind also wrote the first German book about rose breeding (Die Hybridation und Sämlingszucht der Rosen), which was published in 1886.
- Jean-Marie Gonod was a French rosarian, working for the Parc de la Tête d’Or in Lyon.
- Jules Gravereaux built the first garden devoted exclusively to roses, the Roseraie de L'Haÿ. He created 27 new cultivars, primarily for rose oil production – the cultivar 'Rose à parfum de L'Haÿ', among others.
- Jean-Baptiste André Guillot (9 December 1827 – 6 September 1893), son of Jean-Baptiste Guillot, and therefore referred to as Guillot Fils, was a pioneering rose hybridizer in Lyons, France, in the later half of the 19th Century. He introduced roses from 1850 to about 1887. He is famous for producing the first Hybrid Tea, 'La France', introduced in 1867.
H
'Alexander' by Harkness- Harkness Roses, in Hertfordshire, UK is best known for 'Ena Harkness' (at one time reputed to be the best-selling red Hybrid Tea in the world and actually bred by amateur rosarian Albert Norman). Other famous introductions include 'Alexander', 'Compassion' and 'Margaret Merril'.[18]
- Nicolai Anders von Hartwiss was a Livonian-born Russian botanist, plant explorer and plant breeder, who created more than 100 varieties of roses at the Nikita Garden.[19] Two are still growing at the Alupka Palace: 'Comtesse Elisabeth Woronzof' 1833 and 'Belle de Nikita' 1833, thought by some to be the rose imported into France and sold as 'Maréchal Niel'.[20]
- Roy Hennessey was a rose nurseryman in Scappoose, Oregon in the early part of the 20th century. He published works on rose cultivation that often countered prevailing practices.
- Albert Hoffmann was a German rosarian and one of the founders of the "Sangerhausen Rosarium". He named the cultivar 'Alice Hoffman' after his daughter.
J
- Jackson & Perkins was a hugely influential American rose grower. The company's early success was 'Dorothy Perkins', but under Eugene Boerner the focus on developing Floribundas led to many All-America Rose Selection honours.[18][21]
- Henri Antoine Jacques (1782–1866) was a breeder of several French roses, under the patronage of King Louis Philippe I.
- Brad Jalbert is a Canadian rose hybridizer, known for introducing the 'Loretta Lynn Van Lear' rose,[22] the 'Marylou Whitney' rose[23] and the 'Royal City Rose'[24] which commemorated the anniversary of the city of New Westminster, British Columbia.
K
- Ketten Frères,[25] (1867–1949) Luxembourg. Ketten Frères was a company based in Luxembourg created by Jean and Evrard Ketten. They notably created Grande-Duchesse Charlotte (1939 Goldmedaille in Rom).
- Hermann Kiese (1865–1923) was a German rosarian. He is one of the founders of the Verein Deutscher Rosenfreunde and was chief editor of the magazine Rosen-Zeitung for five years. Notable cultivars he introduced are 'Tausendschön' (1906), 'Otto von Bismarck' (1908) and 'Gruß an Frankfurt' (1918).
- George Robert Knight was an Australian rose breeder.
- W. Kordes' Sons, based in Sparrieshoop in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, is one of the most innovative rose breeders and growers, and responsible for the early flowering "Frühlings" series, the Kordesii Hybrids and many famous Hybrid Tea and Floribunda roses, including 'Crimson Glory' and 'Iceberg' ('Schneewittchen').
L
- Peter Lambert was a German rose breeder from Trier, who bred many original rose varieties including 'Frau Karl Druschki', 'Adam Messerich' and 'Mozart'. He was a founder of the Verein Deutscher Rosenfreunde (German Rose Society), was a jurist for several rose competitions (Saint Petersburg, Paris, London, etc.) and helped establish the Europa-Rosarium at Sangerhausen.
- Henri Lédéchaux was a French rosarian and the breeder of 'American Beauty' (1875)
- Louis Lens was a Belgian rose breeder. His cultivars 'Pascali' was chosen as World's Favourite Rose in 1991.
M
- Sam McGredy refers to 4 generations of Northern Irish rose hybridizers. Sam McGredy I founded the family nursery in 1880. Sam McGredy II focused the nursery on roses in 1895. Sam McGredy III took over in 1926, and was the first to name roses after family members. Sam McGredy IV moved operations to New Zealand in 1974 to escape The Troubles, and focused on Hybrid Teas and Grandifloras, including 'Paddy Stephens', 'New Zealand', and 'Kathryn McGredy'; and the hand-painted roses such as 'Regensberg'.[26]
- Meilland family made its name and fortune with 'Mme A. Meilland' ('Peace'), and has continued to be at the forefront of rose breeding, with varieties such as 'Bonica '82' and 'Swany'.
- Ralph S. Moore, the California-based breeder of more than 500 roses, is known as 'the father of Modern Miniatures' and was a hugely influential figure in the development of commercial approaches to rose hybridization.
- Hilda Murrell (1906–1984) was an English rose grower, naturalist, diarist and campaigner against nuclear energy and weapons. She led Edwin Murrell Ltd from 1937 to 1970 and was an internationally respected rose-grower and authority on rose species, old-fashioned varieties and miniature roses.
N
- Louis Claude Noisette was a French botanist. The Noisette roses were named after him.
- Pierre Notting was a Luxembourgian rosarian known for his breeding of rose cultivars. With his friend Jean Soupert, he established the "Soupert & Notting" company specializing in growing roses in Limpertsberg.
P
Joseph Pernet-Ducher (1859–1928)- Paul was a Hertfordshire, UK nursery first located in Broxbourne, later in Cheshunt. The nursery was originally run by Adam Paul and was known as Paul and son, later as The Old Nursery. His son William started his own nursery (Royal Nurseries) in Waltham Cross,[27] wrote a book about roses (The Rose Garden-1888[28]) and introduced new varieties. His grandson George, who also owned the nursery, introduced hybrids such as Cheshunt. Collectively, Paul is known today for varieties such as 'Paul's Lemon Pillar' and 'Paul's Scarlet Climber'. Experimental hybrids using species roses resulted in choice varieties such as 'Mermaid'.[29] They are still widely available.
- Joseph Pemberton was an Anglican clergyman and amateur rosarian who set out to breed 'old fashioned' roses. The resulting Hybrid Musks include 'Felicia' and 'Penelope'. On his death, the nursery passed to his gardener J.A. Bentall, who produced 'Buff Beauty' and the Polyantha 'The Fairy'.
- Lord Penzance was a noted British judge and rose breeder, creating among others the varieties 'Lady Penzance' and 'Jeanie Deans'.
- Jean Pernet, père was a Lyon nurseryman whose notable roses include the Moss variety 'Louis Gimard' and the Hybrid Perpetual 'Baronne Adolphe de Rothschild'.[30]
- Joseph Pernet-Ducher was among the first rose breeders to focus on developing the new Hybrid Tea class. His introductions include 'Mme Caroline Testout' and 'Soleil d'Or'- forerunner of 20th century yellow and orange roses.[31]
- Poulsen, the Danish rose dynasty, was established in 1878 by Dorus Theus Poulsen (1851–1925) and originally focused on breeding roses hardy enough to withstand the Scandinavian climate. Later introductions notable for their form and colour include 'Chinatown' (1963)[32] and 'Ingrid Bergman' (1984). The nursery developed a number of successful ground cover (landscape) roses, including 'Kent' (1988).[33] Today, Poulsen Roser A/S is managed by the founder's great-grand daughter Pernille and her husband Mogens Olesen.
R
- Frank Riethmuller (1884–1965) was an Australian rose breeder, known to have released 26 roses of which ten are still available, while many have been lost.[34]
- Rose Barni in Tuscany specialises in roses for Mediterranean climates. Notable successes include 'Castore' and 'Polluce', and striped varieties such as 'Rinascimento' and 'Missoni'.[35]
- Rosen Tantau is a German rose breeding company founded in 1906 by Mathias Tantau sen. (1882–1953). His son Mathias Tantau jun. (1912–2006) led the nursery until 1985, when it was sold to Hans-Jürgen Evers (1940–2007), whose son Christian Evers is managing the company today. Notable cultivars developed by Rosen Tantau include 'Polarstern', 'Super Star' and 'Fragrant Cloud'.
S
George Schoener (1864–1941)- George Schoener was a Roman Catholic priest known for his experiments in rose breeding, especially in the use of wild species. Only two of his creations survive today: 'Arrilaga' and 'Schoener's Nutkana'.
- Jean Soupert was a Luxembourg-born floriculturist, who specialized in breeding rose cultivars, working with Pierre Notting in "Soupert & Notting".
- Suzuki Seizo was a Japanese rose breeder and director of the Keisei Rose Research Institute[36] since 1958. His international successes include 'Olympic Torch', 'Mikado' and 'Ferdy'.[18]
T
- Mathias Tantau is a rose breeding company located at Uetersen, Germany. Founded in 1906, it has introduced some 350 cultivars and is responsible for popular roses such as 'Super Star' (1960), 'Fragrant Cloud' (1963) and 'Black Magic' (1997).
- George Clifford Thomas (1873–1932) was an American golf course architect, botanist and author, who began breeding roses on Bloomfield Farm in 1912, cultivating over thousand varieties and creating some new hybrids, e.g. 'Bloomfield Abundance'.
- George Thomson is a Scottish-born South Australian rose breeder of over 50 cultivars, including 'Crown Princess Mary' (2006), 'Mawson' (2001) and 'Howard Florey' (1998).
V
- Jean-Pierre Vibert was a prolific early rose hybridizer, responsible for many older roses still found in gardens today. 'Aimee Vibert' (1828), one of his Noisettes, was named for his daughter.
- Dr. Walter van Fleet worked for the US Department of Agriculture, focusing on crops, but also developing roses designed to thrive in the American climate. His introductions include 'American Pillar' and 'Dr W. Van Fleet'. After his death, his seedlings – including 'Mary Wallace', 'Breeze Hill' and 'Glenn Dale' – were introduced by the American Rose Society as 'dooryard climbers'.[37]
'Fourth of July' by Tom Carruth for Weeks Roses- Verein Deutscher Rosenfreunde, a German society of rose breeders
W
- Weeks Roses (with Tom Carruth) is a California rose company that has focused on innovations in colour, form and vigour. Its roses include 'Night Time', 'Stainless Steel', 'Fourth of July' and 'Hot Cocoa'.[38]
- William Warriner was an American rose breeder (1922-1991), who worked with Jackson & Perkins for 25 years, and is recognized for developing over 150 rose varieties, including 19 All-America Rose Selections winners.[39]
See also

Comments
Post a Comment