Anstruther Davidson

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Anstruther Davidson
Born(1860-02-19)February 19, 1860
DiedApril 3, 1932(1932-04-03) (aged 72)
Scientific career
FieldsDermatology, botany, and entomology
Author abbrev. (botany)Davidson
Signature

Anstruther Davidson (1860–1932) was a Scottish-American physician, professor of medicine, botanist, and entomologist.[2]

Biography

Born in Scotland, Davidson attended the University of Glasgow, where he graduated CM MB[3] in 1881 and received his higher MD in 1887. He served a medical internship in the Glasgow Western Infirmary and then went into private practice at Thornhill, Dumfriesshire. After some time spent in Vienna, he emigrated in 1889 to the United States.[1] He practiced medicine in Los Angeles and published papers in medical journals. He became an associate professor of dermatology at the University of Southern California, while simultaneously studying natural history and publishing papers on botany and entomology.[2]

After an extended stay in Clifton, Arizona, he published the first floristic account for that state and in 1923 collaborated with George L. Moxley to produce a flora of southern California. Davidson was particularly interested in the weeds of the Los Angeles area and published works such as "Changes in our weeds" (1907).[2]

In 1897 he married Alice Jane Merritt (1859–1931), author of California Plants in Their Homes: A Botanical Reader for Children (1898).[1][4]

Anstruther Davidson died at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles on April 3, 1932.[5]

Selected publications

  • Catalogue of the plants of Los Angeles County. Part 1. Phanerogamia. 1896.
  • Davidson, A. (1913). "Pellagra". California State Journal of Medicine. 11 (10): 420.
    PMID 18736069
    .
  • with George L. Moxley: Flora of southern California. Times-mirror press. 1923.

Eponyms

References

  1. ^ a b c "Davidson, Anstruther". The International Who's Who. 1912. p. 352.
  2. ^ a b c "Davidson, Anstruther (1860–1932)". JSTOR Global Plants.
  3. ^ "Year-Book for 1909–1910 with Announcements for 1910–1911". University of Southern California. 5 (1): 136. March 1910.
  4. ^ Davidson, Alice Merritt (1898). California Plants in Their Homes: A Botanical Reader for Children. B.R. Baumgardt.
  5. ^ "Noted Entomologist Dies". Los Angeles Times. April 4, 1932. p. 13. Retrieved December 14, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Davidson.