Nathan Cobb
Nathan Augustus Cobb (30 June 1859, in Spencer, Massachusetts – 4 June 1932, in Baltimore, Maryland) is known as "the father of nematology in the United States".
He provided the foundations for nematode taxonomy and described over 1000 different nematode species. An individual with a variety of skills, he made significant contributions to a number of scientific disciplines and the USDA Nematology Lab, originally established with him as the director, continues today.
He was the father of Frjeda Blanchard, the geneticist who first demonstrated Mendelian inheritance in reptiles.
Books by Cobb[]
This list can be accessed via the Biodiversity Heritage Library.[1] The list is incomplete.
- "A Nematode formula." (1890) Sydney : C. Potter
- "Nematodes, mostly Australian and Fijian." (1893) Sydney : F. Cunninghame & Co., printers
- "The sheep-fluke." (1897) Sydney : W. A. Gullick, gov't. printer
- "Letters on the diseases of plants." (1897) Sydney : W. A. Gullick, gov't. printer
- "Seed wheat: an investigation and discussion of the relative value as seed of large plump and small shrivelled grains." (1903) Sydney : W. A. Gullick, gov't. printer
- "Letters on the diseases of plants. Second series." (1904) Sydney : W. A. Gullick, gov't. printer
- "Methods of using the microscope, camera-lucida and solar projector for purposes of examination and the production of illustrations." (1905) Honolulu : Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association
- "Contributions to a science of nematology." (1914–35) Baltimore : Williams & Wilkins Co.
References[]
- Nathan Augustus Cobb: A Biography (including photos of Cobb)
- The Nathan A. Cobb Nematology Foundation
- Society of Nematologists
- ^ "Search Results for "Nathan Cobb"". Archived from the original on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2013.
- ^ IPNI. Cobb.
Categories:
- 1859 births
- 1932 deaths
- American biologists
- Nematologists
- People from Spencer, Massachusetts
- 19th-century American scientists
- 20th-century American scientists
- Scientists from Massachusetts
- American zoologist stubs