Otto Lugger
Otto Lugger (16 September 1844 – 21 May 1901) was an American entomologist and botanist who served as the State Entomologist of the U.S. State of Minnesota.
Biography
[edit]Lugger was born in Hagen in the Prussian Province of Westphalia where his father was a chemistry professor. After studying at the Gymnasium in Hagen, he joined the Prussian army as a cavalry lieutenant. Along with his parents, the family moved to the United States in 1864, and Lugger found work as an engineer in the army.
While working on surveys around the Great Lakes, he also began to collect insect specimens and came to know C.V. Riley. When Riley became State Entomology of Missouri in 1868, Lugger became an assistant. He helped produce nine annual reports before 1875 when he married Lina Krokmann and moved to Baltimore to become curator of the collections of the Maryland Academy of Sciences. He became an assistant in the entomology division of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 1885. He was appointed entomologist and botanist at the Minnesota Station in 1888 and later became a state entomologist, a position he held until his death from pneumonia. Some of his work was on the control of chinch bugs using fungi, the spores of which he attempted to propagate, and investigations on locusts including the now extinct Rocky Mountain locust.[1][2][3][4]
Lugger died at his home in Saint Paul, Minnesota on 21 May 1901.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Howard, L.O. (1901). "Otto Lugger". Science. 13 (338): 980–981. Bibcode:1901Sci....13..980H. doi:10.1126/science.13.338.980. JSTOR 1628640. PMID 17729924.
- ^ Fitzharris, Joseph C. (1974). "Science for the Farmer: The Development of the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station 1868-1910". Agricultural History. 48 (1): 202–214. JSTOR 3741430.
- ^ Hodson, A. C. (1976). The Department of Entomology, Fisheries, and Wildlife 1888-1974 (Chronological and Somewhat Anecdotal) (PDF). University of Minnesota.
- ^ "Agricultural research through fifty years 1885-1935". Bulletin of the Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Minnesota. 328. 1936.
- ^ "Professor Otto Lugger". The San Francisco Call. St. Paul. 22 May 1901. p. 9. Retrieved 8 February 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
External links
[edit]- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 13 (1890) - A treatise on flax culture
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 16 (1891) - Sheep scab and how to cure it
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 17 (1891) - Migratory locusts in Minnesota in 1891
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 28 (1893) - The classification of insects and their relation to agriculture
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 37 (1894) - The chinch bug
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 43 (1895) - Insects injurious in 1895
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 48 (1896) - Insects injurious in 1896
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 55 (1897) - Grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, cockroaches, etc., of Minnesota
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 66 (1899) - Beetles injurious to fruit-producing plants
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 64 (1899) - The black rust or summer rust. The Hessian fly. Migratory locusts or grasshoppers
- Bulletin on the Agricultural Experiment Station. Number 69 (1900) - Bugs injurious to our cultivated plants