"During his long period on the academic staff of Salisbury’s scientific reputation rose steadily with the publication of a succession of research papers in botanical and other journals and of several important books, including The reproductive capacity of plants (1942), and also through his frequent and much acclaimed lectures to a wide range of botanical and horticultural audiences. He was President of the in 1928, Vice-President of the in 1928-9, and in 1933 he was elected a . In 1937 he became President of Section K of the and in 1939 was made Then in 1943 he was appointed to the Directorship of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, made vacant by the death of ."
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Academics from EnglandFellows of the Royal SocietyScience authorsNon-fiction authors from EnglandBotanists from England
Original Language: English
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Edward James Salisbury
(16 April 1886 – 10 November 1978) was an English botanist, field naturalist, plant photographer, and ecologist. He was appointed of botany in 1929, awarded a in 1936, and knighted in 1946.
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