Biography:Gabrielle Howard

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Short description: British botanist (1876–1930)
Gabrielle Howard
Photo of Gabrielle Howard.jpg
Born
Gabrielle Louise Caroline Matthaei

Kensington, London, England
Died18 August 1930(1930-08-18) (aged 53)
Genoa
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
Spouse(s)Albert Howard
Scientific career
FieldsPlant physiology

Gabrielle Louise Caroline Howard (née Matthaei; 3 October 1876 – 18 August 1930), usually cited as G. L. C. Matthaei, was an English plant physiologist and economic botanist who advocated organic farming.

Education and photosynthesis experiments

Matthaei was born in Kensington in a family of German, Swiss and French ancestry. She was the daughter of the musician Louise Henriette Elizabeth Sueur and the commission merchant Carl Hermann Ernst Matthaei, she had a brother and three younger sisters, including Louise Howard.[1] Matthaei attended North London Collegiate School for Girls and Newnham College, Cambridge, and later worked as assistant to Frederick Blackman, producing significant work on cellular respiration. Between 1902 and 1905, Blackman and Matthaei set out to discover the role of temperature in photosynthesis and performed the first such experiments, finding that carbon fixation is based on biochemical reactions which depend on temperature.[2] Although the experiment is inaccurately known as the Blackman Reaction, a significant part of the work was carried out by Matthaei and the 1904 paper communicated to the Royal Society by Francis Darwin bears only her name.[3]

Agricultural research

In 1905, she married Albert Howard, imperial economic botanist to the government of India. The couple invariably did their research together and soon became known as the "Sidney and Beatrice Webb of India". In 1913, Gabrielle Howard became the second imperial economic botanist to the government of India. Between 1905 and 1924, the Howards carried out research on crops such as cotton and wheat at their experiment station at Pusa, and ran a fruit experiment station at Quetta from 1912 until 1919. They argued that plants should be studied in the context of their habitat and that food grown in humus-rich soil would be beneficial to health. Beginning in 1924, they oversaw the planning and construction of the Institute of Plant Industry at Indore. She suddenly died in Genoa shortly before their planned retirement and return to England. The next year, her widower married her sister Louise. Neither marriage produced children.[4]

Publications

References

  1. Oldfield, Sybil (2004). "Howard, Louise Ernestine". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37576. http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/37576. Retrieved 1 January 2013.  (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. Möller, Detlev (2010), Air: Chemistry of the Climate System, Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3110197914 
  3. Ayres, Peter G. (2008), The Aliveness Of Plants: The Darwins at the Dawn of Plant Science, Pickering & Chatto, ISBN 978-1851969708 
  4. Conford, Philip, "Howard, Sir Albert", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press), http://www.oxforddnb.com/templates/article.jsp?articleid=56157&back=, retrieved 2 January 2013 

External links