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Clara H. Hasse

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Clara Henriette Hasse (1880 - 10 Ọktoba 1926)bụ onye America na-ahụ maka ihe ọkụkụ nke nyocha ya lekwasịrị anya na pathology osisi. A maara ya maka ịchọpụta ihe kpatara citrus canker, nke na-eyi ihe ọkụkụ egwu na Deep South..

Akụkọ ndụ

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Hasse attended the University of Michigan. While at U of M, she was appointed an assistant in botany in 1902.[1] Hasse was a founding member of the Women's Research Club at U of M as women were not allowed in the Research Club at the time.[2] After graduating from the University of Michigan in 1903 with a PhB,[3][4] she went to Washington, D.C., to take up an appointment as assistant horticulturist and botanist in the Bureau of Plant Industry at the U.S. Department of Agriculture under Erwin Frink Smith, the USDA's pathologist-in-charge.[3] Hasse was one of the twenty assistants that Smith hired during his tenure at the USDA. She later worked at the Florida Agricultural Experiment Station.[5] Hasse died at her home in Muskegon, Michigan, aged 46.

Akwụkwọ ya "Pseudomonas citri, ihe kpatara citrus canker", nke e bipụtara na Journal of Agricultural Research na 1915, bụ onye mbụ chọpụtara ihe kpatara citrus canker. Ọ bụ ezie na mbụ a kwenyere na citrus canker sitere na fungoid, Hasse chọpụtara na nje bacteria dị na isi iyi ya.. Hasse wepụrụ nje bacteria, nke a maara ugbu a dị ka Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri[6][7]. E tinyere ọrụ ya na akwụkwọ akụkọ nke Ngalaba Ọrụ Ugbo iji gosipụta ọrịa nke osisi akụ na ụba.[8]

Thomas Swann Harding na-ekwu na nyocha a mere ka "n'ụzọ nchịkwa nke gbochiri ọrịa a ikpochapụ ihe ọkụkụ citrus na Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, na Texas" [9]

Akụkụ nke akwụkwọ

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Edemsibia

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  1. University of Michigan. Board of Regents.. Proceedings of the Board of Regents (1901-1906).
  2. Michigan (2000). The University of Michigan, an encyclopedic survey ... Wilfred B. Shaw, editor.. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Rossiter (September 1980). ""Women's Work" in Science, 1880-1910". Isis 71 (3): 381–398. DOI:10.1086/352540. 
  4. Michigan (1900-01-01). Calendar of the University of Michigan for .... The University. 
  5. Clara H. Hasse (1880?-1926). Collection Record. Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved on 30 March 2012.
  6. Jordan (1918). A text-book of general bacteriology. Philadelphia and London: W. B. Saunders company. DOI:10.5962/bhl.title.68463. 
  7. Citrus canker (en-US). Citrus canker. Retrieved on 2020-05-02.
  8. Killough (1926). "Department Bulletin No. 1366". United States Department of Agriculture. 
  9. Thomas Swann Harding (1947). Two Blades Of Grass. Norman University Of Oklahoma Press.