Charles Drechsler
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Charles Drechsler (May 1, 1892 – February 5, 1986) was an American mycologist with 45 years of research with the
United States Department of Agriculture The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) is the federal executive department responsible for developing and executing federal laws related to farming, forestry, rural economic development, and food. It aims to meet the needs of com ...
. He spent considerable time working with cereal fungal diseases, and the genus ''
Drechslera ''Drechslera'' is a genus of fungi. Many of the species in this genus are plant pathogens. Species The following species are accepted within ''Drechslera'':Drechslera S.Ito in GBIF Secretariat (2017). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist datase ...
'' was named after him. Drechsler also worked extensively on
oomycete Oomycota forms a distinct phylogenetic lineage of fungus-like eukaryotic microorganisms, called oomycetes (). They are filamentous and heterotrophic, and can reproduce both sexually and asexually. Sexual reproduction of an oospore is the resul ...
fungi and their interactions with vegetable plants. Drechsler was recognized as a leading authority on helminthosporia, oomycetes, and other
parasitic Parasitism is a close relationship between species, where one organism, the parasite, lives on or inside another organism, the host, causing it some harm, and is adapted structurally to this way of life. The entomologist E. O. Wilson ha ...
fungi.


Early life

Drechsler was born on May 1, 1892 in Wisconsin. He was raised by his parents Louis and Bertha Alvina Schultz Drechsler on a farm near the village of Butternut. Lois and Bertha were of German origin, and Charles spoke only German until learning English in school.


Education

Drechsler attended the
University of Wisconsin–Madison The University of Wisconsin–Madison (University of Wisconsin, Wisconsin, UW, UW–Madison, or simply Madison) is a public land-grant research university in Madison, Wisconsin. Founded when Wisconsin achieved statehood in 1848, UW–Madison ...
, where he started off studying engineering, but switched to botany after attending a mycology lecture. He earned his bachelor's degree in 1913, and went on to complete a Master of Science in
plant pathology Plant pathology (also phytopathology) is the scientific study of diseases in plants caused by pathogens (infectious organisms) and environmental conditions (physiological factors). Organisms that cause infectious disease include fungi, oomy ...
in 1914, producing a thesis on bacterial black rot of
crucifer A crucifer or cross-bearer is, in some Christian churches (particularly the Roman Catholic Church, Anglican Communion, Lutherans, and United Methodist Church), a person appointed to carry the church's processional cross, a cross or crucifix wit ...
s. Drechsler then enrolled at
Harvard University Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of high ...
, working alongside noted mycologist
Roland Thaxter Roland Thaxter (August 28, 1858 – April 22, 1932) was an American mycologist, plant pathologist, botanist, and entomologist, renowned for his contribution to the insect parasitic fungi— Laboulbeniales. His college education was completed a ...
. His dissertation involved the taxonomic placement of the genus
Actinomyces ''Actinomyces'' is a genus of the Actinomycetia class of bacteria. They all are gram-positive. ''Actinomyces'' species are facultatively anaerobic and they grow best under anaerobic conditions. ''Actinomyces'' species may form endospores, an ...
.


Employment at the U.S. Department of Agriculture

In 1917, Dr. Drechsler moved to Washington D.C., and began his career with the United States Department of Agriculture. His first position was an assistant with the Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering. Only a year later, Drechsler served with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers during World War I. He served for two years and then came back to work continuously with the USDA for the following decades. He was promoted from assistant pathologist (1924) to associate pathologist (1924) and then pathologist(1929). Dr. Drechsler began his research in cereal diseases. The Genus Drechslera was named after him by another mycologist. Dr. Drechsler was eventually moved from cereal disease research to vegetable disease research. He studied oomycete fungal plant diseases, many from the Genera Pythium, Phytophthora and Aphanomyces and identified several new species. He drew many illustrations of newly identified fungi. He published numerous papers (located in the Notable Works section below) on oomycetes that destroy nematodes, amoebae, and soil rhizopods. Dr. Drechsler was recognized for his extensive work by being named a fellow in the American Phytopathological Society in 1966 and named Distinguished Mycologist by the Mycological Society of America in 1984.


Personal life

Drechsler's wife, Mary Florence Morscher, was also a botanist and also worked at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The two met at a Washington Botanical Society annual dinner dance. They were married in 1930 and eventually had three children and remained married until Charles's death in 1986. The family were regular members at the Clarendon Methodist Church in Arlington, Virginia and later became members at the University Park United Methodist Church in College Park, Maryland. After retiring from the Department of Agriculture, Drechsler continued his research at his home near
Beltsville, Maryland Beltsville is a census-designated place (CDP) in northern Prince George's County, Maryland, United States. The community was named for Truman Belt, a local landowner. The 2020 census counted 20,133 residents. Beltsville includes the unincorporated ...
. During 20 years of post-retirement research, Drechsler collaborated with the Agricultural Research Service. Drechsler was outlived by his wife Mary Florence, son Charles, daughter Kathryn Finnegan of Flemington, and his younger son, Robert.


Works

* 1933. Morphological diversity among fungi capturing and destroying nematodes. Washington, ''J. Acad. Sci.'' 23:138-141. * 1933. Morphological features of some more fungi that capture and kill nematodes. Washington, ''J. Acad. Sci.'' 23:267-270. * 1933. Several more fungi that prey on nematodes. Washington, ''J. Acad. Sci''. 23:355-357. * 1933. Morphological features of some fungi capturing and killing amoebae. * 1934. Organs of capture in some fungi preying on nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 26:135-144. * 1934. Pedilospora dactylopaga n. sp., a fungus capturing and consuming testaceous rhizopods. ''Washington, L. Acad. Sci.'' 24:395-402. * 1935. Some conidial phycomycetes destructive to terricolous amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 27:6-40. * 1935. Some non-catenulateconidial phycomycetes preying on terricolous amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 27:176-223. * 1935. A new species of conidial phycomycete preying on nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 27:206-215. * 1935. A new mucedinaceous fungus capturing and consuming amoeba verrucosa" ''Mycologia'' 27:216-223. * 1936. A new species of Stylopage preying on nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 28:241-246. * 1936. New conidial phycomycetes destructive to terricolous amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 28:363-389. * 1936. A Fusarium-like species of Dactylella capturing and consuming testaceous rhizopods. Washington, ''J. Acad. Sci.'' 26:397-404. * 1937. New zoopagaceae destructive to soil rhizopods" ''Mycologia'' 29:229-249. * 1937. Some hyphomycetes that prey on free-living terricolous nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 29:447-552. * 1937. A species of Tridentaria preying on Difflugia constricta. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 27:391-398. * 1938. Two Hyphomycetes parasitic on oospores of root-rotting oomycetes" ''Phytopathology'' 28:81-103. * 1938. New zoopagaceae capturing and consuming soil amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 31:137-157. * 1939. A few new zoopagaceae destructive to large soil rhizopods" ''Mycologia'' 31:128-153. * 1939. Five new zoopagaceae destructive to rhizopods and nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 31:388-415. * 1940. Three fungi destructive to free-living terricolous nematodes. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 30:240-254. * 1940. Three new hyphomycetes preying on free-living terricolous nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 32:448-470. * 1941. Four phycomycetes destructive to nematodes and rhizopods" ''Mycologia'' 33:248-269. * 1941. Some hyphomycetes parasitic on free-living terricolous nematodes" ''Phytopathology'' 31:773-802. * 1941. Predaceous fungi. ''Biol. Rev.'' 16:265-290. * 1942. New species of Acaulopage and Cochlonema destructive to soil and amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 34:274-297. * 1942. Two zoophagous species of Acrostalagmus with multicellular Desmidiospora-like chlaymidiospores. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 32:343-350. * 1943. Antagonism and parasitism among some oomycetes associated with root rot. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 33:21-28 * 1943. Another hyphomycetous fungus parasitic on Pythium oospores" ''Phytopathology'' 33:227-233. * 1943. A new non-helicoid bispores Helicocephalum parasitizing nematode eggs" ''Mycologia'' 35:134-141. * 1943. A new nematode-capturing Dactylella and several related hyphomycetes" ''Mycologia'' 35:339-362. * 1943. Two new hasidiomyceteous fungi parasitic on nematodes. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 33:183-189. * 1944. Three hyphomycetes that capture nematodes in adhesive networks" ''Mycologia'' 36:138-171. * 1944. A species of Arhtrobotrys that captures springtails" ''Mycologia'' 36:382-2399 * 1945. Several additional phycomycetes subsisting on nematodes and amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 37:1-31. * 1946. A nematode-destroying phycomycete forming immotile spores in aerial evacuation tubes. ''Bull. Torrey Bot. Club'' 73:1-17. * 1946. A clamp-bearing fungus parasitic and predaceous on nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 38:1-23. * 1946. A new hyphomycete parasitic on a species of nematode" ''Phytopathology'' 36:213-217. * 1946. Three new Zoopagaceae subsisting on soil amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 38:120-143. * 1946. A species of Harsporium invading its nematode host from the stoma. ''Bull. Torrey Bot. Club.'' 73:557-564. * 1947. A nematode-strangling Dactylella with broad quadriseptate conidia" ''Mycologia'' 39:5-20. * 1947. Three Zoopagaceous fungi that capture and consume soil-inhabiting rhizopods" ''Mycologia'' 39:253-281. * 1947. Three new species of Zoopage predaceous on terricolous rhizopods" ''Mycologia'' 39:379-408. * 1948. Three Zoopagaceae that subsist by capturing soil amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 40:85-105. * 1949. A nematode-capturing fungus with anastomosing clamp-bearing hyphae" ''Mycologia'' 41:369-387. * 1950. Several species of Dactylella and Dactylaria that capture free-living nematodes" ''Mycologia'' 42:1-79. * 1950. A Dactylella with conidia resembling those of Dactylella stenobrocha in size and shape" ''Mycologia'' 42:367-373. * 1950. A Harposporium infecting eelworms by means of internally adhering awl-shaped conidia. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 40:405-409. * 1951. Various zoopagaceous fungi subsisting on protozoans and eelworms" ''Mycologia'' 43:161-185. * 1951. An entomophthoraceous tartigrade parasite producing small conidia on propulsive cells in spicate heads. ''Bull. Torrey Bot. Club.'' 78:183-200. * 1952. Another nematode-strangulating Dactylella and some related hyphomycetes" ''Mycologia'' 44:533-556. * 1952. Widespread distribution of Delacroxia coronate and other saprophytic Entomophthoraceae in plant detritus" ''Science'' 115:575-576. * 1954. A nematode-capturing fungus with clamp-connections and curved conidia. Washington, ''J. Acad Sci'' 44:82-85. * 1954. Production of aerial arthrospores by Harposporium bysmatosporium. ''Bull. Torrey Bot. Club.'' 81:411-413. * 1954. Some hyphomycetes that capture eelworms in southern States" ''Mycologia'' 46:762-782. * 1955. Additional species of Zoopagaceae subsisting on rhizopods and eelworms" ''Mycologia'' 47:364-388. * 1955. A new species of Rhopalomyces occurring in Florida. ''Bull. Torrey Bot. Club.'' 82:473-479. * 1957. A nematode-capturing phycomycete forming chlamydospores terminally on lateral branches" ''Mycologia'' 49:387-391. * 1959. Several zoopagaceae subsisting on a nematode and on some terricolous amoebae" ''Mycologia'' 51(6):787-823. * 1959. Two new species of Harposporium parasitic on nematodes. ''Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences. ''49(4):106-112. * 1960. A clamp-bearing fungus using stalked adhesive young chlamydospores in capturing amoebae. Sydowia, ''Annales Mycologici'' Ser. II 14:246-257. * 1961. Two additional species of Dactylella parasitic on Pythium oospores. Sydowia, ''Annales Mycologici'' Ser. II 15:92-97. * 1961. Some clampless hyphomycetes predacious on nematodes and rhizopods. Sydowia, ''Annales Mycologici'' Ser. II 15:92-97. * 1962. A nematode-capturing phycomycete with distally adhesive branches and proximally imbedded fusiform conidia" ''American Journal of Botany'' 49(10):1089- 1095. * 1963. A new nematode-destroying hyphomycete of the Genus Harposporium" ''American Journal of Botany'' 50(8):839-842. * 1963. A slender-spored Dactylella parasitic on Pythium oospores" ''Phytopathology'' 53(9):993-994. * 1965. A Harposporium parasitic on rotifers. ''Mycopathologia et Mycologia Applicata.'' 27:285-288. * 1965. A Tridentaria subsisting on testaceous rhizopods and Pythium oospores. Sydowia, ''Annales Mycologici'' Ser. II 18:359-362. * 1968. A nematode-destroying species of Cephalosporiopsis. Sydowia, ''Annales Mycologici'' Ser. II 22:194-198. * 1968. A new nematode-destroying Harposporium with slender helicoid conidia. Sydowia, ''Annales Mycologici'' Ser. II 22:189-193. * 1968. A new nematode-destroying Harposporium. ''Am. J. Bot.'' 55(10):1251-1253. * 1969. A Tulasnella parasitic on Amoebae terricola. ''Am. J. Bot.'' 56(10):1217-1220. * 1975. A nematode-destroying hyphomycete forming parallel multiseptate hyaline conidia in circular arrangement. ''Am. J. Bot.'' 62(10):1073-1077.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Drechsler, Charles American mycologists 1892 births 1986 deaths People from Ashland County, Wisconsin Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Agricultural and Life Sciences alumni People from Beltsville, Maryland