Gustav Mann

Gustav Mann (1886 – 1916) was a German botanist who led expeditions in West Africa and was also a gardener at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

Born in Hanover in 1836, he was chosen by William Jackson Hooker, Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, to take part in William Balfour Baikie's expedition to West Africa. While there, he sent numerous specimens back to Kew.

He married Mary Anne Stovell in 1863.

His exploration of the Cameroon Mountains is described by Sir Richard Burton in Abeokuta and the Camaroon Mountains vol. 2

Mann later collected specimens in Darjeeling, India, before retiring to Munich, Germany, in 1891. He died in 1916

Some 349 species of plants, the genera Manniella Hook.f. and Manniophyton Muell. Arg.; and Mann's Spring on the Cameroon Mountain bear his name.

The standard author abbreviation G.Mann is used to indicate this individual as the author when citing a botanical name.

Read more about Gustav Mann:  Publications

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    Because it often happens that an old family, with traditions that are entirely practical, sober and bourgeois, undergoes in its declining days a kind of artistic transfiguration.
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