Ragnar Hult

Ragnar Hult in the early 1880s.

Ragnar Hult (4 March 1857 – 25 September 1899) was a Finnish botanist and plant geographer. He was a forerunner in developing a methodology for vegetation survey. He emphasized the physiognomy of vegetation and paid less attention to its ecology. His ideas were much-followed in Sweden, making him the real father of the "Uppsala school" in plant sociology.[1]

Ragnar Hult was the first (1881) to publish a comprehensive study of ecological succession as it is taking place in a given region. He was the first to recognize that a relatively large number of pioneer plant communities give way to a comparatively small number of relatively stable communities.[2]

Selected works

References

  1. Trass, H. & N. Malmer, 1978. “North European approaches to classification.” Pp 201–245 in R. H. Whittaker (ed.). Classification of plant communities. Dr. W. Junk Publ., den Haag.
  2. Cowles, Henry C. (1911): The causes of vegetational cycles. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 1 (1): 3–20.
  3. IPNI.  Hult.

Further reading


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