Charles Thomas Brues
Charles Thomas Brues (June 20, 1879, Wheeling – July 22, 1955, Crescent City, Florida) was an American entomologist.
Biography
He studied at the University of Texas at Austin and at Columbia University. He was appointed field agent of the Bureau of Entomology, United States Department of Agriculture 1904-05, curator of invertebrate zoology in the Milwaukee Public Museum 1905-09, and then became instructor in economic entomology at Harvard University.
His contributions on embryology and the habits of insects, notably the Hymenoptera — ants, bees, etc., and Diptera — mosquitoes, flies, fleas, etc., are highly instructive. He was editor of the Bulletin of the Wisconsin Natural History Society 1907-09, and in 1910 was appointed editor of Psyche, a journal of entomology.
In 1913, while employed at the Bussey Institution, he was part of a three-person team (along with Ernest Tyzzer and Dr. Richard P. Strong) that studied tropical diseases in Peru and Ecuador. [1]
Works
- with Axel Leonard Melander (1878-1962), A Key to the Families of North American Insects (1915). Scanned version
- Insects and Human Welfare (1920, reprinted 1947).
- Classification of Insects (1931).
- Insect Dietary : An Account of the Food Habits of Insects (1945).
Notes
- ↑ "Science Notes". Evening Star (Washington DC). September 7, 1913. Retrieved November 7, 2015 – via Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.
References
- Allen G. Debus (Ed.) (1968). World Who’s Who in Science. A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Scientists from Antiquity to the Present. Chicago: Marquis-Who’s Who. xvi + 1855 p.
- French Wikipedia
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Brues, Charles Thomas". Encyclopedia Americana.
External links
- Works by or about Charles Thomas Brues in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
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