Hisao Migo (original) (raw)

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Japanese botanist

Hisao Migo
Born 1900
Died 1985
Nationality Japanese
Scientific career
Fields botany
Author abbrev. (botany) Migo

Hisao Migo (御江 久夫 Migo Hisao,[1] 1900–1985) was a Japanese botanist.[2]

Hisao Migo was employed at the Shanghai Science Institute from 1933 to 1945 during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai. During his employment at the Institute he made several botanical collecting trips to southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang.[2]

In 1936, Koiti Kimura identified 20 different species of Dendrobium being sold as shi-hu in Chinese markets, and with Hisao Migo he described a species new to science, D. crispulum, picked up from the drug market (Kimura and Migo, 1936).[3]

Selected publications

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  1. ^ 吳永華 (Tominaga) (15 August 2016). 早田文藏: 臺灣植物大命名時代 (Bunzō Hayata: The era of plant naming). 國立臺灣大學出版中心 (National University of Science Publishing Center). p. 199. ISBN 978-986-350-170-1. (See Bunzō Hayata.)
  2. ^ a b Hong, De-Yuan; Blackmore, Stephen, eds. (2015). ""Plant Exploration in China" by Chi-Ming Hu and Mark F. Watson". Plants of China: A Companion to the Flora of China. pp. 212–236 (p. 223). ISBN 9781107070172.
  3. ^ Teoh, Eng Soon (2016). Medicinal Orchids of Asia. Springer. p. 308. ISBN 9783319242743.
  4. ^ Keng, Claves Gen. & Spec. Gramin. Sinic. 152 1957 (IK)
  5. ^ Journ. Shanghai Sci. Inst., Sect. 3, iv. No. 17, 163 1939 (IK)
  6. ^ Fl. Taiwan ed. 2, 4: 116. 1998 (IK)
  7. ^ International Plant Names Index. Migo.

Data related to Hisao Migo at Wikispecies