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  1. Hace 13 horas · Recordemos que, por otra parte, Beatrix Potter había dejado escrito en un complejo código un diario casi ininteligible. Sin embargo, en 1966 el mencionado escritor Leslie Linder consiguió descodificar ese diario y lo publicó en un libro con el título de The Journal of Beatrix Potter from 1881 to 1897.

  2. Beatrix Potter's first known fungal paintings date from 1887 and at least two paintings from this time still survive. Over the next few years she painted many more fungi but her serious study of fungi began in 1892 after her first fungal talk with the very knowledgeable and respected Scottish amateur naturalist Charles McIntosh (1839-1922).

  3. The Tale of the Linnean Society. Beatrix Potter and her interactions with the Linnean Society of London have been the subject of much scrutiny, particularly regarding her treatment by the Society, whose Executive Secretary publicly acknowledged in 1997 that Potter had been “treated scurvily”.

  4. De hecho, Potter fue una de primeras personas en sugerir que los líquenes eran en realidad producto de una relación simbiótica entre los hongos y las algas, pero su único intento por publicar sus estudios se topó con nuevas dificultades: no se le permitió leer ella misma su propio estudio ante la sociedad científica, por lo que acabó ...

  5. 3 de ene. de 2024 · Incluso le negaron el derecho a leer sus propios estudios ante la comunidad científica, entre ellos, uno de los primeros aportes a la simbiosis entre hongo y alga que forman los líquenes.

  6. 28 de jul. de 2015 · Beatrix Potter (July 28, 1866–December 22, 1943) is one of the most beloved and influential storytellers of all time.The Tale of Peter Rabbit and her other gloriously illustrated children’s books tickle the human imagination through the fantastical aliveness of nature and its creatures, in a spirit partway between Aesop and Mary Oliver, between Tolkien and Thoreau.

  7. Post the second failed attempt by Beatrix Potter, it was finally in 1939 that Eugen Thomas established the dual nature of lichens. Lichens consist of a permanent merger of a fungus (called the mycobiont) and an photobiont (a partner capable of photosynthesis), which is usually a green alga or a cyanobacterium.