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Swedish naturalist and physician. His
botanical work Systema naturae 1735 contained his system for classifying
plants into groups depending on shared characteristics (such as the
number of stamens in flowers), providing a much-needed framework for
identification. He also devised the concise and precise system for naming
plants and animals, using one Latin (or Latinized) word to represent
the genus and a second to distinguish the species.
For example, in the Latin name of the daisy, Bellis perennis, Bellis
is the name of the genus to which the plant belongs, and perennis distinguishes
the species from others of the same genus. By tradition the generic
name always begins with a capital letter. The author who first described
a particular species is often indicated after the name, for example,
Bellis perennis Linnaeus, showing that the author was Linnaeus.
Linnaeus was born in Småland and studied medicine at Lund and
Uppsala and in the Netherlands at Harderwijk. As a lecturer in botany,
he explored Lapland 1732 for the Uppsala Academy of Sciences. He practised
as a physician and was appointed professor of medicine at Uppsala 1741,
but changed this position in 1742 for the chair of botany.
Linnaeus's system of nomenclature was introduced in Species plantarum
1753 and the fifth edition of Genera plantarum 1754 (first edition 1737).
In 1758 he applied his binomial system to animal classification.
Latinized form of Carl von Linné
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