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Giuseppe Gibelli (9 February 1831 – 16 September 1898) was an Italian botanist and lichenologist who was a native of Santa Cristina e Bissone. He originally studied medicine, earning his medical doctorate at the University of Pavia. Later he studied botany and microscopy in Germany. He became a professor of botany at the Universities of Modena (1874) and Bologna (1879), and from 1883 to 1898 was a professor of botany and director of the botanical garden at Turin. The standard author abbreviation Gibelli is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.

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  • Giuseppe Gibelli (es)
  • Giuseppe Gibelli (en)
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  • Giuseppe Gibelli (9 February 1831 – 16 September 1898) was an Italian botanist and lichenologist who was a native of Santa Cristina e Bissone. He originally studied medicine, earning his medical doctorate at the University of Pavia. Later he studied botany and microscopy in Germany. He became a professor of botany at the Universities of Modena (1874) and Bologna (1879), and from 1883 to 1898 was a professor of botany and director of the botanical garden at Turin. The standard author abbreviation Gibelli is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name. (en)
  • Giuseppe Gibelli ( 9 de febrero 1831 - 16 de septiembre 1898) fue un botánico, micólogo, pteridólogo, y liquenólogo italiano, originario de Santa Cristina e Bissone. Originalmente estudió medicina, obteniendo su doctorado médico en la Universidad de Pavía. Luego estudia botánica y microscopía en Alemania. Llega a ser profesor titular de botánica en las Universidades de Modena, desde 1874 y de la de Bolonia, (1879), y de 1883 a 1898 será profesor de botánica y director del Jardín botánico en la Universidad de Turín. (es)
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  • Giuseppe Gibelli ( 9 de febrero 1831 - 16 de septiembre 1898) fue un botánico, micólogo, pteridólogo, y liquenólogo italiano, originario de Santa Cristina e Bissone. Originalmente estudió medicina, obteniendo su doctorado médico en la Universidad de Pavía. Luego estudia botánica y microscopía en Alemania. Llega a ser profesor titular de botánica en las Universidades de Modena, desde 1874 y de la de Bolonia, (1879), y de 1883 a 1898 será profesor de botánica y director del Jardín botánico en la Universidad de Turín. Gibelli es recordado por sus estudios pioneros sobre micorrizas: la asociación simbiótica entre hongos y raíces de plantas. Con Giovanni Passerini (1816-1893) y Vincenzo de Cesati (1806-1883), fue coautor de Compendio della flora italiana, un compendio de la , publicada en 35 volúmenes entre 1868 a 1886. * La abreviatura «Gibelli» se emplea para indicar a Giuseppe Gibelli como autoridad en la descripción y clasificación científica de los vegetales.​ (es)
  • Giuseppe Gibelli (9 February 1831 – 16 September 1898) was an Italian botanist and lichenologist who was a native of Santa Cristina e Bissone. He originally studied medicine, earning his medical doctorate at the University of Pavia. Later he studied botany and microscopy in Germany. He became a professor of botany at the Universities of Modena (1874) and Bologna (1879), and from 1883 to 1898 was a professor of botany and director of the botanical garden at Turin. Gibelli is remembered for his pioneer studies of mycorrhiza, the symbiotic association between fungus and plant roots. With Giovanni Passerini (1816-1893) and Vincenzo de Cesati (1806-1883), he was co-author of Compendio della flora italiana, a compendium of Italian flora. He is honoured in the naming of Gibellia (1886), which is a genus of fungi within the Melanconidaceae family, Gibellina (1886), which is a genus of fungi in the family Magnaporthaceae, and also Gibellula (1894), which is a genus of fungi in the family Cordycipitaceae. Then in 1959, Gibellulopsis, a genus of fungi belonging to the family . The standard author abbreviation Gibelli is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name. (en)
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