Vladimir Nikolaevich Lyubimenko (1873-1937) was a Russian and Soviet botanist and academician who worked in the Nikitsky Botanical Garden in Crimea.[1] He researched and wrote on the process of photosynthesis in shade-tolerant plants.[2][3]
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (December 2019) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
His wife was the historian Inna Lubimenko (1878-1959).[1]
Selected publications
edit- "On culturing of medicinal herbs on the southern coast of Crimea", Vestnik Russkoy Flory, 1915 (3), pp. 144–50.
- Tabachnaya Promyshlennost v Rossii. Petrograd, 1916.
- Syedobnye Dikorastushchiye Rasteniya Severnoy Polosy Rossii. 2 vols. Petrograd, 1918. (With N. A. Monteverde and A. F. Sulima-Samoylo)
- Chay i Yego Kultura v Rossii. Petrograd, 1919.
References
edit- ^ a b Любименко Инна Ивановна, M. N. Rumynskaya, Saint Petersberg Institute of History. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
- ^ "V. N. Lyubimenko's Studies of Chlorophyll and Their Modern Development" by E. M. Senchenkova in Life Phenomena: A Historical Survey. Jerusalem: Israel Program for Scientific Translations/NASA. 1966. pp. 116–170.
- ^ "OTS". 1966.