Literature DB >> 19852398

Frits Went's atomic age greenhouse: the changing labscape on the lab-field border.

Sharon E Kingsland1.   

Abstract

In Landscapes and Labscapes Robert Kohler emphasized the separation between laboratory and field cultures and the creation of new "hybrid" or mixed practices as field sciences matured in the early twentieth century. This article explores related changes in laboratory practices, especially novel designs for the analysis of organism-environment relations in the mid-twentieth century. American ecologist Victor Shelford argued in 1929 that technological improvements and indoor climate control should be applied to ecological laboratories, but his recommendations were too ambitious for the time. In the postwar period Frits W. Went, plant physiologist at the California Institute of Technology, created a new high-tech laboratory, dubbed a "phytotron", in the hope that it would transform plant sciences by allowing for unprecedented control of environmental variables. Went's aspirations, the research conducted in his laboratory, and its impact in initiating an international movement, are considered. Went's laboratory can be seen as a "hybrid culture" evolving in the laboratory, complementing and intersecting with some of the field practices that Kohler describes. It was also a countercultural movement against the reductionist trends of molecular biology in the 1950s and 1960s. By considering the history of the laboratory in relation to field sciences, we can explore how new funding sources and cross-disciplinary relations affected the development of field sciences, especially in the postwar period.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19852398     DOI: 10.1007/s10739-009-9179-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Biol        ISSN: 0022-5010            Impact factor:   1.326


  7 in total

1.  Controlled-climate facilities for biologists.

Authors:  S B HENDRICKS; F W WENT
Journal:  Science       Date:  1958-09-05       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Conjectures, refutations, and extrapolations.

Authors:  Lloyd Evans
Journal:  Annu Rev Plant Biol       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 26.379

3.  GROWTH AND COMPOSITION OF BILOXI SOYBEAN GROWN IN A CONTROLLED ENVIRONMENT WITH RADIATION FROM DIFFERENT CARBON-ARC SOURCES.

Authors:  M W Parker; H A Borthwick
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  1949-07       Impact factor: 8.340

4.  Shaping biology: the National Science Foundation and American biological research, 1945-1975. [Review of: Appel, T. Shaping biology: the National Science Foundation and American biological research, 1945-1975. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins U. Pr., 2000].

Authors:  Daniel Lee Kleinman
Journal:  J Am Hist       Date:  2002

5.  THE INTERNATIONAL UNION OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES.

Authors:  F A Went
Journal:  Science       Date:  1928-11-30       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  PHOTOPERIODISM, THE RESPONSE OF THE PLANT TO RELATIVE LENGTH OF DAY AND NIGHT.

Authors:  W W Garner; H A Allard
Journal:  Science       Date:  1922-06-02       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Arabidopsis, the botanical Drosophila: from mouse cress to model organism.

Authors:  Sabina Leonelli
Journal:  Endeavour       Date:  2007-03-02       Impact factor: 0.444

  7 in total
  3 in total

1.  Labs in the field? Rocky mountain biological stations in the early twentieth century.

Authors:  Jeremy Vetter
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2012       Impact factor: 1.326

2.  A low-cost automated growth chamber system for continuous measurements of gas exchange at canopy scale in dynamic conditions.

Authors:  Nicole Salvatori; Alberti Giorgio; Onno Muller; Uwe Rascher; Alessandro Peressotti
Journal:  Plant Methods       Date:  2021-06-30       Impact factor: 4.993

3.  Working across species down on the farm: Howard S. Liddell and the development of comparative psychopathology, c. 1923-1962.

Authors:  Robert G W Kirk; Edmund Ramsden
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2018-02-07       Impact factor: 1.205

  3 in total

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