| Literature DB >> 24465180 |
Péter Poczai1, Neil Bell2, Jaakko Hyvönen1.
Abstract
Contemporary science thrives on collaborative networks, but these can also be found elsewhere in the history of science in unexpected places. When Mendel turned his attention to inheritance in peas he was not an isolated monk, but rather the latest in a line of Moravian researchers and agriculturalists who had been thinking about inheritance for half a century. Many of the principles of inheritance had already been sketched out by Imre Festetics, a Hungarian sheep breeder active in Brno. Festetics, however, was ultimately hindered by the complex nature of his study traits, aspects of wool quality that we now know to be polygenic. Whether or not Mendel was aware of Festetics’s ideas,both men were products of the same vibrant milieu in 19th-century Moravia that combined theory and agricultural practice to eventually uncover the rules of inheritance.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24465180 PMCID: PMC3897355 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Figure 1Count Imre Festetics around 1819.
Portrait by Oelenhainz August Friedrich, original painting found in Kőszeg City Museum (No. 55.11).
Figure 2Historic photos.
(A) Robert Bakewell's barrel-shaped New Leicester (Dishley) ram, created through inbreeding on his farm at Dishley, Leicestershire. Vintage engraved illustration, Trousset Encyclopaedia (1886–1891). (B) The enormous Festetics family library, consisting of 90,000 volumes and the only aristocratic library remaining in Hungary. It nowadays operates as a museum, open to visitors. Photo kindly provided by 3dpano.hu. (C) The Festetics castle at Keszthely on Lake Balaton where the family library is housed. Imre Festetics read and studied here, despite living and sheep-breeding in the city of Kőszeg. Photo kindly provided by 123rf.com. (D) Members of St. Thomas's Abbey in Brno about 1862. Gregor Mendel is standing second from right, while Cyrill Napp is seated second from right. Photo kindly provided by Jiří Sekerák from the archive of Mendelianum, Moravian Museum, Brno, Czech Republic.