Alan "Doc" Ackerman Beetle | |
Birth Date: | 8 June 1913 |
Birth Place: | Princeton, New Jersey, United States |
Death Date: | 27 March 2003 (aged 89) |
Death Place: | Riverton, Wyoming, United States |
Nationality: | American |
Fields: | Agrostology, Botany |
Workplaces: | University of Wyoming College of Agriculture |
Known For: | Work with grasses, revising the genus Artemisia |
Spouse: | Dorothy Erna Schoof (div. 1963) |
Children: | 3 (Howie, Karen, John) |
Parents: | Ralph Dennison Beetle and Helen Maria Ackerman |
Notable Works: | Alan A. Beetle Herbarium |
Alan "Doc" Ackerman Beetle (8 June 1913 in Princeton, New Jersey – 27 March 2003 in Riverton, Wyoming)[1] was an American agrostologist and botanist. He was a professor of the University of Wyoming College of Agriculture in Laramie.
Beetle adopted both surnames of his parents (Ralph Dennison Beetle and Helen Maria Ackerman).[2] He was married to botanist and malacologist Dorothy Erna, née Schoof (1918–2005), from whom he was divorced in 1963. They had two children, Howie and Karen. They also adopted a third child, John.[3]
Beetle collected plant specimens with his wife and many other botanists, and is best known for his work with grasses. The Alan A. Beetle Herbarium, a collection of his grass specimens numbering in excess of 10,000, is located at the Department of Rangeland Ecology and Watershed Management at UW. In addition to grasses, Beetle worked together with another botanist in revising the genus Artemisia[2]