Journal of the History of Biology; 42: 151-183, 2009
The Plymouth
Laboratory and the Institutionalization of Experimental Zoology in Britain
in the 1920s
Steindór J. Erlingsson
Abstract:
The Plymouth Laboratory
of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom (1884) was founded
in 1888. In addition to conducting morphological and other biological research,
the founders of the laboratory aimed at promoting research in experimental
zoology which will be used in this paper as a synonym for e.g. experimental
embryology, comparative physiology or general physiology. This dream was not
fully realized until 1920. The Great War and its immediate aftermath had a
positive impact on the development of the Plymouth Laboratory. The war greatly
upset the operation of the Zoological Station in Naples
and the ensuing crisis in its operations was closely related to the
establishment of the physiological department in Plymouth in 1920. Two other key factors in the
Plymouth story were the establishment of the
Development Fund in 1909, which began contributing funds to the Plymouth
Laboratory in 1912, and the patronage of the Cambridge zoologist George P. Bidder
(1863-1954). This paper will focus on the combined influence of the Development
Fund and Bidder on the development of the Plymouth Laboratory from around 1902
through the early 1920s, and the important role it played in promoting
experimental zoology in Britain
in the 1920s.
Keywords: zoological station, Naples, physiological laboratory, Plymouth, Marine
Biological Association of the United Kingdom, experimental zoology, Development
Fund, George P. Bidder, Lancelot Hogben, Edgar J. Allen, Ray Lankester Investigatorship
The article,
in a .pdf format, is located here. If you
can not access the article you can email me, steindor(at)akademia.is, and I will send you a copy.
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