Françoise Ardré
Born17 February 1931
Died2010
NationalityFrench
Scientific career
FieldsPhycology
Marine Science

Françoise Ardré (1931–2010) was a French phycologist and marine scientist, honoured as the namesake of the red alga known as Pterosiphonia ardreana.[1]

After gaining a Doctorate in Sciences, Ardré was in charge of the phycology department of the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in Paris. She also conducted research programs in Portugal, in Spain (Cadaqués) and in France (Ile d'Yeu), among another locations. Skilled at holding her breath and diving without a wetsuit in the cold water of the ocean, she personally collected the specimens she was studying.

Her most well known published literary work is Contribution à l'étude des Algues Marines du Portugal I: La Flore (English: Contribution to the Study of the Marine Algas of Portugal I: Flora).

Bibliography

Some of her works:

  • Contribution à l'étude des Algues Marines du Portugal (publisher Cino del Duca), Biarritz).
  • Observations sur quelques espèces du genre Centroceras (Ceramiaceae, Rhodophyta) 1987.
  • Observations nouvelles sur la morphologie et la repartition géographique de trois ceramiales: Ceramium cinnabarinum, Mesothamnion caribaeum et Ctenosiphonia hypneoides. In collaboration with Ir. Hardy-Halos and L. Saldanha, 1982.

Other

Portraits of Françoise Ardré were painted, inspiring painters such as Maurice Boitel and Pierre Béchon.

References

  1. Christine A. Maggs & Max H. Hommersand (1993) Seaweeds of the British Isles: a collaborative project of the British Phycological Society and the Natural History Museum; Vol. 1, Part 3A Rhodophyta. Ceramiales. London: HMSO

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