Israel Aharoni: Difference between revisions
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'''Israel Aharoni''' ([[1882]]-[[1946]]) was |
'''Israel Aharoni''' ([[1882]]-[[1946]]) was a Jewish zoologist in [[Ottoman Palestine]] widely known as the "first [[Hebrews|Hebrew]] [[zoology|zoologist]]." Aharoni discovered 30 unknown species of animals, insects and birds in [[Ottoman Palestine]], and is credited with giving them Hebrew names. |
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Aharoni is best known for collecting a litter of [[Syrian hamster]]s on an expedition to [[Aleppo]], [[Syria]]. The hamsters were bred as laboratory animals in [[Jerusalem]], but some escaped through a hole in the floor. The majority of hamsters in [[Israel]] today are thus said to be descended from this one litter.<ref>http://www.ppne.co.uk/index.php?m=show&id=30551</ref> |
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⚫ | Aharoni was born in [[Widzi]] on the Russian/Polish border, and went to school in [[Prague]]. He immigrated to [[ |
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==Biography== |
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⚫ | Israel Aharoni was born in [[Widzi]] on the Russian/Polish border, and went to school in [[Prague]]. He immigrated to [[Palestine]], which was then under Turkish rule, and his early zoological expeditions took place under the protection of the local Sultan, for whom he obtained [[butterfly]] specimens. Many of his collected specimens can still be viewed at the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]]. |
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In 1930, Aharoni set off to look for Syrian hamsters at the request of his colleague [[Saul Adler]], a [[parasitology|parasitologist]] who was looking for an easily breedable alternative to the [[Chinese hamster]] for research on the disease [[Leishmaniasis]]. Syrian hamsters had been discovered and named by [[George Robert Waterhouse]] in 1839 but had not been sighted since. Together with a [[Syria]]n guide named ''Georgius Khalil Tah'an'', Aharoni managed to discover a [[nest]] containing a female and eleven young in the [[Aleppo]] region. However, [[cannibalism]] of one of the litter by the mother, and the subsequent death of the mother, meant that Aharoni had to hand-rear the pups during the journey back. The four that made it were bred successfully and used extensively in laboratories, before being introduced to the pet market in the 1940s. |
In 1930, Aharoni set off to look for Syrian hamsters at the request of his colleague [[Saul Adler]], a [[parasitology|parasitologist]] who was looking for an easily breedable alternative to the [[Chinese hamster]] for research on the disease [[Leishmaniasis]]. Syrian hamsters had been discovered and named by [[George Robert Waterhouse]] in 1839 but had not been sighted since. Together with a [[Syria]]n guide named ''Georgius Khalil Tah'an'', Aharoni managed to discover a [[nest]] containing a female and eleven young in the [[Aleppo]] region. However, [[cannibalism]] of one of the litter by the mother, and the subsequent death of the mother, meant that Aharoni had to hand-rear the pups during the journey back. The four that made it were bred successfully and used extensively in laboratories, before being introduced to the pet market in the 1940s. |
Revision as of 19:22, 27 February 2008
Israel Aharoni (1882-1946) was a Jewish zoologist in Ottoman Palestine widely known as the "first Hebrew zoologist." Aharoni discovered 30 unknown species of animals, insects and birds in Ottoman Palestine, and is credited with giving them Hebrew names.
Aharoni is best known for collecting a litter of Syrian hamsters on an expedition to Aleppo, Syria. The hamsters were bred as laboratory animals in Jerusalem, but some escaped through a hole in the floor. The majority of hamsters in Israel today are thus said to be descended from this one litter.[1]
Biography
Israel Aharoni was born in Widzi on the Russian/Polish border, and went to school in Prague. He immigrated to Palestine, which was then under Turkish rule, and his early zoological expeditions took place under the protection of the local Sultan, for whom he obtained butterfly specimens. Many of his collected specimens can still be viewed at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In 1930, Aharoni set off to look for Syrian hamsters at the request of his colleague Saul Adler, a parasitologist who was looking for an easily breedable alternative to the Chinese hamster for research on the disease Leishmaniasis. Syrian hamsters had been discovered and named by George Robert Waterhouse in 1839 but had not been sighted since. Together with a Syrian guide named Georgius Khalil Tah'an, Aharoni managed to discover a nest containing a female and eleven young in the Aleppo region. However, cannibalism of one of the litter by the mother, and the subsequent death of the mother, meant that Aharoni had to hand-rear the pups during the journey back. The four that made it were bred successfully and used extensively in laboratories, before being introduced to the pet market in the 1940s.