Martinus Willem Beijerinck

MALE
Amsterdam, Netherlands 16-03-1851 - Gorssel, Netherlands 01-01-1931

Member Group(s)

  • Genootschaps-lid
  • KNAW-Lid

Variant Names

N/A

BIO

Dissertation: "Bijdrage tot de morphologie der plantegallen" (Contribution to the Morphology of Plant Galls)

Highest degree: Ph.D.

Fields of interest:
Biography:
Beijerinck was born in 1851 in Amsterdam, the son of a railway employee. He received his secondary education at the HBS in Haarlem. From 1868 to 1872, he studied chemical technology at the Delft Polytechnic School. In 1872, he and his fellow students J.H. van 't Hoff and A.A.W. Hubrecht, were exempted from an additional examination in Greek and Latin required for university study. Beijerinck studied botany at Leiden from 1872 on while working as a teacher in various schools. In 1877 he obtained his doctorate. He was awarded a "cum laude" for his dissertation "Bijdrage tot de morphologie der plantegallen" (Contribution to the Morphology of Plant Galls).

In 1884 Beijerinck became a member of the Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences in Amsterdam. A year later he was hired as a microbiologist at the" Nederlandsche Gist- en Spiritusfabriek" (Dutch Yeast and Methylated Spirits Factory) in Delft. He received his own microbiological laboratory where he carried out many original studies, especially on the metabolism of various species of bacteria and lichens. He discovered the small nitrogen-fixing tubers at the roots of leguminous plants and a group of anaerobic bacteria that were important for the production of acetone and butyl alcohol.

In 1895 the Delft Polytechnic School appointed Beijerinck as professor of biology and bacteriology. Two years later a new microbiological laboratory, built especially for him and his students, was opened. Here Beijerinck continued his microbiological studies with great success. In 1896 he discovered the bacterium that was reponsible for the bad smell of polluted canal water in Dutch cities, he and his students did important work on the microbes that were active in acetic-acid and alcohol fermentations, and in 1898 Beijerinck was the first to postulate the existence of a filterable living principle, a 'contagium vivum fluidum', responsible for the mosaic disease in tobacco plants.

A special feature of Beijerinck's research was the application of chemical methods to research on the metabolism of micro-organisms. He used chromatographic methods and hydrodiffusion of nutrients in gelatin. Before he retired from his chair, in 1927, Beijerinck had established a program of basic research in microbiology to which he was very devoted. His originality lies in the application of micro organisms for the study of growth, variability, and evolution. He is one of the examples of the shift from the descriptive to the experimental approach in Dutch biology of the time. The results of his studies were published in many journals.

Beijerinck was a loner who cared little for personal contact with colleagues, and therefore his image was that of a scientist working in isolation. Nevertheless, his views on the aims of scientific research and its role in society matched those of his contemporaries like H. de Vries, M. Treub and F.A.F.C. Went. After Beijerinck's retirement, a number of his students, among whom his successor A.J. Kluyver, organized a campaign to bring Beijerinck's work to a wider audience. They edited his collected works, and by doing so were responsible for many honors Beijerinck received toward the end of his life. Beijerinck died in 1931, scientifically active almost to the end of his life.

Beijerinck discovered the small nitrogen-fixing tubers at the roots of leguminous plants and a group of anaerobic bacteria that were important for the production of acetone and butyl alcohol.

Residence

  • Gorssel 
  • Delft 

Occupation

  • microbiologist at the Nederlandsche Gist- en Spiritusfabriek (Dutch Yeast and Methylated Spirits Factory) in Delft 

Education

N/A

Membership

Provenance

  • Beijerinck, M.W., Verslagen Natuurkunde 40, 1931, p. 6-12 door F.A.F.C. Went.
  • Bibliografie van Biografieën van biologen, dierkundigen, kruidkundigen, plantkundigen, biohistorici, natuurbeschermers, natuurfotografen, natuurillustratoren, natuurschilders etc. voor 1950 geboren. http://www.natuurcijfers.nl/biografieen.htm
  • Biografie opgenomen in History of Science and Scholarship in the Netherlands
  • Ledenlijst Vereeniging het Nederl. Natuur- en Geneesk. Congres (1890).

Publications

Wiki and VIAF

Wiki Data: Q55015247 VIAF: http://viaf.org/viaf/19794581