> [!cite] BHL link: this entry starts at [page 184](https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/33212226) of TL-2 Vol. VI > Author links: [IPNI](https://www.ipni.org/a/10454-1) LSID 10454-1, [Wikidata](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q21610255) QID Q21610255 > Support pages: [[Abbreviations|abbreviations]], [[Layout key|layout key]], [[Cite TL-2|cite TL-2]] ### Author Tauscher, Gyula \[Julius August\] (1832-1882), Hungarian physician and plant collector; practicing physician at Ercs and (from 1873) regional physician for the Comitat Alba. **Abbreviated name**: *Tauscher* \[standard form in IPNI: *Tauscher*\] #### Herbarium and types [[Collection BP|BP]]; other material at [[Collection A|A]], [[Collection AK|AK]], [[Collection B|B]] (extant), [[Collection BR|BR]], [[Collection C|C]], [[Collection E|E]], [[Collection F|F]], [[Collection GB|GB]], [[Collection GOET|GOET]], [[Collection IBF|IBF]], [[Collection MANCH|MANCH]], [[Collection MW|MW]], [[Collection OXF|OXF]], [[Collection PH|PH]], [[Collection W|W]] (part of this material as *Flora exsiccata Csepeliensis* and/or *Flora transylvaniae*). – *Letters* at [[Collection G|G]] and [[Collection UPS|UPS]]-UB. #### Bibliography and biography AG 5(1): 921; Barnhart 3: 362 (b. 8 Jul 1832, d. 16 Mar 1882); Bossert p. 395; Clokie p. 252; Lasègue p. 330, 400, 502; TL-2/see K.G. Baenitz; Urban-Berl. p. 402. #### Biofile - Anon., J. Bot. 21: 382. 1883 (d.); Bot. Not. 1883: 30 (d.); Magy. növen. Lap. 6: 27. 1882 (d.); Österr. bot. Z. 24: 33. 1874 ("Komitats-Oberphysikus" as reward for his action during a cholera epidemic), 32: 176. 1882 (d.), 33: 311. 1883 (herb. to BP). - Borbás, V., Bot. Centralbl. 10: 111. 1882 (obit. not.), 15: 187. 1883 (herb. to BP). - Lack, H.W. Willdenowia 14: 432. 1984 (coll. in herb. Ullepitsch). - Lack, H.W. & C.-O. von Sydow, Willdenowia 14: 441. 1984 (letters to Halácsy and Reichenbach at UPS-UB). - Simonkai, L., Enum. fl. transsilv. xxxiv. 1886. #### Eponymy *Tauscheria* F.E.L. Fischer ex A.P. de Candolle (1821) was named for Tauscher who collected in western Russia in the early part of the nineteenth century.