Collingwood Ingram
#99,475
Most Influential Person Across History
British gardener
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Biology
Why Is Collingwood Ingram Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Collingwood "Cherry" Ingram , was a British ornithologist, plant collector and gardener, who was an authority on Japanese flowering cherries. Personal life Collingwood Ingram was a son of Sir William Ingram and Mary Eliza Collingwood , daughter of Australian politician Edward Stirling. His maternal grandfather was born in Jamaica to a Scottish planter and an unnamed woman of colour. He concealed his racial identity and later settled in South Australia, where he was elected to parliament; his sons Lancelot and Edward Charles Stirling were also members of parliament.
Collingwood Ingram's Published Works
Published Works
- The Importance of Juvenile Cannibalism in the Breeding Biology of Certain Birds of Prey (1959) (110)
- Cannibalism by Nestling Short-Eared Owls (1962) (11)
- The evolutionary basis of the ecological amplitude of plant species. (1990) (4)
- Notes on Japanese cherries (3)
- The evolutionary basis of the ecological amplitude. (1987) (1)
- Isles of the Seven Seas (1937) (0)
- Juvenile Cannibalism in Short-Eared Owls (1960) (0)
- Dunlop Holdings Limited : investigation under Section 172 of the Companies Act 1948 : interim report (1981) (0)
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