Jan-Peter Frahm (14 February 1945 – 5 February 2014) was a German botanist dedicated to the study of mosses. The standard author abbreviationJ.-P.Frahm is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[1]
Career
Frahm studied biology and geography at the University of Hamburg before switching to the University of Kiel for his undergraduate degree. He returned to Kiel and earned his Ph.D. in botany in 1972.[2] He then worked at the University of Duisburg, where he was appointed professor in 1981. Between 1978 and 1992 he issued six exsiccata series, the largest by numbers of specimen units being Bryophyta Vogesiaca exsiccata.[3][4] Research stays at foreign institutes (eg. Helsinki, Paris, Stockholm, Chicago) and a visiting professorship at the University of Alberta in 1989 followed. He moved from Duisburg to the University of Bonn in 1994.[5]
Frahm conducted research on numerous topics of bryology and published more than 650 publications.[5] Within his moss research, he was concerned with bioindication. Frahm noted that the improved air quality in cities has led to an increased number of lichen species colonizing urban areas. He also demonstrated that the release of ammonia by auto-catalysts causes nitrogen-loving lichens and mosses and nitrogen-emitting plants to settle along roads.[7]
Frahm was also passionate about cooking. He published his own cook book, 10000 Kochideen, in 2007.
Journalistic activity
Frahm was the publisher of the following journals:
Bryologische Rundbriefe, an electronic newsletter with information on moss research in Germany
Limprichtia, a magazine for moss research in Germany
Tropical Bryology, an international non-profit journal on the biology of tropical mosses; now under the title Bryophyte Diversity and Evolution
Selected publications
Frahm, Jan-Peter; Giese, Monika; Padberg, Monika; Koponen, Timo; Norris, Daniel H. (1985). Bryophyte Flora of the Huon Peninsula, Papua New Guinea. IX. Atractylocarpus, Bryohumbertia, Campylopodium and Campylopus (Dicranaceae, Musci) (Acta Botanica Fennica, 131). Finnish Zoological and Botanical Publishing Board.