Gause, GeorgyiFrantsevich
Gause, GeorgyiFrantsevich (1910–86)A Russian biologist and ecologist, best known for his competitive exclusion principle, which he derived from his studies of competition among protists and described in a monograph, The Struggle for Existence (1934). Gause studied biology at Moscow University. In 1942 he and his wife, Maria Georgyevna Brazhnikova, isolated a strain of Bacillus brevis from which an antibiotic substance was produced and used later to treat infected wounds. For this Gause was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1946. From 1960 until his death he was director of the institute of antibiotics he and his wife had founded.
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Interspecific Competition , interspecific competition See competition.
intraspecific competition See competition.
interspecific competition See competition.
intraspecific compet… Competition , An adaptive strategy that pits one person's interests against another's.
Psychologists have long been in disagreement as to whether competition is a… Exclusion Principle , exclusion principle Basic law of quantum mechanics, proposed by Wolfgang Pauli in 1925, stating no two electrons in an atom can possess the same ener… Competition (economics) , competition (in economics)
competition, in economics, rivalry in supplying or acquiring an economic service or good. Sellers compete with other selle… ampicillin , am·pi·cil·lin / ˌampiˈsilin/ • n. Med. a semisynthetic form of penicillin used chiefly to treat infections of the urinary and respiratory tracts.
amp… Substance , No common statement on the nature of substance is acceptable to all philosophers, the more famous of whom range from a full treatment of its nature t…
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Gause, GeorgyiFrantsevich