Martin Beazor Ellis
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Martin Beazor Ellis
| birth_date = 14 September 1911
| birth_place = Guernsey
| death_date = 8 June 1996
| nationality = British
| fields = Mycology
| alma_mater = Chelsea Polytechnic
| known_for = Taxonomy of hyphomycetes
| author_abbrev_bot = M.B.Ellis
| spouse = Janet Pamela "Pam" Morgan
}}
Martin Beazor Ellis (14 September 1911, Guernsey – 8 June 1996) was a British mycologist, known as a leading expert on the taxonomy of pigmented hyphomycetes.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IFD4_VFRDdUC&pg=PA230| page=230 |isbn=9780851998268 | title=Ainsworth & Bisby's Dictionary of the Fungi | year=2008 | last1=Ainsworth | first1=Geoffrey Clough |author-link=Geoffrey Clough Ainsworth }} He was the president of the British Mycological Society for the academic year 1973–1974.{{cite journal|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/9987283D5640F1A388C5099FE5C0E68D/S0953756296003292a.pdf/obituary_martin_beazor_ellis_19111996.pdf|journal=Mycol. Res.|volume=101|issue=4|pages=510–512|year=1997|title=Obituary. Martin Beazor Ellis, 1911–1996|author=Sutton, B. C.|author2=Mordue, E.|doi=10.1017/S0953756296003292}}
Biography
Martin B. Ellis was the younger brother of Ted Ellis, who became a well-known naturalist with a focus on The Broads.{{cite web|title=Voices of the Broada: Ted Ellis (Norfolk naturalist)|date=February 24, 2020|publisher=Broads Authority|website=YouTube|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWQwE-1ktz8}}{{cite book|title=Ted Ellis's countryside reflections, with 78 drawings by David Poole|year=1982|postscript=; 126 pages|publisher=Wilson-Poole|isbn=9780950659244}} The Ellis family originated in Great Yarmouth, relocated to Guernsey, and returned to England to settle in 1920 in Gorleston-on-Sea. Martin and Ted Ellis often worked together and were keen amateur naturalists in Guernsey and later in East Anglia. Martin's mother taught him to draw and paint in watercolours. After education at Great Yarmouth Grammar School, Martin Ellis worked for three years as an apprentice in Great Yarmouth and then matriculated in 1933 at the University of London but lived at home and travelled back and forth. He then studied at Norwich's University Technical College Norfolk and became a laboratory assistant there. He passed the qualifying examination in 1935 to gain an Inter B.Sc. qualification from the University of London. He then worked until 1936 at University Technical College Norfolk before moving to London and studying mycology and botany for 2 years at Chelsea Polytechnic (affiliated with the University of London). In 1938 he passed his final examinations with 1st class honours. After a year at Chelsea Polytechnic, where he worked as a botanical researcher, demonstrator, lecturer, and private academic coach, he enlisted in October 1939 in the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC). He was sent to British India and posted to the District Laboratory at Quetta, where he worked until 1942. Due to his contributions to research on Shigella, Ellis became a commissioned officer. He was given the rank of Captain and posted to Calcutta. There he created an inspection unit for medical stores and was made the officer in charge of the unit. After passing examinations in Urdu, he was transferred from the RAMC to the Indian Army Ordnance Corps. In August 1943 he was stationed to Lahore and put in charge of British India's largest inspection depot. During his army service from 1943 to 1945, he organized collecting forays or collected by himself. He travelled in the Punjab, Sind, Baluchistan, and Kashmir. He collected microfungi for himself and polypores for Sahay Ram Bose.
After the end of WW II, Ellis returned to England. At the Commonwealth Mycological Institute he held an appointment as Mycologist from 1946 to 1960 and as Principal Mycologist from 1960 to 1976, when he retired. His successor as Principal Mycologist was Brian Charles Sutton.{{cite journal|doi=10.1007/BF03449474|title=Brian Sutton — World leader in coelomycete classification|last=Minter |first=David W. |journal=IMA Fungus |date=June 2018 |volume=9 |issue=1 |page=10|url=https://imafungus.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1007/BF03449474|doi-access=free }}{{cite journal|author=Sutton, B. C.|title=Presidential Address. Improvizations on conidial themes|journal=Transactions of the British Mycological Society|volume=86|issue=1|year=1986|pages=1–38|url=https://www.indexfungorum.org/Publications/TBMS/86/86(1)1-38.pdf}} At the institute, Ellis worked with Edmund William Mason (1890–1975), Stanley John Hughes (1918–2019), and Guy Richard Bisby (1889–1958).
In Chatham, Kent, in September 1948, Martin B. Ellis married Janet Pamela "Pam" Morgan. She graduated in 1940 with a degree in general science from the University of Reading and in 1946 with a Diploma in systematic mycology mentored by Charles Geddes Coull Chesters (1904–1993), a professor of botany at the University of Nottingham. She met Martin Ellis during collecting forays. They spent their honeymoon collecting fungi on the island of Guernsey and the results of their research was published in Report and Transaction of la Société Guernesiaise. Martin and Pam Ellis collaborated in mycological research until his death in 1996 and wrote several books together.
The two superbly illustrated books Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes (1971) and More Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes (1976), both published by the Commonwealth Mycological Institute, were based on a series of articles published in Mycological Papers. The two books have essential importance for the science of dematiaceous hyphomycetes{{cite journal|volume=30|issue=1|date=March 2016|pages=165–178|journal=Infectious Disease Clinics of North America|title=Dematiaceous Molds|author=Wong, Eunice H.|author2=Revankar, Sanjay G.|doi=10.1016/j.idc.2015.10.007|pmid=26897066|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26897066/}} (a diverse group of microfungi sometimes called black yeasts or black molds) in identification and taxonomy.{{cite book|author=Holliday, Paul|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FhLxn8WPCS8C&dq=more+dematiaceous+hyphomycetes+by+ellis+books.google&pg=PR12 | isbn=9780486686479 | title=Fungus Diseases of Tropical Crops |page=xii| date=January 1995 | publisher=Courier Corporation }}{{cite book|author=Money, Nicholas P.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AeIJCAAAQBAJ&dq=martin+b.+ellis,+commonwealth+mycological+institute&pg=PA33|pages=33–34| isbn=978-0-19-029149-5 | title=Carpet Monsters and Killer Spores: A Natural History of Toxic Mold | date=8 April 2004 | publisher=Oxford University Press }}
In retirement, Martin and Pam Ellis moved to Southwold in Suffolk, where they began collecting, describing and illustrating microfungi, especially from East Anglia. Their research was presented in three identification handbooks, Microfungi on Land Plants (1985),Microfungi on Miscellaneous Substrates (1988), and Fungi without Gills (1990). The three books were extremely useful for amateur mycologists in the UK and led to a huge increase in the number of species of fungi newly recorded in Suffolk.
More than 30 species names honour Martin Ellis with derivations from his surname. The genera Ellisembia Subram.{{cite web|title=Ellisembia Subram.|website=NBN Atlas|url=https://species.nbnatlas.org/species/BMSSYS0000045171}} and Martinellisia V. G. Rao & Varghese are also named in his honour.{{cite web|title=Martinellisia V. Rao & Varghese|website=Index Fungorum|url=https://www.indexfungorum.org/names/NamesRecord.asp?RecordID=8850}} Martin Ellis communicated his enthusiasm for the study of fungi and appreciation of nature to many mycologists and gained wide esteem. The mycologists T. R. Nag Raj and Bryce Kendrick dedicated A Monograph of Cholera and Allied Genera with the laudatio "prince of a man and peerless mycologist, Dr. Martin B. Ellis".{{cite book|author=Nag Raj, T. R.|author2=Kendrick, Bryce|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I1Tza9nra-YC&pg=PA5 |page=5|isbn=9780889205352 | title=A Monograph of Chalara and Allied Genera | date=January 2006 | publisher=Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press }} Upon his death he was survived by his widow and their sons. The Natural History Museum, London has some of the specimens collected by M. B. Ellis.{{cite web|title=Ellis, Martin Beazor|website=JSTOR Global Plants|url=https://plants.jstor.org/stable/history/10.5555/al.ap.person.bm000381333}}
{{botanist|M.B.Ellis|Martin Beazor Ellis}}
=Books=
- {{cite book|author=Ellis, N. B.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QB8JAQAAMAAJ| title=Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes | year=1972 | publisher=Commonwealth Mycological Institute }} [https://scholar.google.com/scholar?as_q=&as_epq=dematiaceous+hyphomycetes&as_oq=cabdirect.org&as_eq=&as_occt=any&as_sauthors=mb+ellis&as_publication=&as_ylo=1971&as_yhi=1971&hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C11 abstract]
- {{cite book|author=Ellis, M. B.|title=More Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes|year=1976|publisher=Commonwealth Mycological Institute|postscript=; 506 pages}}
- {{cite book|title=1996 reprint|isbn=0851983650|year=1996|publisher=CABI}} [https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/book/10.1079/9780851983653.0000 description at CABI Digital Library]
- {{cite book|author=Ellis, M. B.|author2=Ellis, J. Pamela|title=Microfungi on Land Plants: An Identification Handbook|location=New York|publisher=Macmillan|year=1985|isbn=0029478901}}{{cite book|editor=Mount, Ellis|title=Sci-Tech Libraries Serving Societies and Institutes|chapter=brief review of Microfungi on land plants: an identification handbook by Martin B. Ellis and J. Pamela Ellis|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YLOSWvKQ8MMC&pg=PA130|page=130|year=1987|isbn=086656618X}}
- {{cite book|author=Ellis, M. B.|author2=Ellis, J. Pamela|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wgifeNt2YlcC| isbn=9780881921151 | title=Microfungi on Miscellaneous Substrates: An Identification Handbook | year=1988 | publisher=Timber Press }}{{cite journal|title=Review of Microfungi on Miscellaneous Substrates: An Identification Handbook by Martin B. Ellis and J. Pamela Ellis|author=Batra, Lekh R.|author-link=Lekh Raj Batra|journal=The Quarterly Review of Biology|volume=64|issue=4|date=December 1989|doi=10.1086/416512}}
- {{cite book|author=Ellis, M. B.|author2=Ellis, J. Pamela|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vowdIZ7GqD4C| isbn=9780412369704 | title=Fungi Without Gills (Hymenomycetes and Gasteromycetes): An Identification Handbook | date=30 June 1990 | publisher=Springer }}
References
External links
- {{cite web|title=Ellis, Martin Beazor; Index of Botanists|website=Harbard University Herbaria & Libraries|url=https://kiki.huh.harvard.edu/databases/botanist_search.php?id=34190}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ellis, Martin Beazor}}
Category:Alumni of the University of London