- Willi Hennig
Emil Hans Willi Hennig (
April 20 ,1913 in Dürrhennersdorf/Oberlausitz –November 5 ,1976 inLudwigsburg ) was a Germanbiologist who is considered the founder of phylogenetic systematics, also known as "cladistics ". With his works onevolution andsystematics he revolutionised the view of the natural order of beings. As a taxonomist, he specialised indipteran s (ordinary flies and mosquitoes).Biography
Early years and studies
His mother Marie Emma, nee Groß (
June 12 1885 –August 3 1965 ), worked as a maid and, later, factory worker. His father Karl Ernst Emil Hennig (August 28 1873 –December 28 1947 ) was a rail worker. Willi had two brothers, Fritz Rudolf (March 5 1915 –November 24 1990 ), who became a minister, and Karl Herbert (April 24 1917 – 1943?), who went missing at Leningrad in 1943.In the spring of 1919, Willi Hennig started school in Dürrhennersdorf, and subsequently was at school in Taubenheim an der Spree and Oppach. Rudolf Hennig described the family as calm; his father possessed an even temperament.
As of 1927, Willi Hennig continued his education at the Realgymnasium and boarding school in Klotzsche near
Dresden . Here he met his first mentor M. Rost. Rudolf Meier. Role of Dipterology in Phylogenetic Systematics: The Insight of Willi Hennig in David K. Yeates and Brian M.Wiegmann (Eds) 2005. The evolutionary biology of flies. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12700-6] Rost had an interest in insects and introduced Hennig toWilhelm Meise , who worked as a scientist at the Dresdener Museum für Tierkunde (Zoological Museum Dresden). In 1930, Hennig skipped a year, and graduated onFebruary 26 1932 . As early as 1931, Willi Hennig composed an essay entitled "Die Stellung der Systematik in der Zoologie" ("The state of systematics in zoology") as part of his school work, published posthumously in 1978. It showed his interest as well as his considered treatment of systematic problems. Besides school, Hennig worked as a volunteer at the museum and, in collaboration with Meise, saw to the systematic and biogeographical investigation of the "flying" snakes of the genus "Dendrophis" that became his first published work.From the summer semester of 1932 onwards, Hennig read zoology, botany and geology at the University of Leipzig. He would continue to visit the Museum in Dresden. There, he met the curator of the entomological collection, the Dipteran expert Fritz Isidor van Emden. Hennig saw him regularly until van Emden was expelled from National Socialist Germany for having a Jewish wife.
Hennig, however, developed a deep friendship with Emden's successor, Klaus Günther. Hennig was able to conclude his studies with a dissertation entitled, "Beiträge zur Kenntnis des Kopulationsapparates der cyclorrhaphen Dipteren". By this time, Hennig had published eight scientific papers. Besides his 300-page revision of the "Tylidae" (now classed as
Micropezidae ), there were further papers on Diptera and theagamid genus "Draco" of gliding lizards. After his studies, Hennig was Volontär at the State Museum for Zoology in Dresden. OnJanuary 1 1937 , he obtained a scholarship from theDeutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) to work at the German Entomological Institute of theKaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft in Berlin-Dahlem. OnMay 13 1939 , Hennig married his former fellow student Irma Wehnert. By 1945, they had three sons, Wolfgang (born 1941), Bernd (born 1943) and Gerd (born 1945).As a military entomologist
Willi Hennig was drafted in 1938 to train for the infantry and concluded this course in 1939. As of the start of World War II, he was deployed in the infantry in Poland, France, Denmark and Russia. He was injured by grenade shrapnel in 1942 and was subsequently used as entomologist at the Institute for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in Berlin, carrying the title "Sonderführer Z". Just before the war ended, he was sent to Italy to the 10th Army, Heeresgruppe C, to fight
malaria and other epidemic diseases. At the end of the war in May 1945, he was captured by the British while he was with the Malaria training corps at the Gulf of Briest, and was only released in the autumn. Through his active participation in war as soldier and scientist Hennig was later subjected to accusations that he had been a member of the National Socialist party, especially by the Italian biologist and founder of panbiogeography, Leon Croizat. However, there is no evidence to support the claim. Hennig was never a member of the National Socialist party and did not support their views on any public occasion.During his time as prisoner of war, Hennig began to draft his most important contribution to systematics, not published until 1950. The rough draft was composed with pencil and ballpoint pen into an A4 exercise book, spanning 170 pages. During the war, he also published a further 25 scientific papers. Most of the correspondence and literature research was conducted by his wife, Irma.
1950s: "Basic outline of a theory of
phylogenetic systematics "From
December 1 1945 toMarch 31 1947 , Willi Hennig stood in for his thesis supervisor Paul Buchner as assistant to Professor Friedrich Hempelmann at the University of Leipzig, giving lectures in general biology, zoology and special zoology of insects. He returned to the German Entomological Institute in Berlin onApril 1 1947 , and gave up his position in Leipzig. From1 November 1949 he led the section for systematic entomology and was second director of the institute. OnAugust 1 1950 , he habilitated in zoology at the Brandenburgische Landeshochschule inPotsdam . OnOctober 10 of the same year, he was offered a professorship with teaching responsibilities, which he fulfilled lecturing on special zoology of invertebrates, systematic zoology and taxonomic practicals. In the same year, he published his "Basic outline of a theory of phylogenetic systematics", and further works on the methodology of phylogenetic systematics followed in the ensuing years, accompanied by numerous taxonomic works about Diptera. His two-volume "Pocket book of zoology", in which he applied phylogenetic systematics to invertebrates for the first time, was particularly successful.He continued working at the German Entomological Institute in the Soviet Sector of Berlin,
Berlin-Friedrichshagen , all the while living in the American sector inBerlin-Steglitz . On a trip to France with his son onAugust 13 1961 , he heard of the impending Berlin Wall and returned to Berlin immediately to quit his appointment. Moving to East Berlin was out of the question, as Hennig held anti-communist views and already had a troubled relationship with theSozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands (Socialist Unity Party of Germany, SED) that was the sole political party of East Germany, as Hennig had repeatedly helped employees of the institute gain employment in the West.1961 to 1976
In West Berlin, Hennig was given an interim post at the Technische Universität Berlin as Distinguished Professor. He rejected offers from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture inWashington, D.C. and an offer made by his friend Elmo Hardy, to become a Research Fellow at theUniversity of Hawaii inHonolulu , citing as reasons that the education of his sons took priority for him, and that he needed to have the "cultural witnesses of the antique Greek-Roman Europe within ready access". He instead decided on a post at the State Museum for Natural Science in Stuttgart, where he was given a department for phylogenetic research. In April 1963, he moved toLudwigsburg -Pflugfelden for this position. The scientific collections of the museum had been provisorily kept in Ludwigsburg and remained here until their re-housing at the new site of the museum at Stuttgart's Löwentor, in 1985.Hennig's works in Stuttgart dealt almost exclusively with taxonomic revisions of Dipterans. For the "Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde", where he published the majority of his works, he completed 29 issues by the end of his life. Significant are the review articles published in
Erwin Lindner 's "Flies of the Palaearctic Regions" and the "Handbuch der Zoologie". The cladistic methodology was also represented in several published works, foremost among them the article, "Cladistic analysis or cladistic classification? A reply to Ernst Mayr" (1974), intended as an internationally accessible reply to the criticismErnst Mayr had made of Hennig's phylogenetic systematics.Willi Hennig only visited international institutions abroad twice, in spite of receiving many invitations for guest lectures. From
September 1 toNovember 30 1967 , he worked at the Entomology Research Institute at Canada's Department of Agriculture inOttawa and participated in the International Congress of Entomology inCanberra fromAugust 22 to 30, 1972. With his wife, he also visited Bangkok, New Guinea (where much of Mayr's understanding of bird taxonomy originated) and Singapore on this latter trip. His stay in Canada was also used for visits to various entomological collections in museums of the US, including Cambridge,Chicago ,Washington, D.C. and New York, always in the hope of finding further amber inclusions of Dipterans, that featured prominently in his research of the late 1960s and early 1970s. On the initiative of Klaus Günther, who by then held a chair at theFreie Universität Berlin , Hennig was given an honorary doctorate onDecember 4 1968 ; for health reasons, he could not accept this honour in person, and it was presented to him by Günther onMarch 21 1969 in Stuttgart. On the initiative of students whom he had lectured on several animal taxa, Hennig was made an honorary professor at theEberhard Karls University of Tübingen onFebruary 27 1970 .In the night of
November 5 1976 , Hennig died of a heart attack. He had previously repeatedly cancelled lectures with reference to his fading health, and had already had an attack on his journey to Ottawa. He was interred onNovember 10 at the Bergfriedhof inTübingen .elected works
* "Die Schlangengattung Dendrophis."in: "Zoologischer Anzeiger." 99.1932, 273-297 (gemeinsam mit W. Meise).
* "Revision der Gattung "Draco" (Agamidae)." in: "Temminckia." 1.1936, 153-220.
* "Beziehungen zwischen geographischer Verbreitung und systematischer Gliederung bei einigen Dipterenfamilien: ein Beitrag zum Problem der Gliederung systematischer Kategorien höherer Ordnung." in: "Zoologischer Anzeiger." 116.1936, 161-175.
* "Probleme der biologischen Systematik." in: "Forschungen und Fortschritte." 21/23.1947, 276-279.
* "Die Larvenformen der Dipteren." 3 Bde. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1948-1952.
* "Grundzüge einer Theorie der phylogenetischen Systematik." Deutscher Zentralverlag, Berlin 1950.
* "Kritische Bemerkungen zum phylogenetischen System der Insekten." Beiträge zur Entomologie. Bd 3 (Sonderheft). 1953, 1-85.
* Hennig, W. 1965. Phylogenetic Systematics. "Ann. Rev. Entomol." 10,97-116
* "Phylogenetic Systematics." (tr. D. Davis and R. Zangerl), Univ. of Illinois Press, Urbana 1966, reprinted 1979, ISBN 0-252-00745-X
* "Die Stammesgeschichte der Insekten." Waldemar Kramer & Co., 1969.
* "„Cladistic analysis or cladistic classification?“ A reply to Ernst Mayr." in: "Syst. Zool." 24.1974, 244-256
* "Aufgaben und Probleme stammesgeschichtlicher Forschung." Paul Parey, Berlin 1984.Notes
References
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*External links
* [http://www.cladistics.org/about/hennig.html Biographical article on Willi Hennig]
* [http://www.zfmk.de/web/Forschung/Abteilungen/Entomologie/Coleoptera/Projekte/Wissenschaftsgeschichte/Willi_Hennig/index.de.html Extensive biography of Willi Hennig (in German)]
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