Carlos E. Chardón Scientist

Carlos Eugenio Chardón Palacios, D.Sc., D.Litt, (September 28, 1897 – March 7, 1965) was the first Puerto Rican mycologist, a high-ranking official in government on agriculture during the 1920s, the first Puerto Rican appointed as Chancellor of the University of Puerto Rico (1931-1935), and the head of the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration in the mid-to late 1930s during the Great Depression. He was also known as "the Father of Mycology in Puerto Rico". He discovered that the aphid "Aphis maidis" was the vector of the sugar cane Mosaic virus. Mosaic viruses are plant viruses.In the 1920s, he was appointed as Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor. In that position, he traveled in Central and South America, aiding agricultural programs in Colombia, Venezuela, Bolivia and Dominican Republic. After serving as a university administrator and head of a major agency, he returned to his academic work in the fields of land use and agriculture in 1940 and later. He published several books on his studies in Puerto Rico and Latin America.

Personal facts

Carlos E. Chardón
Birth dateSeptember 28, 1897
Birth place
Ponce Puerto Rico
Nationality
Puerto Rican people
Date of deathMarch 07, 1965
Place of death
San Juan Puerto Rico
Education
Cornell University
Known for
Rhopalosiphum maidis

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Scientist

doctoral advisor
Herbert H. Whetzel
Field of study
Mycology
Plant pathology

Carlos E. Chardón on Wikipedia