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Georgii Frantsevich Gause : ウィキペディア英語版
Georgy Gause
Georgii Frantsevich Gause ((ロシア語:Гео́ргий Фра́нцевич Га́узе); December 27, 1910 – May 4, 1986), was a Russian biologist who proposed the competitive exclusion principle, fundamental to the science of ecology. He would devote most of his later life to the research of antibiotics.
==Early life==
Gause was born December 27, 1910 in Moscow, Russia to parents Frants Gause, a professor of architecture at Moscow State University, and Galina Gause, an industrial worker at an automotive steel plant. As a boy and into his teenage years, Gause and his extended family took summer vacations to the Caucasus Mountains in southern Russia for months at a time. 〔Brazhnikova, MG. 1987. Obituary. The Journal of Antibiotics 40 (7): 1079-1080.〕 Although his family was not wealthy, they were allowed these respites because his father, being a government architect, helped to build many structures at the university. It was during these trips to the Caucasus Mountains that Gause grew fond of nature, often chronicling the lives and behavior of several organisms including the Siberian Grasshopper (Aeropus sibiricus).

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