Émile Brumpt

French parasitologist (1877–1951).

Alexandre Joseph Émile Brumpt (10 March 1877, in Paris – 8 July 1951) was a French parasitologist. He studied zoology and parasitology in Paris, obtaining his degree in science in 1901, and his medical doctorate in 1906. In 1919 he succeeded Raphaël Blanchard (1857–1919) as professor of parasitology to the Faculté de Médecine de Paris, a position he maintained until 1948. Much of his career was spent performing research in Africa and Latin America. Brumpt is credited for introducing a technique known as xenodiagnosis into parasitological research. In 1935, he described Plasmodium gallinaceum,

Abbreviations: Brumpt
Occupations: zoologist, parasitologist, entomologist, botanist
Citizenships: France
Languages: French
Dates: 1877-03-10T00:00:00Z – 1951-07-08T00:00:00Z
Birth place: 16th arrondissement of Paris
Direct attributions: 0 plants, 4 fungi
Authorship mentions: 0 plants, 9 fungi

4 fungi attributed, 5 fungi contributed to9 fungi:

Madurella mycetomatis (Laveran) Brumpt 1905
fungi species in the order sordariales
Madurella mycetomatis is a fungus primarily reported in Central Africa as a cause of mycetoma in humans. It has been misclassified for many years, but with improvement of molecular techniques, its phylogenetic classification has been established. Many methods exist to identify M. mycetomatis, both in lesions and in culture. Histological examination is especially useful, as it has many unique morphological features. Strain-level differences in response to antifungal agents is informative for treatment and laboratory isolation of cultures.
Madurella Brumpt 1905
fungi genus
Madurella is a fungal genus of uncertain position in the Sordariales, and sometimes classified as Mitosporic Ascomycota. It includes the following species: Madurella mycetomatis is a main cause of eumycetoma, an infection of human extremities and rarely the nervous system, in arid regions of east Africa and Asia. The origin is soil and its dark agar colonies are often sterile, although sclerotia are often produced, and short chains of 1-celled conidia sometimes occur. A molecular assay distinguishes the four species based on rolling circle amplification of the internal transcribed spacer of
Monilia elongata (Mattlet) Brumpt 1927
fungi species in the poaceae family
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Entomophthora schroeteri Brumpt 1940
fungi species in the entomophthoraceae family
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Fonsecaea pedrosoi (Brumpt) Negroni 1936
fungi species in the herpotrichiellaceae family
Fonsecaea pedrosoi is a fungal species in the family Herpotrichiellaceae, and the major causative agent of chromoblastomycosis. This species is commonly found in tropical and sub-tropical regions, especially in South America, where it grows as a soil saprotroph. Farming activities in the endemic zone are a risk factor for the development of chromoblastomycosis.
Scopulariopsis hominis (Brumpt & Langeron) Sartory 1922
fungi species in the microascaceae family
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Madurella reynieri (Brumpt) Vuill. 1931
fungi species in the order sordariales
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Madurella mansonii (Brumpt) Vuill. 1931
fungi species in the order sordariales
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Madurella bouffardii (Brumpt) Vuill. 1931
fungi species in the order sordariales
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