Thekla Resvoll


Thekla Susanne Ragnhild Resvoll was a Norwegian botanist and educator. She was a pioneer in Norwegian natural history education and nature conservation together with her sister, Hanna Resvoll-Holmsen.

Biography

Resvoll was born at Vågå in Oppland, Norway. She was the daughter of Hans Resvoll and Julie Martine Deichman.
She worked as a nurse in an upper-class home in Stockholm before commencing studies of natural history at the Royal Frederick University in Kristiania 1894. She became an adept of the professor of botany, Axel Blytt. After her graduation in 1899, she went to Copenhagen where she worked at the University of Copenhagen's botanical laboratory under Professor Eugen Warming. In 1900, she returned to the University of Oslo. She was made an associate professor at the University Botanical Garden in 1902.
She obtained her doctorate in 1918 on the basis of a thesis entitled On Plants Suited to a Cold and Short Summer, in which she presented studies on adaptations of alpine plants to the harsh environment. These studies were Warmingian of nature, that is they were based on meticulous observations of plant individuals—their clonal and sexual propagation, perennation etc. Thus, it was plant population ecology before that discipline was first conceived.
Thekla Resvoll made a visit to Java and the botanic garden in Buitenzorg in 1923-24. She studied Fagaceous trees in the Javan flora. She found that they had hibernation buds and interpreted it as an unnecessary trait – a rudiment from their temperate origin. She remained at the Botanical Laboratory until her retirement in 1936. Her botany classes made a resting impact on generations of Norwegian students. She also wrote a textbook on botany for high school pupils.

Personal life

Alongside her academic career, Thekla Resvoll took part in the women's equality movement in Norway. She was a head of the Norwegian Female Student’s Club and served on the board of the women's suffrage movement.
She was married to mining engineer Andreas Holmsen whose brother Gunnar Holmsen was married to her sister Hanna. She was the third woman to become a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. She died in 1948 in Oslo.

Selected scientific works