Anders Sandøe ÃÂrsted, also written as Anders Sandoe Oersted or Anders Sandö ÃÂrsted (21 June 1816 â 3 September 1872) was a Danish botanist, mycologist, zoologist and marine biologist. He was the nephew of physicist Hans Christian ÃÂrsted and of politician Anders Sandøe ÃÂrsted.
ÃÂrsted was born on 21 June 1816 in Rudkøbing on the island of Langeland, the son of merchant merchant Jacob Albert ÃÂrsted (1780âÂÂ1829) and wife Petronelle Catherine ÃÂrsted, née Bang (1781âÂÂ1845). From 1820, he lived with his uncle Anders Sandøe ÃÂrsted who treated him as his own son.
In his early career, he published on Danish and Arctic nematodes and on the zonation of marine algae in ÃÂresund.
Between 1845 and 1848, he travelled extensively in Central America and the Caribbean and published numerous papers on the flora, concentrating on the plant families Acanthaceae and Fagaceae. One of his better known publications is L'Amérique Centrale.
He was appointed professor of botany at the University of Copenhagen in 1851, a post he held until 1862. He was succeeded by Ferdinand Didrichsen.
His studies of what has since been known as juniper-pear rust showed that this fungus annually switches between two hosts; Juniperus sabina is the primary (telial) host and pear, Pyrus communis, is the secondary (aecial) host. He thus was the first to discover that some plant-parasitic fungi are heteroecious. These studies were continued on other Gymnosporangium species.
The orchid genus Oerstedella Reichenbach f. is named for him.
He is the author of several hundred plant names still in use.