Karl Rechinger (9 April 1867 – 29 November 1952) was an Austrian botanist born in Vienna.
He was the father of botanist Karl Heinz Rechinger (1906-1998).
Afterwards he served as a demonstrator, followed by work as an assistant at the university botanical garden.
Beginning in 1902 he worked at various functions at the Naturhistorisches Museum in Vienna, and from 1918 onward, he served as a curator of the botany department.
[1] In 1905, with his wife Lily Rechinger-Favarger (1880-1973), he participated on an expedition to Oceania, where he performed botanical research in Samoa, the Solomon Islands and New Guinea.