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Lorenzo Camerano (9 April 1856 Biella – 22 November 1917 Turin) was an Italian herpetologist and entomologist.
Born in Biella in 1856 he studied in Bologna and Torino, where he settled in order to take, between 1871 and 1873, a painting course held by Fontanesi at the local Art Academy.
Camerano worked as a painter for the Turin Zoology Museum, then directed by the great zoologist Michele Lessona.
Fascinated by the strong personality of Lessona, he started a natural sciences course at the local university and graduated in 1878.
After having held several positions as assistant he became professor in 1880 and attained a permanent tenure in Cagliari University.
A little later he went back to Turin where he was assigned the chair of comparative anatomy, that he held till 1915.
Camerano also was chancellor of the University of Turin between 1907 and 1910, and was elected an Italian senator in 1909.
Besides his large scientific production (more than 300 titles), which included documenting the first food web,[1] he founded scientific journals and a marine biology institute in Rapallo.
Camerano strongly defended Darwin's ideas and was member of several national and international scientific institutions.
[2]
Works
edit- La zoologia da Aristotele a Darwin (in Italian). Torino: Guadagnini & Candellero. 1887.
References
edit- Conci, Cesare; Poggi, Roberto. 1996. Iconography of Italian Entomologists, with essential biographical data. Memorie della Società entomologica Italiana 75 : 159–382.
- ^ Egerton, F. N. (2007). "Understanding food chains and food webs, 1700-1970". Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 88: 50–69. doi:10.1890/0012-9623(2007)88[50:UFCAFW]2.0.CO;2.
- ^ A short biography written by Guido Badino is on-line on www.torinoscienza.it Archived 11 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine (URL accessed on 8 August 2009)