Scholarly Article

Henri de Lacaze-Duthiers and the observation of the Mediterranean marine life: a brief history of aquariology in Banyuls-sur-Mer

Louis, V., Loubet, J., Besseau, L.

2023-06-01 · Life and Environment · Sorbonne Université

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Abstract

The Laboratoire Arago in Banyuls-sur-Mer (France) was founded in 1882 by Professor Henri de Lacaze-Duthiers, one of the most famous French zoologists of the 19th cen­tury. Professor at the Sorbonne (University of Paris), he was noted for his wide knowledge of the French coastal marine fauna. In 1885, he initiated the construction of a public Aquarium, one of the first in France, which was attached to the Laboratoire Arago. This Aquarium quickly became not only a place where any eminent scientist or simple curious visitor could observe the Mediterranean diversity, but also a tool for experimentation in controlled environmental condi­tions made possible by the arrival of electricity in Banyuls in 1888. Nowadays the aquarium is a tool still used as a research medium, for experiments addressing hot issues in the context of global change and the impact of pollution in the marine environment. Since 2017, by associat­ing in the same department the Research Aquarium Centre and the public Aquarium of the Bio­diversarium, the Laboratoire Arago, now known as Observatoire Océanologique of Banyuls, offers quality facilities for scientific experimentation and an essential place for scientific media­tion, where all audiences are sensitized to the preservation of the marine environment and its biodiversity. DOI: 10.57890/VIEMILIEU/2022.72.3/4:191-198

Keywords

Henri de Lacaze-Duthiers, Aquarium, History of aquariology, Banyuls-sur-mer, Scientific experimentation, Scientific mediation, Research aquarium

Citation Details

Life and Environment, pp. 191-198