Alfredo Dugès

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Alfredo Dugès (1826-1910)

Alfredo Dugès (birth name- Alfred Auguste Delsescautz Dugès); (April 16, 1826 - January 7, 1910) was a French-born, Mexican physician and naturalist born in Montpellier. He was the son of zoologist Antoine Louis Dugès (1797-1838). Alfredo Dugès is largely remembered for his extensive studies of Mexican herpetology.

He studied medicine at the University of Paris, and in 1852 emigrated to Mexico. He settled in Guanajuato, where he worked as an obstetrician, also giving classes in natural history at the Escuela de Estudios Superiores de Guanajuato. With his brother, entomologist Eugenio Dugès (1826-1895), he organized frequent field trips in order to collect specimens.

Dugès published numerous scientific papers in the fields of herpetology, botany, entomology, et al. At Guanajuato, he was director of the local museum, later named the Museo Alfredo Dugès in his honor. In Mexico, he described 40 new species of reptiles and amphibians, of which nearly half are considered valid today.[1] As a botanist, he is the taxonomic authority of the genus Barcena (family Rhamnaceae).[2]

Books about Alfredo Dugès

  • "Early foundations of Mexican herpetology; an annotated and indexed bibliography of the herpetological publications of Alfredo Dugès, 1826-1910", by Hobart M. Smith and Rozella B. Smith.[3]

References

  • This article is based on a translation of an equivalent article at the French Wikipedia.
  1. SSAR Herps (biography)
  2. IPNI List of plants described by Dugès.
  3. Google Books Early foundations of Mexican herpetology
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