Pierre André Latreille

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Pierre André Latreille (Template:IPA; 29 November 1762 – 6 February 1833) was a French zoologist, specialising in arthropods. Having trained as a Roman Catholic priest before the French Revolution, Latreille was imprisoned, and only regained his freedom after recognising a rare beetle species he found in the prison, Necrobia ruficollis.<ref name="Damkaer" />

He published his first important work, Template:Lang, in 1796, and was eventually employed by the Template:Lang. His foresighted work on arthropod systematics and taxonomy gained him respect and accolades, including being asked to write the volume on insects for George Cuvier's monumental work, Template:Lang, the only part not by Cuvier himself.

Latreille was considered the foremost entomologist of his time, and was described by one of his pupils as "the prince of entomologists".

Biography

File:Place Latreille Brive.JPG
Latreille's birthplace in Brive-la-Gaillarde

Early life

Pierre André Latreille was born on 29 November 1762 in the town of Brive, then in the province of Limousin, as the illegitimate child of Jean Joseph Sahuguet d'Amarzit, général baron d'Espagnac, who never recognised him, and an unknown mother, who abandoned him at birth; the surname "Latreille" was formally granted to him in 1813, and derives from a nickname of unclear provenance.<ref name="Dupuis"/> Latreille, effectively orphaned from his earliest age, but had influential protectors – first a physician, then a merchant from Brive, and later a baron (after the baron's death), who brought him to Paris in 1778.<ref name="Damkaer"/>

He studied initially in Brive and in Paris at the Template:Lang attached to the University of Paris to become a priest.<ref name="Dupuis">Template:Cite journal</ref> He entered the Template:Lang of Limoges in 1780, and left as a deacon in 1786. Despite being qualified to preach, Latreille later wrote that he had never carried out his functions as a minister, although for a few years he signed the letters he wrote "Template:Lang" ("the Reverend Latreille") or "Template:Lang" ("Latreille, Priest").<ref name="Dupuis"/>

Even during his studies, Latreille had taken on an interest in natural history, visiting the Template:Lang planted by Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, and catching insects around Paris. He received lessons on botany from René Just Haüy, which brought him in contact with Jean-Baptiste Lamarck.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

Necrobia ruficollis

File:Necrobia ruficollis.JPG
Discovering Necrobia ruficollis while in prison saved Latreille's life.

After the fall of the Template:Lang and the start of the French Revolution, the Civil Constitution of the Clergy was declared in 1790, which required priests to swear an oath of allegiance to the state. Latreille failed to do so and was therefore imprisoned in November 1793 under threat of execution.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

When the prison's doctor inspected the prisoners, he was surprised to find Latreille scrutinising a beetle on the dungeon floor.<ref name="Damkaer"/> When Latreille explained that it was a rare insect, the physician was impressed, and sent the insect to a 15-year-old local naturalist, Jean Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent. Bory de St.-Vincent knew Latreille's work, and managed to obtain the release of Latreille and one of his cell-mates.<ref name="Damkaer"/> Latreille and Bory de Saint-Vincent remained life-long friends.<ref name=":0">Bory de Saint-Vincent, Correspondence, published and annotated by Philippe Lauzun, Maison d’édition et imprimerie moderne, 1908. (Read online)</ref> The beetle had been described by Johan Christian Fabricius in 1775,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> but recognising it had saved Latreille from likely demise, as all the other inmates were dead within one month.<ref name="Damkaer"/>

File:Latreille (Louis Figuier, 1875).jpg
Portrait of Latreille by Louis Figuier, 1875

Thereafter, Latreille lived as a teacher and corresponded with various entomologists, including Fabricius. In 1796, and with Fabricius' encouragement, Latreille published his Template:Lang at his own expense. He was briefly placed under house arrest in 1797, and his books were confiscated, but the influence of Georges Cuvier, Bernard Germain de Lacépède and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (who all held chairs of zoology at the recently instituted Template:Lang) succeeded in freeing Latreille.<ref name="Dupuis"/> In 1798, Latreille was appointed to the Muséum, where he worked alongside Lamarck, curating the arthropod collections, and published a number of zoological works.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

First Empire

Following the death of the entomologist Guillaume-Antoine Olivier in 1814, Latreille succeeded him as titular member of the Template:Lang.<ref name="Dupuis"/> In the following few years, Latreille was especially productive, producing important papers for the Template:Lang, all of the volume on arthropods for George Cuvier's Le Règne Animal ("The Animal Kingdom", 1817), and hundreds of entries in the Template:Lang on entomological subjects.<ref name="Dupuis"/> In 1819, Latreille was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As Lamarck became blind, Latreille took on an increasing proportion of his teaching and research work. In 1821, Latreille was made a knight of the Template:Lang.<ref name="Dupuis"/> In 1829 he succeeded Lamarck as professor of entomology.<ref>Template:CathEncy</ref>

Later years

File:Père-Lachaise - Division 39 - Latreille 02.jpg
Monument to Latreille over his grave at Père Lachaise Cemetery (39th division)

From 1824, Latreille's health deteriorated. He handed his lectures over to Jean Victoire Audouin and took on several assistants for his research work, including Amédée Louis Michel Lepeletier, Jean Guillaume Audinet-Serville and Félix Édouard Guérin-Méneville.<ref name="Dupuis"/> He was instrumental in the founding of the Template:Lang, and served as its honorary president.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

Latreille's wife became ill in 1830 and died in May of that year; the date of Latreille's marriage is unclear, and his request to be released from his vow of celibacy was never acknowledged.<ref name="Dupuis"/> He resigned his position at the museum on 10 April 1832, in order to move to the country and thereby avoid the cholera epidemic. He returned to Paris in November, and died of bladder disease on 6 February 1833.<ref name="Dupuis"/> He had no children but was survived by a niece whom he had adopted.<ref name="Damkaer">Template:Cite book</ref>

Commemoration

The Template:Lang raised the money to pay for a monument to Latreille. This was erected over Latreille's grave at Père Lachaise Cemetery (39th division),<ref>Paul Bauer, Deux siècles d'histoire au Père Lachaise, Mémoire et Documents, (Template:ISBN), p. 476-477</ref> and comprised a Template:Convert obelisk with various inscriptions, including one to the beetle which had saved Latreille's life: "Template:Lang" ("Necrobia ruficollis, Latreille's saviour").<ref name="Damkaer"/>

As testimony to the high esteem in which Latreille was held, many books were dedicated to him, and up to 163 species were named in his honour between 1798 and 1850.<ref name="Dupuis"/> Taxa commemorating Latreille include:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Micro-computed-tomography-Introducing-new-dimensions-to-taxonomy-ZooKeys-263-001-g002.ogv
A 3D model based on a micro-CT scan of the polychaete worm Lumbrineris latreilli, which is named after Latreille.

Work

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File:Kellerassel1109.jpg
Latreille named the rough woodlouse Porcellio scaber in 1804, and also established the genus Porcellio (1804), the sub-order Oniscidea (1802), the order Isopoda (1817) and the class Malacostraca (1802).

Latreille produced a significant body of scientific work, extending across several fields. He was described by Johan Christian Fabricius as Template:Lang ("the foremost entomologist of our time"), and by Jean Victoire Audouin as Template:Lang ("the prince of entomology").<ref name="Dupuis"/>

Taxonomy and systematics

Latreille was significant as the first person to attempt a natural classification of the arthropods.<ref name="Grimaldi">Template:Cite book</ref> His "eclectic method" of systematics incorporated evidence from all available characters without assuming a pre-defined goal; Latreille repeatedly dismissed anthropocentrism and teleology.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

As well as many species and countless genera, the names of many higher taxa are also attributable to Latreille, including Thysanura, Siphonaptera, Ostracoda, Stomatopoda, Xiphosura, and Myriapoda.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

Typification

Although Latreille named many species, his primary interest was in describing genera.<ref name="Dupuis"/> He introduced the concept of the "type species", a species to which the name of a genus is firmly attached.<ref name="Dupuis"/> Similarly, he favoured the method of naming families after one of the constituent genera, rather than some defining feature of the group, implicitly designating a type genus for the family.<ref name="Dupuis"/>

References

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