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Swiss-born geographer and botanist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henri François Pittier de Fabrega (August 13, 1857 in Bex, Switzerland – January 27, 1950 in Caracas, Venezuela) was a Swiss-born geographer and botanist who started Venezuelan National Park history.[1]
Henri François Pittier de Fabrega | |
---|---|
Born | Bex, Switzerland | August 13, 1857
Died | January 27, 1950 92) Caracas, Venezuela | (aged
Nationality | Swiss |
Alma mater | University of Jena |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Geography |
He graduated as an engineer from the University of Jena and moved to Costa Rica in 1887,[2] where he founded the Physical Geographic Institute and an herbarium. With Théophile Alexis Durand he edited the exsiccata-like series Plantae Costaricenses exsiccatae.[3] Pittier collected fungi in Costa Rica which was published as a paper in 1896 by Marietta Hanson Rousseau and Elisa Caroline Bommer, and collected spiders that were detailed or described by A. Getaz in a paper in 1893, and collected at various dates and locations in the prior four years. That latter work also mentions a specimen from Greytown (Nicaragua) also collected by H.Pittier.
Pittier arrived in Venezuela in 1917, where he classified more than 30,000 plants and devoted many years to studying the flora and fauna in the country. Henri Pittier National Park was the first national park established in Venezuela.[4]
The plant genera Pittiera (now considered a synonym of Polyclathra), Pittierella (now considered a synonym of Cryptocentrum) and Pittierothamnus (now considered a synonym of Amphidasya) are named after him.[2] His name is also associated with Pittier's crab-eating rat, Ichthyomys pittieri.[5] and more than 500 species honor him. The Venezuelan government grants the Henri Pittier Order of Merit to Conservation.
He was the author of more than 300 papers on topics in botany, geography, forestry, anthropology, ethnography, linguistics, geology, and climatology.
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