Edouard Van Beneden

Belgian biologist (1846-1910) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Édouard Joseph Louis Marie Van Beneden (5 March 1846 in Leuven – 28 April 1910 in Liège) was a Belgian embryologist, cytologist and marine biologist.[1][2] He was professor of zoology at the University of Liège. He contributed to cytogenetics by his works on the roundworm Ascaris. In this work he discovered how chromosomes organized meiosis (the production of gametes).

Born5 March 1846
Died28 April 1910(1910-04-28) (aged 64)
CitizenshipBelgian
Knownformeiosis
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Edouard Van Beneden
Edouard Van Beneden
Born5 March 1846
Died28 April 1910(1910-04-28) (aged 64)
CitizenshipBelgian
Known formeiosis
Scientific career
Fieldsembryologist
InstitutionsUniversity of Liège
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He is son of Pierre-Joseph Van Beneden, a zoologist and paleontologist.

Van Beneden elucidated, together with Walther Flemming and Eduard Strasburger, the essential facts of mitosis, where, in contrast to meiosis, there is a qualitative and quantitative equality of chromosome distribution to daughter cells. (See karyotype).[3] [4]

Publications

  • Recherches sur la composition et la signification de l'œuf 1868 Full text available from Archive.org PDF
  • La maturation de l'oeuf, la fecondation, et les premieres phases du développement embryonnaire des mammifères, d'aprés des recherches faites chez le lapin : communication préliminaire in Bulletins de l'Académie royale de Belgique. 2me.série ; 40(12) 1875

Family

Van Beneden's father, Pierre-Joseph van Beneden (18091894) was also a well-known biologist. He introduced two important terms into evolutionary biology and ecology: mutualism and commensalism.[5]

References

Sources

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