- François-Xavier Bélanger
Infobox Scientist
name = François-Xavier Bélanger
box_width = 250px
image_width =
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birth_date = 1833
birth_place = Saint-Vallier,Quebec
death_date =January 19 1882
death_place =Quebec City
nationality =Canadian
ethnicity =French-Canadian
field =Natural history ,entomology
work_institutions =Université Laval
known_for =Museum curator,Microlepidoptera studies
influences =Léon Abel Provancher
influenced =
prizes =
religion = Roman CatholicFrançois-Xavier Bélanger (1833 –
19 January 1882 ) was aFrench-Canadian naturalist andmuseum curator . An autodidact like many naturalists of the time, he specialized in the study ofMicrolepidoptera . Thanks to the influence ofLéon Abel Provancher andThomas-Étienne Hamel , he became curator of thezoology museum atUniversité Laval , where although he did a good job of enlarging the total collection, he did so in a generally poorly organized way. He was succeeded by his assistant curatorCharles-Eusèbe Dionne .Biography
Bélanger was born in 1833 in Saint-Vallier, a small rural village on the southern shore of the
Saint Lawrence River , and married to Vitaline Fontaine at an unknown date. From 1846 to 1853 he studied at thePetit Séminaire de Québec and then taught in rural schools for a few years before returning toQuebec City where he worked at the "Courrier du Canada ", mainly as a proofreader.Léon Provancher noticed his published papers on insects and invited him in 1868 to write for his newly created "Naturaliste Canadien ". Bélanger was a goodillustrator , and a relatively competentnaturalist , although his major interest wasentomology .In 1869, thanks to Provancher and
Thomas-Étienne Hamel , the then Dean of the faculty of arts and General Secretary, he was appointed as curator of the zoology museum ofUniversité Laval . From then on until his death in 1882 he would be charged with maintaining and enlarging the collection, although these goals would become mostly restricted to the entomological collection after 1874, possibly because the room began to lack for larger specimens. During his tenure he published relatively little, all his energy being taken by the management and preparation of items for the collection, but he provided other naturalists with specimens, often of newspecies (V.T. Chambers named two species after him in 1875, "Gelechia belangerella", now "Pseudotelphusa belangerella ", and "Argyresthia belangerella "). In the 1870s, Bélanger secured increased communication and exchange withEurope an specialists, and was tasked with organizing the university's exhibit to theCentennial Exposition , where he was accompanied by Hamel.The main collection upon arrival of Bélanger was constituted of a collection given by William Couper: less than fifty
mammal s,reptile s andfish es, some two hundredbird s and three thousandinsect s, as well as an exotic birds collection, mostly acquired from the AmericanSmithsonian Institution , and a large conchological collection. Amongst Bélanger's good results include the acquisition of a large collection from French naturalistAlfred Lechevallier and another collection, of birds, from commission of crown landsPierre-Étienne Fortin . In the 1870s, the collection counted 1,300 Canadian birds in addition to existing exotic ones, a hundred mammals, about as much reptiles and fishes, and over thirty thousand insects.While Bélanger invested all his time and energy in the museum and succeeded in greatly enlarging the collections, his limited competence in non-entomological
taxonomy and average skills intaxidermy meant the collection was generally poorly organized, and sometimes outright outdated. His timidity also meant he could hardly do justice to the collection. These problems where further highlighted by his later disease and the arrival ofCharles-Eusèbe Dionne as assistant curator, who overshadowed Bélanger in almost all areas. The question of replacing Bélanger was troublesome because he was strongly backed by Provancher, a very influential figure. His death in 1882 solved the problem definitively, and the academic authorities were quick to nominate Dionne as his replacement.References
*cite web|url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5408|last=Raymond| first=Duchesne|title=Bélanger, François-Xavier| publisher=
Dictionary of Canadian Biography online| accessdate=2007-09-23
*cite book |last=Gaboriault |first=Victor |title=Charles-Eusèbe Dionne: Naturaliste, né à Saint-Denis-de-la-Bouteillerie |year=1974 |publisher=Société historique de la Côte-du-Sud |location=La Pocatière |oclc=15752359|series="Cahiers d'histoire" 9|pages=pp. 42–46
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