Biological research institute in Naples, Italy
Stazione Zoologica in 1873
Stazione Zoologica in the 1890s
Stazione Zoologica in 2010
The
Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn
is a
research institute
in
Naples
,
Italy
, devoted to basic research in biology. Research is largely interdisciplinary involving the fields of
evolution
,
biochemistry
,
molecular biology
,
neurobiology
,
cell biology
,
biological oceanography
,
marine botany
,
molecular plant biology
,
benthic
ecology, and
ecophysiology
.
Founded in 1872 as a private concern by
Anton Dohrn
, in 1982 the Stazione Zoologica came under the supervision and control of the Ministero dell'Universita e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica (Ministry of Universities and Scientific and Technological Research) as a National Institute.
History
[
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]
The idea
[
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]
Dohrn's idea was to establish an international scientific community provided with laboratory space, equipment, research material and a library. This was supported and funded by the
German Government
,
Thomas Henry Huxley
,
Charles Darwin
,
Francis Balfour
and
Charles Lyell
among others. Dohrn provided a substantial sum himself. Running costs were paid from income derived from the
bench system
, the sale of scientific journals and specimens and the income from the public aquarium. This system was an important innovations in management of research and it worked. When Anton Dohrn died in 1909 more than 2,200 scientists from Europe and the United States had worked at Stazione Zoologica and more than 50 tables-per-year had been rented out.
"Report of the Committee, consisting of Dr. Anton Dohrn, Professor Rolleston and Mr. P. L. Sclater, appointed for the purpose of promoting the Foundation of Zoological Stations in different parts of the World:?Reporter, Dr. Dohrn [Jena]."-"The Committee beg to report that since the last Meeting of the British Association at Liverpool steps have been taken by Dr. Dohrn to secure the moral assistance of some other scientific bodies, and that the Academy of Belgium has passed a vote acknowledging the great value of the proposed Observatories. Besides this, the Government at Berlin has given instruction to the German Embassy at Florence and to the General Consul at Naples to do everything to secure success to Dr. Dohrn's enterprise. Next October the building at Naples will be commenced under the personal superintendence of Dr. Dohrn, who will be accompanied by the assistant architect of the Berlin Aquarium. The contractors agree to finish the building in one year, so that in January 1873 the Aquarium in Naples may be expected to be in working order."
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Report on the 1871 Meeting in Edinburgh
The building
[
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]
The oldest building of the zoological station was opened in 1874. A second building connected to the western end of the first by bridges was added in 1886 and a third was built in 1906 for the new science of comparative physiology. In 1910 the 1874 building was occupied by the public aquarium and the library only, the department for collecting and preserving organisms as well as the individual laboratories for zoologists having been relocated in the 1886 addition.
People
[
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]
Salvatore Lo Bianco in November 1889. His preservation methods were so advanced that collections of preserved marine organisms were sold to clients from all over the world
The first assistants were zoologists
Nicolaus Kleinenberg
and
Hugo Eisig
and one of the Preparators was Salvatore Lobianco (Lo Bianco) (1860?1910), who wrote
The Methods Employed at the Naples Zoological Station for the Preservation of Marine Animals
.
[1]
[2]
Others were Dr. Brandt (librarian); Dr. Lang; Dr. Giesbrecht; Petersen (engineer). By 1910 the permanent staff were Professor Dr.
Paul Mayer
and Dr. Gross, morphology; Dr. Burian, comparative physiology; Dr. Henze, chemistry; Dr. Gast, the museum; Hermann Linden, secretary; Sig. Santorelli, Preparator. Zoologists and morphologists were the first guests of the new Institute. Included were
Heinrich Wilhelm Gottfried von Waldeyer-Hartz
,
Francis Balfour
,
Ray Lankester
,
August Weismann
,
Giovanni Battista Grassi
,
Antonio della Valle
,
Oskar Schmidt
,
Ambrosius Hubrecht
(Professor of Utrecht University, an embryologist).
In 1897
Ida Henrietta Hyde
was invited to occupy a table at the institute. She went on to fund raise to help establish the American Women's Table at the Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn. This table was subsequently held by American women zoologists such as
Emily Ray Gregory
.
[3]
Publications
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]
The three publications issued by the Station were:-
Mittheilungen der Zoologischen Station in Neapel
,
Zoologischer Jahresbericht
a reference journal famous for its rapid publication and accuracy and
Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel
an inventory of the biota of Mediterranean (in 1876 Anton Dohrn added a section of Botany),
-
Zoologischer Jahresbericht
1911
-
Plate from Cefalopodi Viventi nel Golfo di Napoli
Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel
-
Mittheilungen der Zoologischen Station in Neapel
1879
-
Plate from
Le Attinie Monografia del Angelo Andres
Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel
Library
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]
Charles Darwin
had advised Dohrn that establishing a library would be unwise (Groeben, 1982, p. 29). Dohrn argued that availability of all the major published sources was essential. He gave his own books and scientific journals to the Station and persuaded publishers and scientists to donate their publications. The Naples Station's biological reference collection is still unrivalled in Europe today.
[
citation needed
]
The first librarian was Emil Schoebel.
Equipment
[
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]
The station maintained a high level of technical services.
Ernst Abbe
(1840?1905) of the
Zeiss
factory, a close friend, supplied sets of Zeiss instruments at low prices, thus bringing Zeiss equipment, sometimes improved, to the attention of the international scientific community. Assistants and guests collaborated in improving section-cutting and staining. For collecting there were several crewed boats, including the steamers "Johannes Muller" and "Francis Balfour". An engineer and assisting machinists maintained the aquarium and a trained mechanic made instruments for experimental investigations.
-
Anton Dohrn with a Zeiss microscope
-
Microscope made by Zeiss, Jena in 1879
-
the
Johannes Muller
and the
Frank Balfour
-
-
Mikrotom
made by von C. Reichert, Wien
The aquarium
[
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]
The aquarium was constructed by
William Alford Lloyd
[1]
. Dohrn had met
Lloyd in 1866 in
Hamburg
.
Culture
[
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]
Anton Dohrn followed
Goethe
in considering arts and science inseparable. He was devoted to music and in 1873 employed
Hans von Marees
(1837?1887) and
Adolf von Hildebrand
to enhance Stazione Zoologica with art works.
-
Pescatori che remano (particolare)
-
Pescatori
Later history
[
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]
Anton Dohrn's son Reinhard Dohrn (1880?1962) continued his father's work from 1909. Peter Dohrn (1917?2007) acted as director between 1954 and 1967. From 1967 to 1976 SZN was led by a Commissario Straordinario. In 1976 following the appointment of Alberto Monroy, an embryologist, as Director a radical reorganisation began. SZN was divided into five parts: Biological Oceanography, Benthic Ecology (at the Villa Dohrn in Ischia), Biochemistry, Cell and Developmental Biology and Neurobiology and. In 1982 SZN became an "Ente pubblico di ricerca (National Research Institute) under the directorship of Antonio Miralto. In 1987 Gaetano Salvatore, dean of the Medical School of Universita Federico II in Napoli, was appointed president of the Stazione Zoologica. After his death in 1997, Professor Giorgio Bernardi was appointed as president. He launched the study of
molecular evolution
"at the institutional level" completing Dohrn's vision.
People associated with SZN
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- Wilhelm Giesbrecht
- Rene-Edouard Claparede
- Heinrich Otto Wilhelm Burger
- George Stuart Carter
FRSE
- Francis Gerald William Knowles
FRS 1937-38 and intermittently thereafter to 1974
- Richard Parkinson
[4]
- Hans Adolf Eduard Driesch
- Arthur Henry Reginald Buller
Researcher, 1900-1901 on the fertilization of sea urchin eggs
[5]
- Carl Vogt
(1879 and 1884)
- Emil du Bois-Reymond
(1878)
- Gaetano Chierchia
Naturalist on the Italian research ship
Vettor Pisani
.
- James Dewey Watson
[6]
- Angelo Andres
- Ernst Ehlers
- Charles Otis Whitman
Mid-1870s early 1880s with Emily Nunn
- Carl Chun
- William Morton Wheeler
Research in Munich, Naples, Liege, 1893-1894
- Hermon Carey Bumpus
Research, Munich, Naples 1893
- Friedrich Alfred Krupp
- Vladimir Timofeyevich Szewiakow
- Jakob von Uexkull
- Albrecht Bethe
de:Albrecht Bethe
- August Weismann
- Adolf Naef
- Ernest Everett Just
- Otto Heinrich Warburg
- Fridtjof Nansen
- Robert Francis Scharff
- Gottlieb von Koch
(1849?1914) Professor of Zoology at the Technical School,
Darmstadt
. He wrote "Die Gorgoniden des Golfes von Neapel und der angrenzenden Meeresabschnitte..." published in Berlin in 1887 and published on octocorals between 1874 and 1891.
- Theodor Boveri
and
Marcella Boveri
- Raphael Weldon
, who visited in summer 1882, working on
Lacerta muralis
, the common wall lizard, and then later (on his honeymoon) in spring 1883.
Pearson's
obituary of Weldon (p. 10) reports that
"At Easter (1884)
Banyuls
was visited, and the summer vacation found Weldon in Naples again for the three months preparing his fellowship dissertation (for Cambridge). In Naples the cholera had broken out, and the Weldons experienced not only difficulty in getting the precious dissertation back to England, but in returning themselves."
- Francis Maitland Balfour (See Letter 9289?
Charles Darwin
to F.A. Dohrn 13 February 1874: "F. M. Balfour to visit Naples").
[2]
[
permanent dead link
]
- Jerome Y. Lettvin
. Researched octopus visual neurophysiology in the summers of 1959, 1961, and 1963.
- John Zachary Young
. Neurophysiologist, honored with Stazione Zoologica gold medal.
- Ida Henrietta Hyde
- George Wilton Field
(1892?1893)
- Thomas Hunt Morgan
(1894)
- David Fairchild
(1894)
- Raffaello Bellini
- Grigore Antipa
- Nino Salvatore
- Rachel Leech
(1959?60) studying chloroplast cytochromes
Further reading
[
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]
- Christiane Groeben, 2006
The Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn as a place for the circulation of scientific ideas: vision and management
in Anderson, K.L. & C. Thiery (eds.). 2006. Information for Responsible Fisheries : Libraries as Mediators : proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference:Rome, Italy, October 10 ? 14, 2005.
[3]
- C. B. Metz, editor; P. L. Clapp, assistant editor, 1985
The Naples Zoological Station and the Marine Biological Laboratory:One hundred years of Biology
Biological Bulletin Volume 168 Number 3 Symposium Supplement to the Biological Bulletin
[4]
Free download
- Dohrn, A. 1892. Aus Vergangenheit und Gegenwart der Zoologischen Station zu Neapel. ? Deutsche Rundschau 72: 275?298.
- Bernardino Fantini, 2000 The 'Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn' and the history of embryology
The International Journal of Developmental Biology
44(6):523?35 · February 2000?
pdf
- Maria Cristina Gambi et al., 2013
The Archivio Moncharmont: a Pioneering Biodiversity Assessment in the Gulf of Naples (Italy)
Conference paper: In: Groeben C. (Ed), Places, People, Tools: Oceanography in the Mediterranean and Beyond., At Napoli (Italy), Volume:
Pubblicazioni della Stazione Zoologica di Napoli
4: 459?467
pdf
See also
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References
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External links
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40°49′58″N
14°14′09″E
/
40.8327°N 14.2358°E
/
40.8327; 14.2358
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