Guido Nonveiller
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| Guido Nonveiller | |
| Born | June 5, 1913 Croatia, |
|---|---|
| Died | April 7, 2002 (aged 88) |
| Residence | Belgrade, Serbia, |
| Fields | Entomology |
| Institutions | International Brigades, Fao, Ordre des Palmes Académiques |
Guido Nonveiller (05 June 1913, Rijeka Belgrade - 07 April 2002) was a Croatian entomologist, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization expert, and professor at the University of Belgrade. He was known for his political and scientific activism and perhaps as the world authority for the African and Palaearctic Mutillidae (velvet ants).
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[edit] Life
Born in Rijeka of a chemist father who travelled a lot and educated his two children in Rijeka, Vienna and Split. In 1927, Nonveiller's mother introduces him to Peter Novak, an early Croatian entomologist, who made a lasting effect on the young boy and stimulated a passion for insects.
In his early twenties, during probation work at the University of Belgrade, he developed an interest for politics and engaged in different rebellious students movements, the Spanish Civil War and the French Resistance during World War II. He was a soldier and officer in International Brigades from 1937 to 1939 in Spain. An officer of the Resistance Movement from 1943 and 1944 in France and the first Yugoslav Diplomatic Representative in France (1944-1945) in Lyon and Paris.
In 1945, he returned to the University of Belgrade, where he taught from 1946 to 1960. He was founder and Director of the Federal Institute for Plant Protection of Yugoslavia. He also held a head of the Plant Protection Service and the Yugoslav Federal Ministry from 1947 to 1949. In 1960, as plant protection officer, he moved to Tunis, and in 1962 as FEO expert to Yaounde, Cameroon.
The Croatian Entomological society named their bibiographical database Nonveilleriana in his memory
[edit] Work
Nonveiller was a world authority on the African and Palaearctic Mutillidae and Bradynobaenidae (Hymenoptera), a leading specialist for several groups of Coleotera of the Balkans and adjacent areas and a prominent expert in economic entomology and historigraphy of his time.
In the late 1980, despite his age, Nonveiller was among the world pioneers in application of personal computers in entomology. He started with Commodore 64 in 1983.[1]
In his early eighties, he moved to France from 1992 to 1996 and published over 20 papers on his work at the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris.
[edit] Publications
Nonveiller wrote and published in German, French, English, Italian, Spanish and Serbo-Croatian, resulting in more than 150 publications, description of 33 new general/subgenera and over 330 new species-group taxa assembling one of the world largest collection of African Mutillids including more than 120,000 specimens collected by himself and his wife Nadezda in Cameroon.[2]
[edit] Bibliography
- Nonveiller, G. (1995). Recherches sur les mutillides de l'afrique xvii. note pour servier a la connaissance du genre Pristomutilla ashmead, 1903. (hymenoptera, mutillidae). Entomofauna, 16:29-120.
- Guido Nonveiller (2001). Pioneers of the Research on the Insects of Dalmatia. Croatian Natural History Museum (Zagreb): 390.
- G. Nonveiller (2004) "Memoir". University of Belgrade
[edit] External links
- At Amazon.com http://www.amazon.com/Pioneers-Research-Insects-Dalmatia/dp/9536645041/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1208324487&sr=8-2
- Croatian entomological Database http://www.agr.hr/hed/hrv/bibl/osobe/osobeFR.htm
- At Googlebooks: http://books.google.com/books?id=3RoJUIunQ-UC&pg=PA827&lpg=PA827&dq=nonveiller&source=web&ots=H7uPAWLwQm&sig=VO8b7vkx-gncu9heouE5ZIkj4j4
- Family Mutillidae: http://www.zmuc.dk/EntoWeb/collections-databaser/Hymenoptera/Mutillidae%20first%20half%20of%20genera.htm

