Roger Dajoz

Roger Dajoz (22 August 1929 - 2019) was a French biologist, ecologist and entomologist, former student of the Ecole Normale Supérieure and a teacher at the Museum national d'histoire naturelle in Paris.[1]

Biography

He published a lot of books on ecology, entomology and biology. One of the most important is an Ecology dictionary named Précis d'écologie, published by Dunod in French.

He married Aline Langevin, anglicist and French physicist Paul Langevin's granddaughter. They gave birth to two daughters, Isabelle Dajoz, who is a biologist and a teacher at Université Denis Diderot, and Hélène Dajoz, who is a teacher in mathematics.

Bibliography

  • Insecticides, PUF, 1959.
  • Wood-boring insects and their part in deadwood degradation in Forest ecology, Gauthier-Villars, 1974.
  • Ecology collection, vol.6, Population dynamics, Masson, 1974.
  • The ecology encyclopedia : the present in question, with other contributors, Larousse, 1977.
  • Insects and forests : role and diversity of insects in forest environment, 1998.
  • Ecology dictionary, Dunod, 2006.
  • Biodiversity, the future of man and the planet, Ellipses, 2009.
  • Biologic evolution in the 21st century, facts and theories, Lavoisier, 2012.

References

  1. "Roger Dajoz (1929-2019)". bnf. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.