René Lesson
René Primevère Lesson (20 March 1794 – 28 April 1849) was a French naval surgeon, naturalist, ornithologist, and herpetologist whose work advanced the classification of birds and reptiles through extensive field collections and publications.[1][2]
Born in Rochefort, Lesson entered the naval medical school there in 1809 and, largely self-taught in natural history, rose through the ranks to become a pharmacist and professor at the institution.[2]
His most notable contributions stemmed from serving as assistant surgeon and naturalist on the circumnavigatory voyage of La Coquille (1822–1825), during which he gathered hundreds of specimens of mammals, birds, fish, and invertebrates from Polynesia, Melanesia, New Guinea, and Australia, including geological samples.[1][2]
In 1823, Lesson became the first Western naturalist to observe birds-of-paradise in the wild, debunking myths such as their footlessness, and he produced original drawings that informed subsequent taxonomic work.[1]
Key publications include Manuel d’ornithologie (1828), Histoire naturelle des oiseaux-mouches (1829–1830) on hummingbirds, and Histoire naturelle des oiseaux de paradis (1835), which detailed avian diversity and supported zoological systematics.[2][1]