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It is a well-kept secret, but Belgium can be proud of having founded the very first marine research station in the world. It was professor Pierre-Joseph van Beneden (1809-1894) from Leuven who built a modest laboratory with private means on the east bank of the port of Ostend in 1843. This “laboratoire des Dunes”, which was located on the grounds of the Valcke-Deknuyt oyster farm and belonged to his in-laws, would be the scene of a great deal of marine biological research and the reception of various renowned Belgian and foreign researchers over the following decades. Here, Van Beneden would also lay the foundation for his pioneering research on (fish) parasites and on the animal life of the Belgian coast. Near the Ostend fish market, hundreds of fishing vessels and dozens of oyster tanks (“huîtrières”) always ensured him of the supply of sufficiently fresh study material. |
With this action he inspired the many reputable stations that sprang up all over Europe from the second half of the 19th century onwards (Concarneau 1859, Roscoff 1872, Naples 1872, Wimereux 1875, Den Helder 1890). His son Edouard van Beneden (1846-1910) followed in his father’s footsteps and became – in addition to perhaps the greatest Belgian biologist of all time thanks to the discovery of meiosis or reductional division – the main driving force behind oceanography at the University of Liège. He also founded a research station in Ostend (1883). However, it was a disciple of his father, Gustave Gilson, who first set up his own field laboratory not far from the aforesaid stations and subsequently became director of the Marine Scientific Institute (ZWI), established in 1927. In 1970 the ZWI was succeeded by the Institute for Marine Scientific Research (IZWO), which was in turn incorporated into the new Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ) in 1999. Nowadays the VLIZ offices in Ostend overlook what was once the world’s first marine research station. So things have come full circle.
Nowadays nothing remains of the actual research station from 1843. At the end of the 19th century it lost its appeal and eventually it was sacrificed to the expansion of the harbour channel. A commemorative plaque will be unveiled on Friday 25 June on the occasion of the annual open members’ day of the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ). The programme also includes an outline of the history of marine sciences in Belgium, the launch of the new ‘Zeekrant 2010’ newsletter and the presentation of the modernised marine library.
Press invitation:
The press has the chance to attend the public part of the VLIZ members’ day, which includes the following items:
2:00 pm – 2:10 pm: launch of Zeekrant 2010 (Guido Decorte, member of the Executive Council of West Flanders)
2:10 pm – 2:30 pm: “Intriguing marine heads” (Evy Copejans)
2:30 pm – 3:00 pm: “The history of Belgian marine sciences has come full circle” (Jan Seys)
3:00 pm – 3:15 pm: Unveiling the commemorative plaque for the first marine research station (Jan Mees)
3:15 pm – 4:00 pm: “A plunge into the modernised marine library” (Jan Haspeslagh & Heike Lust)
The event takes place on Friday 25 June 2010 from 2 pm to 4 pm in the VLIZ offices, Wandelaarkaai 7, 8400 Ostend (Belgium).
Press contact:
Jan Seys – Mobile: + 32 478/37 64 13; jan.seys@vliz.be
Press Release as pdf:
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