Olivério Pinto
Olivério Pinto | |
---|---|
Born |
Olivério Mário de Oliveira Pinto 11 March 1896 Jaú, Brazil |
Died |
13 June 1981 85) Piracicaba, Brazil | (aged
Residence | Brazil |
Nationality | Brazilian |
Fields | Ornithology, Zoology, Medicine |
Institutions | Instituto Butantan |
Olivério Mário de Oliveira Pinto (11 March 1896 – 13 June 1981) was a Brazilian zoologist and physician.
Life
Born in 1896 in the city of Jaú, state of São Paulo, Brazil, Olivério Pinto moved to Salvador at an early age. During his basic studies, he already showed a great interest in zoology, but due to the lack of a higher education in natural sciences in the city, he studied medicine in the Faculdade de Medicina da Bahia, the first medical school to be founded in Brazil. He concluded his studies in 1921 at the age of 25.[1]
Returning to São Paulo in 1921, Pinto settled in Araraquara and started to work as a physician, founding and directing the first laboratory of clinical analyses in the region. He also taught Natural Sciences at the recently founded School of Odontology and Pharmacy in the city. He married his wife, Alice Alves de Camargo, in 1924.[1]
Pinto started to produce technical drawings for the zoologist Afrânio do Amaral who was at the time the director of the Instituto Butantan. Perceiving Pinto's talent and knowledge, Amaral designated him to the position of researcher in Zoology. In 1939, Pinto became the director of the Zoology Department of São Paulo's Agriculture Secretariat. He retired in 1956, but continued his research.[1]
At the age of 85, Pinto traveled to Águas de São Pedro with his family and started to feel sick. He was hospitalized in Piracicaba and died in 13 June 1981.
Works
Pinto's main work was the Catálogo das Aves do Brasil (Brazil's Catalog of Birds), published between 1938 and 1944 in two volumes with a total of 1266 pages. This was the first work that organized data on names, classification and distribution of Brazilian birds. In 1978 he published an updated version, the Novo Catálogo das Aves do Brazil (Brazil's New Catalog of Birds).