Michael Joseph François Scheidweiler (1 August 1799 – 24 September 1861) was a German-born professor of botany and taxonomist, whose main area of interest was the Cactaceae.[1] From a collection by Henri Guillaume Galeotti, he first described Ariocarpus retusus, type species of the genus in 1838 in Brussels.[2]
In 1850 he launched the short-lived journal L'agriculteur belge et étranger.[4] In 1851 he was appointed instructor at the State School of Horticulture in Gentbrugge that Louis van Houtte had founded in 1849.[5]
Cours raisonné et pratique d'agriculture et de chimie agricole, 2 volumes (1841-1843).[6]
Traité théorique et pratique de l'élève et de l'amélioration des bêtes à cornes (1855).[7]
Together with Pierre-Victor Royer, Scheidweiler translated Matthias Jakob Schleiden's Die Pflanze und ihr Leben (1848) into French as La plante et sa vie (1859).