Daubenton was born at
Montbard, Côte-d'Or. His father, Jean Daubenton, a
notary, intended him for the church, and sent him to
Paris to study
theology, but Louis-Jean-Marie was more interested in
medicine. Jean's death in 1736 set his son free to choose his own career, and in 1741 he graduated in medicine at
Reims and returned to his hometown, planning to practice as a
physician. At about this time,
Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon, also a native of Montbard, was preparing to bring out a multi-volume work on
natural history, the
Histoire naturelle, générale et particulière, and in 1742 he invited Daubenton to assist him by providing anatomical descriptions. In many respects, the two men were complete opposites, but they worked well in partnership. In 1744, Daubenton became a member of the
French Academy of Sciences as an adjunct botanist, and Buffon appointed him keeper and demonstrator of the king's cabinet in the
Jardin du Roi. In the first section of the
Histoire naturelle, Daubenton gave descriptions and details of the dissection of 182 species of
quadrupeds, thus securing himself a high reputation as a comparative anatomist. From 1775 onwards, Daubenton lectured on natural history in the College of Medicine, and in 1783 on rural economy at the
Alfort school. He was also professor of mineralogy at the
Jardin du Roi. As a lecturer he was in high repute, and to the last retained his popularity. In December 1799 he was appointed a member of the
senate, but at the first meeting which he attended he fell from his seat in an apoplectic fit and, after a short illness, died at Paris. His wife, Marguerite Daubenton (1720-1818), was a novelist and the author of
Zelie dans le Desert (1786). Daubenton's name is commemorated in several species names, most notably the lemur the
aye-aye (
Daubentonia madagascariensis),
Daubenton's bat (
Myotis daubentoni) and a kale known as . ==Relatives==