Gerald Stokell (20 June 1890 – 10 July 1972) was a New Zealand amateur ichthyologist.[1]
Stokell was born at Prebbleton, near Christchurch, New Zealand, on 20 June 1890 to Edmund Stokell and Jane (Née Pasche). He lived there for his whole life. He attended Broadfields Primary School, and was a keen trout angler.
A keen angler, Stokell wrote a series of studies on trout in Lake Ellismere.[2] Through this interest in angling, he also came across native fish species, but was unable to identify them due to a lack of published information.[2] [3] From 1938 onwards he began publishing papers on them, describing species and detangling the many names that had accrued.[2] He described 10 species that are still accepted, although others turned out to be junior synonyms.[2]
In 1941 Stokell's smelt, Stokellia anisodon, was named after him.
A direct man with forceful opinions, he left the Acclimatisation Society, stating:
Their sole qualification for safe-guarding the welfare of wild creatures [is] the possession of a desire to kill them.
Stokell died 10 July 1972 in Christchurch.