Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell | |
Birth Date: | 22 August 1866 |
Birth Place: | West Norwood, London, England |
Death Date: | [1] |
Death Place: | San Diego, California, US |
Resting Place: | Columbia Cemetery, Boulder, Colorado, US |
Citizenship: | United States UK |
Fields: | Entomology, systematic biology |
Workplaces: | New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station, New Mexico Normal University, University of Colorado, University of Colorado Museum of Natural History |
Alma Mater: | Middlesex Hospital Medical School |
Notable Students: | Charlotte Cortlandt Ellis |
Author Abbrev Bot: | Cockerell |
Author Abbrev Zoo: | Ckll.[2] |
Spouses: | Annie Fenn Cockerell, Wilmatte Porter Cockerell |
Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell (22 August 1866 – 26 January 1948) was an American entomologist and systematic biologist who published nearly 4,000 papers, some of them only a few lines long. Cockerell's speciality was the insect order Hymenoptera (bees and wasps), an area of study where he described specimens from the United States, the West Indies, Honduras, the Philippines, Africa, and Asia. Cockerell named at least 5,500 species and varieties of bees and almost 150 genera and subgenera, representing over a quarter of all species of bees known during his lifetime. In addition to his extensive studies of bees, he published papers on scale insects, slugs, moths, fish scales, fungi, roses and other flowers, mollusks, and a wide variety of other plants and animals.
Cockerell was born in Norwood, Greater London, and died in San Diego, California.
He married Annie Sarah Fenn in 1891 (she died in 1893) and Wilmatte Porter in 1900. In 1901, he named the ultramarine blue chromodorid Mexichromis porterae (now Felimare porterae) in her honor. After their marriage in 1900, they frequently went on collecting expeditions together and assembled a large private library of natural history films, which they showed to schoolchildren and public audiences to promote the cause of environmental conservation.
He died in 1948, aged 81, and was buried in Columbia Cemetery in Boulder, Colorado.[3]
Between 1891 and 1901, Cockerell was the curator of the public museum of Kingston, Jamaica, professor of entomology of the New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station. In 1900–03, he was an instructor in biology at the New Mexico Normal School. While there, he taught and mentored Charlotte Cortlandt Ellis.[4]
In 1904, Cockerell became the curator of the Colorado College Museum and a lecturer on entomology. In 1906 he became a professor of systematic zoology at the University of Colorado where he worked with Junius Henderson in establishing the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History. During World War II, he operated the Desert Museum in Palm Springs, California.[5]
In 1912, Cockerell first described the Megachile zexmeniae, a species of leafcutter bee.[6]
Cockerell was author of more than 2,200 articles in scientific publications, especially on the Hymenoptera, Hemiptera and Mollusca, and on paleontology and various phases of evolution, plus some 1,700 other works, including treatises on social reform and education. He was one of the most prolific taxonomists in history, publishing descriptions of over 9,000 species and genera of insects alone, some 6,400 of which were bees and some 1,000 mollusks, arachnids, fungi, mammals, fish and plants.
This includes descriptions of numerous fossil taxa, such as the landmark study, Some Fossil Insects from Florissant, Colorado (1913). In an obituary note that appeared in the Nature on 14 February 1948, R.B. Benson observed that Cockerell "acquired the habit of hurrying his ideas and observations into print as soon as he could. The habit persisted throughout his long life, so that almost all his work appeared in the form of short papers".[7]
Cockerell and Wilmatte traveled to the United Kingdom in 1921. While there, they visited the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh where, according to himself in 1937, Isaac Bayley Balfour proved that the plant Primula ellisiae was a distinct species from P. rusbyi. He had named this taxon in honor of its discoverer, one of his students, Charlotte Cortlandt Ellis.[8] [9] However, at present this taxon is regarded as a synonym of P. rusbyi.[10]
Cockerell was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1928.[11] A dormitory in the Engineering Quad at the University of Colorado at Boulder and the moth Givira theodori are named in his honor.
Taxa named by Cockerell include:
Name | Year | Unit | Location | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anthidium exhumatum | 1906 | Florissant Formation | United States | A mason bee | |
Anthidium scudderi | 1906 | Florissant Formation | United States | A mason bee | |
Archimyrmex rostratus | 1923 | Green River Formation | United States | A myrmeciine ant | |
Elisolimax | 1893 | Extant | a land slug genus | ||
Dinopanorpa megarche | 1924 | Khutsin Formation | Russia | A scorpion fly | |
Hydriomena? protrita | 1922 | Florissant Formation | United States | A butterfly | |
Protostephanus ashmeadi | 1906 | Florissant Formation | A crown wasp | ||
Palaeovespa | 1906 | Baltic amber & Florissant Formation, Colorado | Europe United States | An Eocene wasp genus | |
Tortrix? destructus | 1917 | Florissant Formation | United States | A moth, moved to Paleolepidopterites destructus | |
Tortrix? florissantanus | 1907 | Florissant Formation | United States | A moth, moved to Paleolepidopterites florissantanus | |
Trigona corvina | 1913 | Central America & South America | A stingless bee | ||