List of organisms named after famous people (born 1800–1899)

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In biological nomenclature, organisms often receive scientific names that honor a person. A taxon (e.g. species or genus; plural: taxa) named in honor of another entity is an eponymous taxon, and names specifically honoring a person or persons are known as patronyms. Scientific names are generally formally published in peer-reviewed journal articles or larger monographs along with descriptions of the named taxa and ways to distinguish them from other taxa. Following rules of Latin grammar, species or subspecies names derived from a man's name often end in -i or -ii if named for an individual, and -orum if named for a group of men or mixed-sex group, such as a family. Similarly, those named for a woman often end in -ae, or -arum for two or more women.

This list is part of the List of organisms named after famous people, and includes organisms named after famous individuals born between 1 January 1800 and 31 December 1899. It also includes ensembles in which at least one member was born within those dates; but excludes companies, institutions, ethnic groups or nationalities, and populated places. It does not include organisms named for fictional entities, for biologists, paleontologists or other natural scientists,[note 1] nor for associates or family members of researchers who were not otherwise notable (exceptions are made, however, for natural scientists who are much more famous for other aspects of their lives, such as, for example, writers Vladimir Nabokov or Beatrix Potter).

Organisms named after famous people born earlier can be found in:

Organisms named after famous people born later can be found in:

The scientific names are given as originally described (their basionyms); subsequent research may have placed species in different genera, or rendered them taxonomic synonyms of previously described taxa. Some of these names may be unavailable in the zoological sense or illegitimate in the botanical sense due to senior homonyms already having the same name.

List (people born 1800–1899)[edit]

Taxon Type Namesake Notes Taxon image Namesake
image
Ref
Abatus shackletoni Koehler, 1911 Sea urchin Ernest Shackleton A species native to the Southern Ocean, described from specimens collected at Cape Royds by the Nimrod Expedition, led by Shackleton. [1]
Abelopsocus truganiniae Schmidt & New, 2008 Barklouse Truganini A Tasmanian species "Named for Truganini, considered to be the last surviving full-blood indigenous person from Tasmania." [2]
Abies borisii-regis Mattf. Conifer Boris III of Bulgaria Known as Bulgarian fir, Macedonian fir or King Boris fir, this species, native to the Balkan peninsula, was described during Tsar Boris III's reign in Bulgaria, and named in his honour. [3][4]
Ablerus longfellowi Girault, 1913 Wasp Henry Wadsworth Longfellow "This truly remarkable species is respectfully dedicated to Henry W. Longfellow, the poet." [5]
Actinoceras amundseni Foerste, 1921 Nautiloid Roald Amundsen A fossil species from the Ordovician of Arctic Canada, described from a specimen collected by the expedition of the Gjøa, led by Amundsen. [6]
Aeginura grimaldii Maas, 1904 Jellyfish Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This deep-sea hydrozoan was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [7]
Agave victoriae-reginae T.Moore Flowering plant Queen Victoria [8]
Akanthinotanais rossi Błażewicz, Jakiel, Bamber & Bird, 2021 Crustacean James Clark Ross A deep-sea tanaid found in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, "name[d] in honour of Sir James Clark Ross, a British Royal Navy officer and explorer of the Antarctic." [9]
Alaptus maccabei Girault, 1914 Wasp Joseph McCabe "Respectfully dedicated to Joseph McCabe, the former Roman Catholic priest, now writer on the philosophical questions of the time."
Subsequently synonymised with Alaptus minimus.
[10]
Aleiodes cacuangoi Shimbori & Shaw, 2014 Wasp Dolores Cacuango A mummy wasp native to Ecuador, "named in honor to Dolores Cacuango, for her pioneering, outstanding brave efforts for the indigenous rights in Ecuador." [11]
Aleiodes frosti Shimbori & Shaw, 2014 Wasp Robert Frost The patronym refers to Frost's The Road Not Taken: the larvae emerge from the host caterpillar in a way different from all other relatives. [11]
Alexandromenia grimaldii Leloup, 1946 Solenogaster (a shell-less, worm-like mollusk) Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice II. [12]
Alisphaera gaudii Kleijne et al., 2001 Algae Antoni Gaudí "The coccolith structure reminds of Gaudí's architecture." [13]
Alophomopsis spenceri Girault, 1913 Wasp Herbert Spencer Subsequently transferred to the genus Eulophinusia. [5]
Alophomorphella edisoni Girault, 1915 Wasp Thomas Edison Subsequently transferred to the genus Elachertus. [14][15]
Alterosa castroalvesi Dumas, Calor & Nessimian, 2013 Caddisfly Castro Alves A species native to Bahia state, Brazil, "named in memory of Antônio Frederico de Castro Alves, known as "the poet of the slaves" because of his sympathy for the Brazilian abolitionist cause. Castro Alves was born in Bahia state in 1847 and died at 1871. He is the patron of the 7th chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters. Some of his abolitionist poems, like Espumas Flutuantes, A Cachoeira de Paulo Afonso, and O Navio Negreiro, were collected in a posthumous book called Os Escravos, published in 1883." [16]
Amplaria muiri Shear & Krejca, 2007 Millipede John Muir [17]
Anagyrus emersoni Girault, 1913 Wasp Ralph Waldo Emerson "Respectfully dedicated to R. W. Emerson for his essay on "War.""
Subsequently transferred to genus Psyllaephagus.
[18][19]
Anagyrus mazzinini Girault, 1915 Wasp Giuseppe Mazzini Subsequently transferred to genus Psyllaephagus. [20][19]
Anatoma tobeyoides Geiger & Jansen, 2004 Sea snail Mark Tobey "The sculpture of fine, irregularly intersecting lines is reminiscent of the paintings of Mark Tobey." [21]
Anolis roosevelti Grant, 1931 Lizard Theodore Roosevelt Jr. This possibly extinct species is native to the Spanish Virgin Islands, part of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, where Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was governor at the time of its naming. [22]
Anophthalmus hitleri Scheibel, 1933 Beetle Adolf Hitler Hitler sent Scheibel a letter showing his gratitude for naming a species after him. This blind, troglobiont beetle, found only in five caves in Slovenia, is now in danger of extinction solely because of its name, due to its interest to collectors of Nazi memorabilia. After World War II, renaming the beetle was rejected by the ICZN, as the name had been originally published in accordance with ICZN rules. [23][24]
[25]
Anostirus ataturki Platia & Gudenzi, 2000 Beetle Mustafa Kemal Atatürk "The name of the new species pays tribute to Kemal Ataturk, the founding father of the modern Turkish republic; Atatürk University in Erzurum, where the specimens are deposited, is named after him." [26]
Antarctanax shackletoni Peecook, Smith & Sidor, 2018 Archosauriform Ernest Shackleton A fossil reptile from the Triassic of Antarctica, named "in reference to British polar explorer Ernest Shackleton, who named the Beardmore Glacier, which runs between lower Fremouw localities such as Graphite Peak." (the type locality) [27]
Antarctophiline amundseni Moles, Avila & Malaquias, 2019 Sea slug Roald Amundsen A species found in the Weddell Sea (Antarctica), "named after the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen who was the first to reach 90°0'S, the South Pole, on 14 December 1911." [28]
Anthemis regis-borisii Stoj. & Acht. Flowering plant Boris III of Bulgaria A species of dog-fennel endemic to Bulgaria, described during Tsar Boris III's reign and named in his honour. [29]
Aphelochaeta palmeri Blake, 2018 Polychaete worm Nathaniel Palmer A marine species found in the Southern Ocean, "named after Nathaniel B. Palmer, American whaler, who is reputed to be among the first to sight the Antarctic continent." [30]
Apogonia rizali Heller, 1897 Beetle José Rizal "José Rizal, born in Luzon of Tagalog parents, studied in Manila, Madrid, Leipzig, Berlin, Paris, London and Brussels and has made an excellent name for himself as a writer in various fields, as a doctor and artist. Living in political exile in Mindanao, he spent years collecting for the Dresden Museum. On 30 November 1896, he gave his young life for his personal and patriotic ideals. He was summarily shot by the Spanish in Manila." This was one of the species Rizal collected. [31]
Aptostichus dorothealangeae Bond, 2012 Spider Dorothea Lange Found in California's agricultural Central Valley [32]
Aptostichus muiri Bond, 2012 Spider John Muir The species occurs in Yosemite National Park, which Muir was instrumental in founding [32]
Aquila adalberti C.L. Brehm, 1861 Eagle Prince Adalbert of Bavaria (1828–1875) The Spanish imperial eagle is endemic to the Iberian Peninsula. Specimens were first collected by Reinhold Brehm, a German doctor and naturalist who had settled in Spain, and who sent them to his father, renowned ornithologist Christian Ludwig Brehm, to write the formal description as a new species. Reinhold Brehm chose to dedicate it to Prince Adalbert of Bavaria, who had appointed him as his ophthalmologist, as a token of gratitude and friendship (like Brehm, the prince had a Spanish wife, Infanta Amalia of Spain, and spent much of his time in Spain). [33][34]
Araphuroides sala Błażewicz-Paszkowycz & Bamber, 2012 Crustacean George Augustus Sala A tanaid from Bass Strait, Australia, "Named after the English journalist George Augustus Henry Sala who, during a visit to Victoria in 1885, coined the phrase "Marvellous Melbourne", which stuck long into the twentieth century and is apparently still used today by Melburnians." [35]
Arcticlam nanseni Marincovich, 1993 Bivalve Fridtjof Nansen A fossil species of clam from the Paleocene of Prince Creek Formation in Arctic Alaska, "named in honor of Fridtjof Nansen, who was the first to scientifically explore and study the Arctic Ocean." [36]
Arctitreta pearyi Whitfield, 1908 Brachiopod Robert Peary A fossil species from the Carboniferous of Ellesmere Island, described from specimens collected by members of Peary's 1905–1906 expedition. [37]
Aristostomias grimaldii Zugmayer, 1913 Fish Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of barbeled dragonfish was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle II. [38]
Artedidraco shackletoni Waite, 1911 Fish Ernest Shackleton A species native to the Southern Ocean, described from specimens collected at Cape Royds by the Nimrod Expedition, led by Shackleton. [39]
Arthurdactylus conandoylei Frey & Martill, 1994 Pterosaur Arthur Conan Doyle Found in jungle similar to where The Lost World was set. [40]
Ascogaster lovelaceae Kittel, 2016 Wasp Ada Lovelace Replacement name for Ascogaster breviventris Tobias, 2000, which was preoccupied by Ascogaster breviventris Granger, 1949. [41]
Asterope grimaldi Skogsberg, 1920 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. The type locality of this ostracod is the Monaco harbour.
Subsequently transferred to genus Cylindroleberis.
[42]
Astrarchia stephaniae Finsch & A.B. Meyer, 1885 Bird Princess Stéphanie of Belgium Genus Astrarchia was subsequently synonymised with Astrapia. [43]
Astrophiura cavellae Koehler, 1915 Brittle star Edith Cavell "I respectfully dedicate this species to the memory of Miss Edith Cavell, in the certainty that scholars in all civilised countries will appreciate this gesture of sympathy to the noble woman who was the victim of a cowardly and revolting act." The description was published a few weeks after Cavell's execution.
Subsequently synonymised with Astrophiura permira.
[44][45]
Atalopedes nabokovi E.L. Bell & Comstock, 1948 Butterfly Vladimir Nabokov A skipper from Hispaniola described from a specimen that was sent to the authors by Nabokov.
Subsequently transferred to genus Hesperia.
[46]
Atoposoma arnoldi Girault, 1913 Wasp Matthew Arnold Subsequently transferred to the genus Cirrospilus. [5][47]
Atoposoma gregi Girault, 1913 Wasp William Rathbone Greg Subsequently transferred to the genus Cirrospilus. [5][48]
Atoposoma lanei Girault, 1913 Wasp Norman Angell "Dedicated to Ralph Lane for his book The Great Illusion, A Study of the Relation of Military Power in Nations to their Economic and Social Advantage." Angell's full name was Ralph Norman Angell Lane, and he had sometimes published under the name Ralph Lane.
This species was subsequently transferred to the genus Cirrospilus.
[5][49]
Atoposoma mazzinini Girault, 1913 Wasp Giuseppe Mazzini Subsequently transferred to the genus Cirrospilus. [5][50]
Atoposoma zolai Girault, 1913 Wasp Émile Zola "This magnificent species I dedicate with great respect to Émile Zola for his work La Débâcle"
Subsequently transferred to the genus Cirrospilus.
[51][52]
Austrotinodes santosdumonti Dumas, de Souza & Rocha, 2017 Caddisfly Alberto Santos-Dumont "Dedicated to the Brazilian inventor Alberto Santos Dumont, who was born at Palmira (now Santos Dumont) in Minas Gerais state in 1873 and died in 1932. Santos Dumont is considered the "Father of Flight" and "Aviation Pioneer" because he invented the first true airplane called 14-BIS, which flew a distance of 220 meters at a height of 6 meters and at a speed of about 40 km/h, in Paris on November 12, 1906." This species is native to Brazil. [53]
Axylus mabinii Tan et al., 2018 Katydid Apolinario Mabini This species, endemic to the Philippines, "is named after Apolinario Mabini y Maranan (1864–1903), a Filipino revolutionary leader and hero who confronted both the Spanish and American colonial rules." [54]
Baeturia hardyi De Boer, 1986 Cicada Oliver Hardy This species and B. laureli (see below), "were named after the two American film comics: Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Without their films, who could face days of staring through the microscope at dead cicadas? Furthermore, Mr. Hardy's favourite line: "there's another nice mess you've gotten me into" frequently leaps to the mind when studying the species of the genus Baeturia. [55]
Baeturia laureli De Boer, 1986 Cicada Stan Laurel [55]
Bagheera kiplingi Peckham & Peckham, 1896 Spider Rudyard Kipling The genus name is derived from Bagheera, the black panther from Kipling's Jungle Book with the species name honoring Kipling himself. [56]
Barapasaurus tagorei Jain, Kutty, Roy-Chowdhury & Chatterjee, 1975 Dinosaur Rabindranath Tagore A sauropod from the Jurassic Kota Formation in India; its first excavation "was carried out in the centenary year of one of India's most famous poets, Rabindranath Tagore, and named in his memory." [57]
Bathytroctes grimaldii Zugmayer, 1911 Fish Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of slickhead was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice. Subsequently synonymised with Bathytroctes microlepis. [58][59]
Becquerelia (insect) Brongniart, 1893 Palaeodictyoptera, an extinct order of insects Henri Becquerel 64 years after botanist Adolphe Brongniart named the plant genus Becquerelia after scientist Antoine César Becquerel (see List of organisms named after famous people (born before 1800)), his grandson, paleoentomologist Charles Brongniart, named this fossil insect genus from the Carboniferous period after Antoine César Becquerel's grandson, physicist (and future Nobel Prize laureate) Henri Becquerel. [60]
Beethovenia brahmsi García-Alcalde, 2015 Brachiopod Johannes Brahms A fossil species from the Devonian of Northern Spain. "Dedicated to the eminent German composer Johannes Brahms for his unshakable romanticism in an era of drastic symphonic changes."
The genus Beethovenia, named after Ludwig van Beethoven, was created concurrently (see List of organisms named after famous people (born before 1800)).
[61]
Belonogaster menelikii Gribodo, 1879 Wasp Menelik II Described from two specimens collected in Shewa (Ethiopian Empire), where Menelik was Negus at the time. [62]
Bhambathorhynchus Willems & Artois, 2017 Flatworm Bhambatha A genus of worms from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa "dedicated to Bhambatha kaMancinza (ca. 1860–1906?), a Zulu chief of the amaZondi clan in present-day KwaZulu-Natal, famous for his role in an armed rebellion against the British." [63]
Biemma grimaldii Topsent, 1890 Sponge Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Desmacella.
[64]
Blancoa Huber, 2000 Spider Andrés Eloy Blanco "The generic name honors the Venezuelan poet Andrés Eloy Blanco, author of Angelitos Negros." [65]
Bonnetina julesvernei Ortiz & Francke, 2017 Spider Jules Verne "in honour of Jules Verne (1828–1905), a French writer who is considered by many as the Father of science fiction. His tens of novels on travel, discovery, invention and history have inspired millions of children and teenagers worldwide (including both authors of this study) with his thirst for knowledge and discovery." [66]
Borrowella Girault, 1923 Wasp George Borrow [56]
Bothriurus mistral Ojanguren-Affilastro, Mattoni, Alfaro & Pizarro-Araya, 2023 Scorpion Gabriela Mistral "referring to Gabriela Mistral, pseudonym of the Chilean poetess Lucila María Godoy Alcayaga (1889–1957), who was born in Vicuña and raised in Monte Grande, both in the Elqui valley (Coquimbo Region), an area adjacent to the type locality of this species." [67]
Boudiennyia Girault, 1937 Wasp Semyon Budyonny [56]
Bristowia gandhii Kanesharatnam & Benjamin, 2016 Spider Mahatma Gandhi A jumping spider native to India and Sri Lanka, "named for Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869–1948). He was the pre-eminent leader of the Indian Independence Movement in British-ruled India, eventually paving the way for independence of Sri Lanka as well." [68]
Burmomiles blixenae Fanti & Damgaard, 2019 Beetle Karen Blixen A fossil soldier beetle found in Cretaceous Burmese amber.
"In memory of the Danish author and writer Karen Christenze von Blixen-Finecke (born Dinesen; 17 April 1885 - 7 September 1962). [Dedication] that the actress Ghita Nørby suggested to us." (the authors had previously named another beetle after Nørby).
[69]
Buthus garcialorcai Teruel & Turiel, 2020 Scorpion Federico García Lorca "a patronym honoring the great Spanish poet and dramatist Federico García Lorca (5/June/1898 – 18/August/1936). Born in Granada, as a member of the Generation of '27 he became the greatest 20th century poet in Spain and one of the best dramatists and prose writers as well. Because of political reasons, during the Spanish Civil War he was assassinated by a fascist Falangist firing squad precisely at the type locality of the new species." [70]
Calliostoma grimaldii Dautzenberg & Fischer, 1896 Sea snail Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [71]
Callyspongia roosevelti van Soest, Kaiser & Van Syoc, 2011 Sponge Franklin D. Roosevelt "Named after President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who facilitated the 1938 cruise to Île Clipperton which allowed W.L. Schmitt to collect the first specimen of the new species." [72]
Calometopidius cavellae Bourgoin, 1917 Beetle Edith Cavell "One of these two species is dedicated to the memory of the passengers on the Lusitania [Calometopus lusitaniae, described in the same paper], the other to the memory of Miss Edith Cavell, victims of German barbarism." [73]
Calvarium mercieri Pic, 1918 Beetle Désiré-Joseph Mercier The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Mercier was noted for his staunch resistance to the German occupation; "It is not without emotion that I have written, in the form of a Gabonese insect, the name of a venerated and energetic prelate who was the soul of the resistance of an unfortunate oppressed people". The genus Calvarium was created concurrently as "a discreet and sad tribute to those who have suffered in exile, to those who are still suffering, stricken by cruel bereavement, and especially to the mothers and widows who have suffered in their dearest affections". [74]
Calyx shackletoni Goodwin, Brewin & Brickle, 2012 Sponge Ernest Shackleton "Named, in recognition of its probable pan-Antarctic presence, after Sir Ernest Shackleton, polar explorer, and also for the Shackleton Scholarship Fund, which supported this work." [75]
Cambarincola osceola Hoffman, 1963 Branchiobdellid worm Osceola "named for the Seminole Chief Osceola, a heroic leader of the resistance of his people during their conflict with the United States Government." This worm is native to the original lands of the Seminole, among other areas.
The specific name was subsequently amended to osceolai.
[76]
Campephaga sloetii Schlegel, 1866 Bird Ludolph Anne Jan Wilt Sloet van de Beele "This species bears the name of His Excellency Baron Sloet van de Beële, Governor-General of the Dutch possessions in the East Indies, a name dear to the sciences, since it belongs to a man of integrity and learning who, in the midst of the high functions he exercises, has taken pleasure in favouring with all his power the progress of human knowledge, and in remembering his fellow members of the Academy of Sciences, among whom he will, we hope, take his place again after his return from the Indies."
Subsequently transferred to genus Campochaera.
[77]
Campsicnemus charliechaplini Evenhuis, 1996 Fly Charlie Chaplin "This species is named in honor of the great silent movie comedian, Charlie Chaplin, because of the curious tendency of this fly to die with its midlegs in a bandy-legged position." [78]
Campsicnemus iii Evenhuis, 2011 Fly John Papa ʻĪʻī "The specific epithet honors John Papa i'i (1800–1870), leading citizen of the Hawaiian kingdom during the 19th century when he was attendant to king Kamehameha II and close associate of many rulers of Hawai'i. One of his great-greatgrandsons is my good friend and colleague in Hawaiian history, DeSoto Brown, collection manager of the Bishop Museum Archives [where the specimens are stored]." This species is endemic to Hawai'i. [79]
Cannopilus picassoi H.Stradner 1961 Algae Pablo Picasso A fossil Dictyochophyceae algae from the late Cenozoic. It has since been transferred to genus Caryocha or Halicalyptra (sources vary). [80][81]
Carnegia Holland, 1896 Moth Andrew Carnegie "I take pleasure in dedicating the genus [...] to my honored friend, Mr. Andrew Carnegie, whose recent gift of a million of dollars, the income there from to be annually expended in the purchase of works of art and collections for the Art Gallery and Museum, which he has founded in the city of Pittsburgh, well entitles him to be regarded as one of the foremost promoters of science in this country." [82]
Carnegiea Britton & Rose Cactus Andrew Carnegie [83]
Ceraphron aguinaldoi Dessart, 1981 Wasp Emilio Aguinaldo This species is native to Luzon, birthplace of Aguinaldo. [84]
Cerapterocerus emersoni Girault, 1915 Wasp Ralph Waldo Emerson [20]
Ceratoneuronomyia arnoldi Girault, 1913 Wasp Matthew Arnold Subsequently transferred to the genus Tetrastichus. [5][85]
Ceratoneuropsis poincarei Girault, 1913 Wasp Henri Poincaré [5]
Cervalces roosevelti Hay, 1913 Deer Theodore Roosevelt A fossil species from the Pleistocene of Iowa, US, "named in honor of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, in recognition of his services in [sic] behalf of the natural history of mammals, and especially in recognition of his contributions to a knowledge of Alces americanus, the American Moose, the living representative of the animal here described."
Subsequently synonymised with Cervalces scotti.
[86][87]
Cervus roosevelti Merriam, 1897 Deer Theodore Roosevelt Subsequently demoted to subspecies status, as Cervus canadensis roosevelti. [40]
Chaenusa trumani Kula, 2008 Wasp Harry S. Truman [88]
Chaetozone shackletoni Blake, 2018 Polychaete worm Ernest Shackleton A marine species from the Southern Ocean, "named in honor of Sir Ernst Shackleton (1874–1922), Antarctic explorer of the Heroic Age, whose Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition (1914–1917) was curtailed by ice in the Weddell Sea, resulting in his ship the HMS Endurance being trapped, eventually crushed, and sunk, leaving all hands with few options for survival. Shackleton, however, organized the crew and after hauling their life boats across the ice to open water, they eventually landed on Elephant Island. There being no hope for rescue, Shackleton led a small crew on his now-famous boat journey to South Georgia where eventually, after a trek over the mountains from the southern to northern side of the island to the whaling station at Grytviken, he was able to find a vessel, return, and rescue his crew with no loss of life. Years later, while on another expedition, he died on 5 Jan 1922 on South Georgia where he was buried." [30]
Charcotia amundseni D'Udekem D'Acoz, Schön & Robert, 2018 Crustacean Roald Amundsen A species of amphipod found off the coast of Antarctica, "dedicated to the memory of Roald Amundsen, conqueror of the South Pole and first mate on the RV Belgica during the historical Belgian Antarctic Expedition." (The discoverers of this species are Belgian.) [89]
Cheiracanthium tagorei Biswas & Raychaudhuri, 2003 Spider Rabindranath Tagore A species of yellow sac spider native to Bangladesh. [90]
Chipetaia Rasmussen, 1996 Primate Chipeta Named after chief Ouray's wife as a reference to its relation to Ourayia, both being fossil omomyid primates from the Uinta Formation. Ourayia, however, was named after the town of Ouray, Utah (which is in turn named after chief Ouray). [91][92]
Chirostoma diazi Jordan & Snyder, 1899 Fish Porfirio Díaz "Named for Porfirio Díaz, the honored President of the Republic of Mexico, in recognition of his interest in the progress of science."
Subsequently synonymized with Chirostoma sphyraena.
[93]
Chiroteuthis grimaldii Joubin, 1895 Squid Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Mastigoteuthis.
[94]
Chlorophorus clemenceaui Pic, 1918 Beetle Georges Clemenceau The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Clemenceau was an important figure. [74]
Chrysocharis dumasi Girault, 1915 Wasp Alexandre Dumas Subsequently transferred to genus Chrysonotomyia. [14][15]
Chrysopophagus mazzinini Girault, 1915 Wasp Giuseppe Mazzini Subsequently transferred to genus Cheiloneurus. [20][19]
Cirroteuthis grimaldii Joubin, 1903 Octopus Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice.
Subsequently transferred to genus Opisthoteuthis.
[95]
Cixius lermontovi Gnezdilov, 2018 Planthopper Mikhail Lermontov "The species is named in honour of the famous Russian poet Mikhail Yur'evich Lermontov (1814–1841) who was lieutenant of Tenginsky infantry regiment deployed in 1839 in the mouth of Shapsukho River – not so far from the type locality of the species described." [96]
Cladorhiza grimaldii Topsent, 1909 Sponge Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice.
Subsequently transferred to genus Nullarbora.
[97]
Clepsydra truganiniae Vyverman et al. Diatom Truganini This species is endemic to lakes of Tasmania. [98]
Closterocerus curtisi Girault, 1915 Wasp George William Curtis [14]
Closterocerus rostandi Girault, 1915 Wasp Edmond Rostand [14]
Closterocerus zangwilli Girault, 1913 Wasp Israel Zangwill "Dedicated to Israel Zangwill for his tragedy The War God." [5]
Cnemaspis vangoghi Khandekar, Thackeray & Agarwal, 2024 Lizard Vincent van Gogh "The colouration of the new species is reminiscent of one of van Gogh's most iconic paintings, The Starry Night." [99]
Cnesterodon carnegiei Haseman, 1911 Fish Andrew Carnegie A killifish from Iguazu River, collected by the expedition of the Carnegie Museum to central South America, 1907-10. [100]
Coccidoxenus wundti Girault, 1915 Wasp Wilhelm Wundt Subsequently transferred to genus Psyllaephagus. [20][19]
Coccophagus thoreauini Girault, 1915 Wasp Henry David Thoreau Subsequently transferred to genus Encarsia. [20][101]
Colanthura gauguini Müller, 1993 Crustacean Paul Gauguin An isopod found in Mo'orea, French Polynesia, "named for the artist Paul Gauguin, who was one of the earliest French impressionists [sic; he was a post-impressionist], living for several years in French Polynesia." [102]
Colletes gandhi Kuhlmann, 2003 Bee Mahatma Gandhi This species is native to India. [103]
Compsodactylus vallejoi Figueroa & Neita-Moreno, 2019 Beetle César Vallejo A species from Peru named "in honor of the great poet and writer Cesar Vallejo, born in La Libertad Department." (where the specimens were collected) [104]
Conus rizali Olivera & Biggs, 2010 Sea snail José Rizal A species of cone snail endemic to the Philippines, "named in honor of José Rizal, the National Hero of the Philippines. Dr. Rizal, who was executed by the Spanish Colonial Administration in 1898, collected shells as a hobby." [105]
Corynebacterium curieae Cappelli et al., 2023 Bacterium Marie Curie [106]
Corynebacterium lehmanniae Cappelli et al., 2023 Bacterium Inge Lehmann [106]
Corynebacterium marquesiae Cappelli et al., 2023 Bacterium Branca Edmée Marques [106]
Corynebacterium meitnerae Cappelli et al., 2023 Bacterium Lise Meitner [106]
Cosmocomoidea renani Girault, 1913 Wasp Ernest Renan Subsequently transferred to genus Lymaenon. [107][108]
Crambus bellinii Bassi, 2014 Moth Vincenzo Bellini [109]
Crambus berliozi Bassi, 2012 Moth Hector Berlioz [110]
Crax alberti Fraser, 1850 Fowl Albert, Prince Consort The blue-billed curassow, endemic to Colombia. "A new and beautiful species of a limited family like the Curassows must be looked upon as a valuable addition to our stock of ornithological acquaintances, and deserving of a distinguished cognomen. I therefore propose to name it after Her Most Gracious Majesty's illustrious consort, His Royal Highness Prince Albert, forming at the same time a companion to my Goura victoria" (also in this list, under its protonym Lophyrus victoria) [111]
Cremastobaeus boolei Veenakumari, 2017 Wasp George Boole [112]
Cremnops witkopegasus Tucker, Chapman & Sharkey, 2015 Wasp Crazy Horse "Named for Crazy Horse, the Native American war leader of the Lakota people. Witko means crazy in the Lakota language and a Pegasus is a winged horse." [113]
Cricula gandhii Naumann & Löffler, 2013 Moth Mahatma Gandhi "The type series of C. gandhii sp. n. was part of the type series of the earlier described C. aungsansuukyiae, dedicated to Aung San Suu Kyi, human rights activist in Myanmar [see List of organisms named after famous people (born 1900–1949)] [...]. As the Indian specimens are now described as separate species, we choose in "good tradition" as name patron for the here described similar taxon the famous Indian pacifist Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, known as Mahatma Gandhi." [114]
Crisia grimaldii Calvet, 1911 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice. [115]
Cristatithorax hugoi Girault, 1915 Wasp Victor Hugo Subsequently transferred to genus Cheiloneurus [20][19]
Ctenomys fochi Thomas, 1919 Rodent Ferdinand Foch "Named in honour of Gen. Foch, by whose genius victory in the recent great struggle has been so greatly accelerated." [116][117]
Ctenomys haigi Thomas, 1919 Rodent Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig This species was described shortly after the end of World War I and "Named in honour of General Sir Douglas Haig, Commander-in-Chief of the British armies." [118]
Culex rizali C.S. Banks, 1906 Mosquito José Rizal This mosquito is endemic to the Philippines; "I dedicate this beautiful species to the memory of Dr. José Rizal y Mercado in recognition of his work as the first Filipino scientist."
Subsequently transferred to genus Aedes.
[119]
Cyclocephala freudi Endrödi, 1963 Beetle Sigmund Freud [56]
Cyclocephala rorschachoides Ratcliffe, 1992 Beetle Hermann Rorschach [56]
Cylindroiulus julesvernei Reboleira & Enghoff, 2014 Millipede Jules Verne "The new species is dedicated to French author Jules Vernes [sic] (1828–1905) on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the publication of his inspirational book Voyage au centre de la Terre (Journey to the Center of the Earth)." This is a troglobiont species known only from the São Vicente Caves in Madeira, Portugal. [120]
Cyphochilus gandhii Sabatinelli, 2020 Beetle Mahatma Gandhi "Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was an Indian lawyer and political ethicist who employed nonviolent resistance to lead the successful campaign for India's independence from British Rule and in turn inspired movements for civil rights and freedom across the World."
This species is native to India.
[121]
Cyphon alberti Pic, 1918 Beetle Albert I of Belgium The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Albert I was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Brachycyphon.
[74][122]
Cyphon albriccii Pic, 1918 Beetle Alberico Albricci The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Albricci was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon aymerichi Pic, 1918 Beetle Joseph Gaudérique Aymerich The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Aymerich was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Brachycyphon.
[74][122]
Cyphon cadornai Pic, 1918 Beetle Luigi Cadorna The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Cadorna was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon debeneyi Pic, 1918 Beetle Marie Eugène Debeney The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Debeney was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon degouttei Pic, 1918 Beetle Jean-Marie Degoutte The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Degoutte was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon (Dermestocyphon) beattyi Pic, 1918 Beetle David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Beatty was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Yoshitomia.
[74][124]
Cyphon (Dermestocyphon) drianti Pic, 1918 Beetle Émile Driant The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Driant had been killed becoming a national hero. "The dead, who also had beautiful patriotic gestures, or who seem to us to deserve a contributory part in the final victory, will not be forgotten. C. Drianti, with the lamented name of a great patriot (ab uno disce omnes), will recall, as is my wish, the immortal memory of the elite phalanx of the "fallen in the field of honour"."
Subgenus Dermestocyphon, created concurrently, was later promoted to genus level.
[74][125]
Cyphon diazi Pic, 1918 Beetle Armando Diaz The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Diaz was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon espereyi Pic, 1918 Beetle Louis Franchet d'Espèrey The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Franchet d'Espèrey was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon foncki Pic, 1918 Beetle René Fonck The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Fonck was a notable participant, having become the "Allied Ace of Aces". "Under the name of Foncki, I pay tribute to the superior merit of the entire air force: to the rare survivors of the winged army, to the many youths cut down before their time."
Subsequently transferred to genus Calvarium.
[74][126]
Cyphon gabrieli Pic, 1918 Beetle Gabriele D'Annunzio The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which D'Annunzio was a notable participant. "I celebrate one of the living forces that contributed to changing the beautiful dream of "the greater Italy" into a touching reality".
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon garibaldii Pic, 1918 Beetle Giuseppe Garibaldi II The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Peppino Garibaldi was a notable participant.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon gouraudi Pic, 1918 Beetle Henri Gouraud The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Gouraud was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon halleri Pic, 1918 Beetle Józef Haller The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Haller was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon henrysi Pic, 1918 Beetle Paul Prosper Henrys The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Henrys was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon humberti Pic, 1918 Beetle Georges Louis Humbert The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Humbert was a significant figure. [74]
Cyphon joffrei Pic, 1918 Beetle Joseph Joffre The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Joffre was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon lemani Pic, 1918 Beetle Gérard Leman The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Leman was a notable participant.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon liggetti Pic, 1918 Beetle Hunter Liggett The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Liggett was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon lyauteyi Pic, 1918 Beetle Hubert Lyautey The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Lyautey was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon maistrei Pic, 1918 Beetle Paul Maistre The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Maistre was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon mangini Pic, 1918 Beetle Charles Mangin The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Mangin was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon paui Pic, 1918 Beetle Paul Pau The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Pau was a significant figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Calvarium.
[74][126]
Cyphon petri Pic, 1918 Beetle Peter I of Serbia The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Peter I was a significant figure. "The name Petri will recall with emotion the Old King, wracked with pain and still walking to stand up to the invaders."
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cyphon roosevelti Pic, 1918 Beetle Theodore Roosevelt and Quentin Roosevelt The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Quentin Roosevelt had been killed in combat in France. "My dedication hidden under the name of Roosevelti will be doubly deserved, by a father, a great champion of law and justice, by a son who spontaneously made the sacrifice of his life for a sister nation".
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.

[74][123]
Cyphon savitchi Pic, 1918 Beetle Milunka Savić The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Savić was a notable participant and Serbian war heroine.
Subsequently transferred to genus Contacyphon.
[74][123]
Cypraea noueli Maury, 1917 Sea snail Adolfo Alejandro Nouel A fossil species from the Pliocene of the Dominican Republic. "I take the liberty of naming this species in honor of Archbishop Nouel of Santo Domingo, whom I had the honor of meeting in his beautiful and historic Cathedral." [127]
Cypraea patrespatriae Maury, 1917 Sea snail Juan Pablo Duarte, Matías Ramón Mella and Francisco del Rosario Sánchez A fossil species from the Pliocene of the Dominican Republic. "The specific name proposed is in honor of the three liberator of the Dominican Republic." (patrespatriae means Founding Fathers in Latin) [127]
Davidius malloryi Fraser, 1926 Dragonfly George Mallory "I have named this interesting species after Mr. Mallory who so nobly laid down his life in the cause of science on the slopes of Mt. Everest." D. malloryi is native to Assam, India. [128][129]
Demonax fochi Pic, 1918 Beetle Ferdinand Foch The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Foch was an important figure. [74]
Dendrobium victoriae-reginae Loher Orchid Queen Victoria [130]
Dendrophorbium chopinii Montesinos Flowering plant Frédéric Chopin A species of arbuscular senecioneae from the Andes of North Peru. "The specific epithet honours Frédéric François Chopin (1810–1849), one of the greatest classical composers of all time, whose piano compositions are an inspiration to me and to many people around the world." [131]
Deratoptera alfredi Krefft, 1868 Manta ray Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha The reef manta ray was described from a specimen caught off the coast of Sydney, Australia, and named "with the permission, and in honor of, His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinborough, who accepted a number of photographs taken shortly after the fish was caught." Alfred was the first member of the British royal family to visit Australia, and suffered an attempt on his life during this trip.
Subsequently transferred to genus Mobula.
[132][133]
[134]
Diadegma meitnerae Kittel, 2016 Wasp Lise Meitner Replacement name for Diadegma simile (Pfankuch, 1914), which had originally been described as Angitia similis Pfankuch, 1914, but upon being transferred to the genus Diadegma in 1997, became a junior homonym of Diadegma simile (Brèthes, 1913). [41]
Diplodocus carnegii Hatcher, 1901 Dinosaur Andrew Carnegie "in honor of Mr. Andrew Carnegie, the founder of this institution [the Carnegie Museum of Natural History], and in recognition of his interest in vertebrate paleontology; which interest he has abundantly and substantially shown in providing the necessary funds for organizing and maintaining a Section of Vertebrate Paleontology in connection with this Museum." [135]
Diplopora grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Diplosolen.
[136][137]
Dolecta akhmatovae Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Anna Akhmatova [138]
Dolecta bulgakovi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Mikhail Bulgakov [138]
Dolecta chekhovi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Anton Chekhov [138]
Dolecta dostoevskyi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Fyodor Dostoevsky [138]
Dolecta esenini Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Sergei Yesenin The surname Есенин is sometimes romanized as Esenin. [138]
Dolecta gertseni Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Alexander Herzen The surname Ге́рцен is sometimes romanised as Gertsen. [138]
Dolecta gogoli Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Nikolai Gogol [138]
Dolecta lermontovi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Mikhail Lermontov [138]
Dolecta nekrasovi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Nikolay Nekrasov [138]
Dolecta ostrovskyi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Alexander Ostrovsky [138]
Dolecta saltykovishchedrini Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin [138]
Dolecta stanyukovichi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Konstantin Stanyukovich [138]
Dolecta tolstoyi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Leo Tolstoy [138]
Dolecta turgenevi Naydenov, Yakovlev, Penco & Sinyaev, 2020 Moth Ivan Turgenev [138]
Draco rizali Wandolleck, 1900 Lizard José Rizal This species of flying lizard was described from specimens collected by José Rizal during his exile in Dapitan, Mindanao.
Subsequently synonymised with Draco guentheri.
[139]
Draculoides bramstokeri Harvey & Humphreys, 1995 Schizomid Bram Stoker [40]
Drassodella tolkieni Mbo & Haddad, 2019 Spider J. R. R. Tolkien A species from South Africa, "Named after John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, who was born in Bloemfontein, Free State, South Africa on 3rd January 1892 and died on 2nd September 1973. [...] His fictional "Middle Earth" is believed to have been inspired in part by the exceptional natural scenery of Hogsback, the type locality of this species." [140]
Ectopsocus sprenti Schmidt & New, 2008 Barklouse James Sprent "Named for James Sprent, an early surveyor and explorer in Tasmania."
This species is endemic to Tasmania.
[2]
Effigia okeeffeae Nesbitt & Norell, 2006 Archosaur Georgia O'Keeffe From the Triassic period. Closest living relatives are the crocodilians [56]
Ellipsodon witkoi Van Valen, 1978 Condylarth (an extinct order of mammals) Crazy Horse A fossil mammal from the Paleocene of New Mexico, named after Crazy Horse's Lakota name, Tasunke Witko. Subsequently synonymised with Ellipsodon grangeri Wilson 1956. [141]
Ellipsodon yotankae Van Valen, 1978 Condylarth (an extinct order of mammals) Sitting Bull A fossil mammal from the Paleocene of New Mexico, named after Sitting Bull's Lakota name, Tatanka Yotanka. [141]
Elodes clemenceaui Pic, 1918 Beetle Georges Clemenceau The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Clemenceau was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Brachycyphon.
[74][122]
Elodes estiennei Pic, 1918 Beetle Jean Baptiste Eugène Estienne The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Estienne was an important figure. "The powerful force of the tanks will be entomologically glorified under the name of Estiennei". [74]
Elodes fayollei Pic, 1918 Beetle Émile Fayolle The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Fayolle was an important figure. [74]
Elodes lloydi Pic, 1918 Beetle David Lloyd George The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Lloyd George was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Brachycyphon.
[74][122]
Elodes petaini Pic, 1918 Beetle Philippe Pétain The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Pétain was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Brachycyphon.
[74][122]
Elodes pichoni Pic, 1918 Beetle Stephen Pichon The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Pichon was an important figure. "I wished to distinguish, among all, a skilful diplomat, with a clear vision from the beginning of the gigantic struggle, but who came a little late to the direction of foreign affairs" [74]
Elodes raynali Pic, 1918 Beetle Sylvain Eugène Raynal The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Raynal was an important figure. [74]
Elodes wilsoni Pic, 1918 Beetle Woodrow Wilson The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Wilson was an important figure. [74]
Emersonella Girault, 1916 Wasp Ralph Waldo Emerson [40]
Emersonia Girault, 1933 Wasp Ralph Waldo Emerson [56]
Emersonopsis Girault, 1917 Wasp Ralph Waldo Emerson [56]
Emplectonema osceolai Corrêa, 1961 Ribbon worm Osceola A species native to Florida, US, named "in reference to the Indian chief Osceola, famous in Florida history." [142]
Encyrtus newcombi Girault, 1915 Wasp Simon Newcomb Subsequently transferred to genus Microterys. [20][143]
Encyrtus wundti Girault, 1915 Wasp Wilhelm Wundt Immediately after its formal description, within the same paper, this species was transferred to genus Paraphaenodiscus. [20]
Entedonomorpha renani Girault, 1913 Wasp Ernest Renan Subsequently transferred to genus Deutereulophus. [5][144]
Entedonomphale esenini Triapitsyn, 2005 Wasp Sergei Yesenin The surname Есенин is sometimes romanized as Esenin. [145]
Entedonomphale lermontovi Triapitsyn, 2005 Wasp Mikhail Lermontov [145]
Epiquadrastichus emersoni Girault, 1915 Wasp Ralph Waldo Emerson Subsequently transferred to genus Neotrichoporoides. [14][15]
Epitetrastichus longfellowi Girault, 1913 Wasp Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Subsequently synonymised with Aprostocetus hagenowii (Ratzeburg, 1852) [5][146]
Equus grevyi Oustalet, 1882 Zebra Jules Grévy The species was described from a specimen gifted in 1882 by Menelik II, King of Shewa, to French President Jules Grévy, which Grévy then donated to the French National Museum of Natural History; the name "Grévy's zebra" was proposed by the Museum's director, Alphonse Milne-Edwards. [147]
Erigone malvari Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 Spider Miguel Malvar This species is endemic to the Philippines. [148]
Ernstmayria venizelosi Ćurčić, Dimitrijević & Trichas, 2007 Pseudoscorpion Eleftherios Venizelos "After the name of Eleftherios Venizelos, a noted Cretan humanist and politician." This species is endemic to the island of Crete, Greece. [149]
Erythroneura geronimoi Knull, 1945 Leafhopper Geronimo This species was described from specimens collected in the Chiricahua Mountains, and "Named for Geronimo, chief of the Chiricahua band of Apaches." [150]
Etheostoma faulkneri Sterling & Warren 2020 Fish William Faulkner "We have named the species Etheostoma faulkneri to honor the great writer and Nobel Laureate William C. Faulkner (1897–1962), a native of the Oxford, Mississippi, area who was also an avid hunter and fisher. The landscape was an important theme in many of his works, and the actions of his characters were often influenced by the lands and streams surrounding his fictional Jefferson, Mississippi, including the Yocona River, which he renamed the Yoknapatawpha." This species is endemic to headwater streams of the Yocona River watershed. The authors gave it the common name "Yoknapatawpha darter", using Faulkner's version of the Yocona River's name. [151]
Etheostoma teddyroosevelt Layman & Mayden, 2012 Fish Theodore Roosevelt The scientific name of the highland darter, endemic to the Arkansas and White River drainages, honors Roosevelt for "his enduring legacy in environmental conservation and stewardship, including the designation of vast areas as national forests, wildlife refuges, national monuments, and national parks, and his efforts to forge the American Museum of Natural History, New York." [152][153]
Eucteniza panchovillai Bond & Godwin, 2013 Spider Pancho Villa Discovered in San Juan del Rio, Durango, birthplace of Villa [154]
Eucypris lobatoi Bergue, Ramos & Maranhão, 2018 Crustacean Monteiro Lobato A fossil ostracod from the Oligocene of Taubaté basin, Brazil, named "In honor of the writer José Bento Monteiro Lobato, born in the Taubaté Municipality, and a rouser of the Brazilian oil industry." [155]
Eudiospilus rubrumbarus Zhang & Sharanowski, 2014 Wasp Manfred von Richthofen (The Red Baron) "In honor of Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the "Red Baron", as the coloration on the head of this species resembles that of a leather aviator helmet". [156]
Eudorcas thomsonii Günther, 1884 Gazelle Joseph Thomson [157]
Eupelmus dumasi Girault, 1915 Wasp Alexandre Dumas [20]
Eupelmus greelyi Girault, 1915 Wasp Adolphus Greely [20]
Eupelmus renani Girault, 1915 Wasp Ernest Renan [20]
Eupithecia nabokovi McDunnough, 1945 Moth Vladimir Nabokov A North American geometer moth described from specimens collected by Nabokov. [158]
Euplectrotetrastichus spenceri Girault, 1915 Wasp Herbert Spencer Genus Euplectrotetrastichus subsequently synonymised with Sigmophora. [14][15]
Euplocania teslai Vinasco-Mondragón, González-Obando & García Aldrete, 2022 Barklouse Nikola Tesla [159]
Eurydice grimaldii Dollfus, 1888 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This isopod was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [160]
Euryischia sumneri Girault, 1913 Wasp Charles Sumner "Dedicated with much respect to Charles Sumner for his orations on war." [161]
Euryischomyia washingtoni Girault, 1914 Wasp Booker T. Washington [162]
Eurytoma lincolni Girault, 1913 Wasp Abraham Lincoln [18]
Eurytoma mazzinii Girault, 1913 Wasp Giuseppe Mazzini "Dedicated to Giuseppe Mazzini for his The Duties of Man." [18]
Eurytoma poincarei Girault, 1913 Wasp Henri Poincaré [163]
Eusarcus garibaldiae Hara & Pinto-da-Rocha, 2010 Harvestman Anita Garibaldi A species native to Brazil; "The name honors an important revolutionary, Anita Garibaldi, who was born in the same state where this species was collected." (Santa Catarina) [164]
Evagetes bengurioni Wolf, 1988 Wasp David Ben-Gurion "David Ben Gurion (1886-1973) rendered great services in matters of international understanding." The holotype for the species was found in Israel, state of which Ben-Gurion was primary national founder and first Prime Minister. [165]
Farciminaria alice Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Alice, Princess of Monaco Species described from specimens collected by one of Prince Albert I of Monaco's (Alice's husband) research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to the genus Farciminellum.
[136]
Farlowella roncallii Martín Salazar, 1964 Fish Pope John XXIII "in honour of His Holiness John XXIII [born Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli], who has rightly been called the Pope of Peace."
Subsequently synonymised with Farlowella vittata.
[166][167]
Felis margarita Loche, 1858 Cat Jean Auguste Margueritte [168]
Fernandocrambus chopinellus Błeszyński, 1967 Moth Frédéric Chopin [40]
Foenatopus prousti Aguiar & Turrisi, 2010 Wasp Marcel Proust [169]
Froudeana Girault, 1928 Wasp James Anthony Froude Subsequently synonymised with Omphalodipara. [56]
Fukomys livingstoni Faulkes, Mgode, Archer & Bennett, 2017 Rodent David Livingstone "This species is named after Dr. David Livingstone, as Ujiji (the type locality) is the site of the famous meeting on 10 November 1871 when Henry Morton Stanley found the explorer David Livingstone, who many thought to be dead, and uttered the famous words "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" [170]
Gabrius tolkieni Schillhammer, 1997 Beetle J. R. R. Tolkien [56]
Gastrancistrus robertsoni Girault, 1915 Wasp Frederick William Robertson [171]
Gaudipluma Artal, Van Bakel, Fraaije & Jagt, 2013 Crustacean Antoni Gaudí A genus of fossil crabs from the Eocene of Huesca, Spain, named "in honour of the Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí (1852–1926), in allusion to the shape and ornament of the new taxon which is defined by sinuous lines, reminiscent of his works, plus the ending -pluma, which refers to the main character of the family [ Retroplumidae ]." [172]
Gelis nightingalae Kittel, 2016 Wasp Florence Nightingale Replacement name for Gelis stigmaticus (Hedwig, 1961), which had originally been described as Pezomachus stigmaticus Hedwig, 1961, but upon being transferred to the genus Gelis in 1997, became a junior homonym of Gelis stigmaticus (Zetterstedt, 1838). [41]
Gelis noetherae Kittel, 2016 Wasp Emmy Noether Replacement name for Gelis longipes (Rudow, 1917), which had originally been described as Pezomachus longipes Rudow, 1917, but upon being transferred to the genus Gelis in 1944, became a junior homonym of Gelis longipes (Strickland, 1912). [41]
Geophis juarezi Nieto-Montes de Oca, 2003 Snake Benito Juárez A species of earth snake described from specimens collected in Santiago Comaltepec, Sierra Juárez, Oaxaca, Mexico, and named "for Don Benito Juárez (1806–1872), the Zapotec Indian President of Mexico born in San Pablo Guelatao in the Sierra de Juárez, Oaxaca." [173]
Gephyrocrinus grimaldii Koehler & Bather, 1902 Sea lily Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice. [174]
Gibberula rachmaninovi Kellner, 2003 Sea snail Sergei Rachmaninoff "named after the great Russian composer and pianist Sergei Rachmaninov [sic]".
This species was subsequently synonymised with Volvarina sauliae (Sowerby II, 1846).
[175][176]
Goetheana kobzari Gumovski, 2016 Wasp Taras Shevchenko "The specific epithet derives from "kobzar", an itinerant Ukrainian bard and also the nickname of the famous Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko (1814–1861). This is a continuation of the trend of A.A. Girault's and S.V. Triapitsyn naming species of this genus after the great poets and writers of the past." (see List of organisms named after famous people (born before 1800)) [177]
Gonatocerus helmholtzii Girault, 1912 Wasp Hermann von Helmholtz "Dedicated to Hermann Helmholtz, a man who aided in establishing the great principle of the conservation of energy in all substance."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Lymaenon.
[178][108]
Gonatocerus mazzinini Girault, 1913 Wasp Giuseppe Mazzini "Respectfully dedicated to Giuseppe Mazzini for his essays, more especially for his The Duties of Man."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Lymaenon.
[179][108]
Gonatocerus poincarei Girault, 1913 Wasp Henri Poincaré Subsequently transferred to the genus Lymaenon. [179][108]
Gonatocerus tolstoii Girault, 1913 Wasp Leo Tolstoy "Dedicated to Leo N. Tolstoi for his work War and Peace."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Lymaenon.
[51][108]
Goniopholis kiplingi de Andrade et al., 2011 Crocodile Rudyard Kipling A fossil crocodyliform from the Cretaceous of Southern England. "Specific name after Rudyard Kipling, British novelist, author of The Jungle Book amongst others and an important disseminator of natural sciences through literature, from the end of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century." [180]
Gounodia Girault, 1940 Wasp Charles Gounod Subsequently synonymised with Epistenoterys. [56]
Grammeubria emmanueli Pic, 1918 Beetle Victor Emmanuel III of Italy The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Victor Emmanuel III was an important figure. "The name Emmanueli will recall a patriotic and inspired monarch who, by refusing to serve the insatiable German appetites, contributed to the triumph of Latin ideas."
Subsequently transferred to genus Dicranopselaphus.
[74][181]
Grantanna Girault, 1939 Wasp Ulysses S. Grant This genus was subsequently synonymised with Ufens Girault, 1911 [182][183]
Grimaldichthys Roule, 1913 Fish Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This genus of cusk eels was described from a specimen collected by Princess Alice using a trap designed by Prince Albert, in Cape Verde, at a depth of 6,035 m (19,800 ft). Other specimens were later captured at depths of up to 7,160 m (23,490 ft), and for decades it was thought that the species Grimaldichthys profundissimus was the fish living at the greatest depth in the world, until another cusk eel, Abyssobrotula galatheae—one specimen of which was found at a depth of over 8,000 m (26,000 ft)—was described in 1977.
Grimaldichthys has been subsequently synonymised with Holcomycteronus.
[184][185]
[186][187]
Grimalditeuthis Joubin, 1898 Squid Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This genus was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice. [188]
Grotiusella pearsoni Girault, 1915 Wasp Karl Pearson Genus Grotiusella was subsequently synonymised with Eulophinusia. [14][15]
Grotiusella thoreauini Girault, 1915 Wasp Henry David Thoreau Genus Grotiusella was subsequently synonymised with Eulophinusia. [14][15]
Guildayichthys carnegiei Lund, 2000 Fish Andrew Carnegie A fossil species found in the Carboniferous Bear Gulch Limestone of Montana, US; "Named in honor of Andrew Carnegie, founder of Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania." (where the holotype and most known specimens are kept) [189]
Gulbenkiania Vaz-Moreira, Nobre, Nunes & Manaia, 2007 Bacterium Calouste Gulbenkian "in honour of Calouste Gulbenkian (1869–1955), a protector of the arts and sciences in Portugal, and founder of the Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian." (which partially financed the research) [190]
Gynacantha chaplini Khan, 2021 Dragonfly Charlie Chaplin "The species is named in honour of the famous British actor and director, Sir Charles Spencer "Charlie" Chaplin [...]. The trapezium-shaped marking of the postfrons of the new species resembles Chaplin's iconic toothbrush moustache." [191]
Gynacantha lyttoni Fraser, 1926 Dragonfly Victor Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Earl of Lytton Subsequently synonymised with Gynacantha bayadera Selys, 1891. [129]
Gyrolasomyia washingtoni Girault, 1913 Wasp Booker T. Washington [5]
Habronattus geronimoi Griswold, 1987 Spider Geronimo The holotype of this jumping spider was collected in the Chiricahua Mountains; the species is "named in honor of Geronimo, leader of the Chiricahua Apaches." [192]
Heleioporus eyrei Gray, 1845 Frog Edward John Eyre [193]
Heliosorex roosevelti Heller, 1910 Shrew Theodore Roosevelt Described from specimens collected by the Smithsonian–Roosevelt African Expedition. "I take much pleasure in naming this distinct type of shrew for Colonel Roosevelt, who took a keen personal interest in the collection of small mammals."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Crocidura.
[194]
Hellinsia alfaroi Gielis, 2011 Moth Eloy Alfaro This species is native to Ecuador and "named after Elroy [sic] Alfaro, president of Ecuador, who was assassinated in 1912." [195]
Hellinsia morenoi Gielis, 2011 Moth Gabriel García Moreno This species is native to Ecuador and "named after president Garcia Moreno of Ecuador, who was assassinated in 1875." [195]
Hemiargus bornoi Comstock & Huntington, 1943 Butterfly Louis Borno This species was described from specimens collected in Haiti.
Subsequently transferred to genus Pseudochrysops.
[196]
Hemichromis livingstonii Günther, 1894 Fish David Livingstone This fish is native to Lake Malawi, which Livingstone claimed to have discovered; during the Second Zambesi expedition, led by him, the first fishes from this lake were collected for scientific studies.
Subsequently transferred to genus Nimbochromis.
[197]
Hernandaria anitagaribaldiae DaSilva & Pinto-da-Rocha, 2010 Harvestman Anita Garibaldi "In honor of Anita Garibaldi (1821-1849), republican revolutionary from Santa Catarina state who fought for freedom against the monarchal central government of Brazil and in Europe."
This species is native to Santa Catarina state, Brazil.
[198]
Herpele fulleri Alcock, 1904 Caecilian Bampfylde Fuller Subsequently transferred to newly created genus Chikila. [193][199]
Heterocarpus grimaldii A. Milne-Edwards & Bouvier, 1900 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of deep-sea shrimp was described from specimens collected by two of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle and the Princesse Alice. [200]
Heterochaeta grimaldii Richard, 1893 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of copepod was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Hemirhabdus.
[201]
Hexactinella grimaldii Topsent, 1890 Sponge Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [64]
Hindsia grimaldii Dautzenberg, 1889 Sea snail Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Pisanianura.
[202]
Hogna bonifacioi Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 Spider Andrés Bonifacio This species is endemic to the Philippines. [203]
Hogna rizali Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 Spider José Rizal This species is endemic to the Philippines. [203]
Hortipes horta Bosselaers & Jocqué, 2000 Spider Victor Horta "in honor of the famous Jugendstil architect and designer Victor Horta (1861–1947). The elegant curves and angles of the ID [insemination duct] of the present species remind [us of] some of the Horta designs" [204]
Hortipes klumpkeae Bosselaers & Jocqué, 2000 Spider Dorothea Klumpke "in honor of Dorothea Klumpke (1861–1942), astronomer known for her work on Saturn's rings and for her contributions to the Carte du Ciel program." [204]
Houdinia Hoare, Dugdale & Watts, 2006 Moth Harry Houdini "The genus is named after the renowned escapologist Harry Houdini (1874–1926). The name alludes not only to the remarkable metamorphosis of the attenuate larva and the adult's escape from the tight confines of the Sporadanthus stem, but also to the manner in which the species itself escaped detection by entomologists for so long." [205]
Hyale grimaldii Chevreux, 1891 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of amphipod was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Protohyale.
[206][207]
Hydraena einsteini Perkins, 2011 Beetle Albert Einstein [208]
Hylomyrma adelae Ulysséa, 2021 Ant Adela Zamudio "named in honor of Adela Zamudio (1854–1928), a Bolivian educator, feminist, and poetess [...] born in Cochabamba, from where this species is known." [209]
Hylomyrma jeronimae Ulysséa, 2021 Ant Jerônima Mesquita "named after Jerônima Mesquita (1880–1972), a Brazilian feminist, pioneer of the women's suffrage in Brazil. She also advocated for the equality of rights and opportunity of women, and co-founder, along with Berta Lutz (1894–1976) and Stella Guerra Duval (1879–1971), of the League for the Intellectual Emancipation of Women in 1918 (which subsequently became the Brazilian Federation for Women's Progress)." [209]
Hyloscirtus tolkieni Sánchez-Nivicela, Falcón-Reibán & Cisneros-Heredia, 2023 Frog J. R. R. Tolkien "in honour of the writer, poet, philologist, and academic John Ronald Reuel Tolkien (J.R.R. Tolkien, 1892–1973), creator of Middle-earth and author of fantasy works like The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. The amazing colours of the new species evoke the magnificent creatures that seem to only exist in fantasy worlds." [210]
Hymenobacter amundsenii Sedláček et al., 2019 Bacterium Roald Amundsen The type strain was isolated from rock samples collected in Antarctica. [211]
Hypopta mussolinii Turati, 1927 Moth Benito Mussolini A species described from specimens collected in Italian Cyrenaica (present-day Libya); "And this is a magnificent novelty well worthy of bearing the name of the 'Genius of Italy', to whom I dedicate it with reverent admiration."
Subsequently synonymised with Mormogystia reibellii.
[212][213]
Hypsiboas alfaroi Caminer & Ron, 2014 Frog Eloy Alfaro A tree frog native to Ecuador, named "for Eloy Alfaro Delgado, former Ecuadorian president (1897–1901 and 1906–1911) and leader of the liberal revolution in Ecuador. His government promoted the separation between church and state and the modernization of Ecuador by supporting education and large-scale systems of transportation and communication."
Subsequently transferred to genus Boana.
[214][215]
Hystrichodexia pueyrredoni Brèthes, 1918 Fly Honorio Pueyrredón A parasitic fly from Argentina; the holotype was collected by Pueyrredón, who was Minister of Agriculture at the time. [216]
Ichneumon potterae Kittel, 2016 Wasp Beatrix Potter Replacement name for Ichneumon vittatus Gmelin, 1790, which was preoccupied by Ichneumon vittatus Geoffroy, 1785. [41]
Ictinus regis-alberti Schouteden, 1934 Dragonfly Albert I of Belgium A species described from specimens collected in the Belgian Congo (present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo). "I dedicate this new Ictinus, so remarkable, to the memory of H.M. King Albert, a sincere friend of the Congo Museum, whom death has just brutally taken from us."
Genus Ictinus was later renamed to Ictinogomphus to avoid homonymy with a different genus of beetles, and the hyphen of the specific name was eliminated, making the current accepted name Ictinogomphus regisalberti.
[217][218]
Idiomacromerus longfellowi Girault, 1917 Wasp Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Subsequently synonymised with Idiomacromerus terebrator. [40]
Inacayalestes Petrulevičius, 2015 Damselfly Inacayal A fossil species from the Eocene of Neuquén Province, Argentina, named "in honour of Inacayal (1833-1888), Günün a Küne (Puelche) chief (Cacique) of the region of Nahuel Huapi Lake; and "lestes", because [it is a] usual ending for lestoid damselflies. Inacayal was captured by the Argentinean state army (conducted by General Julio Argentino Roca) during the genocidal campaign "Conquest of the Desert" carried out to break the sovereignty of the indigenous communities in Patagonia. After that, he was "rescued" from the detention camp with part of his family by the Perito Francisco Josué Pascasio Moreno in gratitude for his help in a previous Patagonian expedition. He was installed, as a living and afterwards as a dead specimen, in the Museo de La Plata from 1886 to 1888 where he died [for] no clear reasons. His skeleton was restituted to Patagonia by a National Law, after claims by several indigenous communities and a National Senator, in 1994. Nevertheless, other claimed remains as his scalp and brain and also from other members of the community are still part of the collection of the museum." [219]
Indiocyphon allenbyi Pic, 1918 Beetle Edmund Allenby The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Allenby was an important figure.
The genus Indiocyphon was subsequently synonymised with Calvarium.
[74][126]
Indomarengo chavarapater Malamel, Prajapati, Sudhikumar & Sebastian, 2019 Spider Kuriakose Elias Chavara A jumping spider native to India, "dedicated to Saint Chavara who was a great educator and founder of the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate (CMI) congregation, the first Catholic congregation in India. The affiliated institution of all the authors is run by the CMI congregation." [220]
Intelcystiscus teresacarrenoae Ortea & Espinosa, 2016 Sea snail Teresa Carreño "Named in honour of Teresa Carreño (1853-1917), the illustrious Venezuelan pianist and composer, [...] to whom the first edition of the Musiciennes en Guadeloupe festival paid tribute." The species was found in Guadeloupe, during an expedition that took place at the same time as the aforementioned music festival in the islands. [221]
Iotreron eugeniae Gould, 1856 Bird Eugénie de Montijo The White-headed fruit dove, endemic to the Solomon Islands.
Genus Iotreron was subsequently synonymised with Ptilinopus.
[222]
Ischnopelta coralinae Rosso & Campos, 2021 True bug Cora Coralina A shield bug named "in honor to the poet Cora Coralina, codename for Anna Lins dos Guimarães Peixoto Bretas, born in Goiás (Goiás, Brazil). Her poetic work is rich in the daily life of the Brazilian interior, and her first book was published when she was almost 76 years old. She died at 95 years old. The specimens used for the description of the species are mostly from the poet's birth city and nearby locations." [223]
Ixchela juarezi Valdez-Mondragón, 2013 Spider Benito Juárez A cellar spider from Mexico "dedicated to Benito Juárez García (1806–1872) in recognition of his role in the Mexican History; he was a Mexican lawyer and politician of Zapotec Indian origin and President of Mexico on several occasions, between 18 December 1857 and 18 July 1872. Born in Guelatao, municipality of the type locality of the species." [224]
Ixchela panchovillai Valdez-Mondragón, 2020 Spider Pancho Villa A cellar spider from Mexico "dedicated to Doroteo Arango Arámbula, better known as "Francisco Villa", "Pancho Villa", or "Centauro del Norte"; a famous Mexican revolutionary who fought during the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917) in the North of Mexico." [225]
Ixchela zapatai Valdez-Mondragón, 2020 Spider Emiliano Zapata A cellar spider from Mexico "dedicated to Emiliano Zapata Salazar, better known as "Emiliano Zapata, el Caudillo del Sur", a famous Mexican revolutionary who fought during the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917) in the Central-South region of Mexico." [225]
Janssoniella kawabatai Tselikh, 2020 Wasp Yasunari Kawabata This species is native to Japan and South Korea. [226]
Kahlerosphaera hamvasi Kozur, Moix & Ozsvárt, 2007 Protist Béla Hamvas A fossil radiolarian from the Triassic of Turkey. [227]
Kalayaan bonifacioi Corpuz-Raros 1998 Mite Andrés Bonifacio This species, endemic to the Philippines, "is named in honor of the late Supremo Andres Bonifacio, who founded the revolutionary movement, Kataas-Taasan Kagalanggalangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan or KKK, a major force behind the Philippine revolution against Spain."
The name of the genus Kalayaan means "freedom" in Filipino language, and was created concurrently to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Philippine Declaration of Independence (12 June 1898).
[228]
Kalayaan rizali Corpuz-Raros 1998 Mite José Rizal This species, endemic to the Philippines, "is named in honor of the Philippines' National Hero, Dr Jose Protacio Rizal, whose nationalist writings and exposés on the abuses of Spanish authorities enlightened the Filipino people and emboldened armed revolutionaries to take more decisive actions in their struggle for independence from Spain."
The name of the genus Kalayaan means "freedom" in Filipino language, and was created concurrently to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Philippine Declaration of Independence (12 June 1898).
[228]
Kalanchoe × poincarei Raym.-Hamet & H.Perrier Flowering plant Raymond Poincaré "This curious crassulacea, having been recognized as new on February 17, 1913, the day of the election of Mr. Raymond Poincaré to the presidency of the Republic, we are pleased to give the name of the eminent statesman to this new species from one of our richest colonies [Madagascar]." [229]
Kalanchoe salazari Raym.-Hamet Flowering plant António de Oliveira Salazar A species of succulent plant native to Angola, described from a specimen housed at the herbarium of the University of Coimbra; "a new and well-characterised species that we are pleased to dedicate to the eminent professor of the University of Coimbra, President Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, whose political genius made a new sun rise on the destiny of Portugal." [230]
Kerygmachela kierkegaardi Budd, 1993 Early Arthropod Søren Kierkegaard An early arthropod from the Cambrian period. The fossils were found in Greenland and are housed at the University of Copenhagen Geological Museum. [231]
Khamul tolkeini Gates, 2008 Wasp J. R. R. Tolkien "named in honor of J. R. R. Tolkein [sic] for his profound impact on the fantasy literature genre." The generic name Khamul is "named for the only Nazgl [sic] specifically named by J. R. R. Tolkein [sic], Khaml [sic], the Shadow of the East (aka Black Easterling)" [232]
Kora corallina Simone, 2012 Snail Cora Coralina A species native to Brazil. "The specific epithet refers to the outline of the shell, resembling a coral polyp, from the Latin corallium. The name is also a regard to Cora Coralina, the pseudonym of Ana Lins dos Guimarães Peixoto Bretas (1889-1985), a famous Brazilian poet novelist." [233]
Kruschevia Flower, 1961 Worm Nikita Khrushchev Named by Rousseau H. Flower to show his dislike of the Soviet Premier. [234][235]
Kuskaella bajerae Fanti & Damgaard, 2018 Beetle Matilde Bajer A fossil soldier beetle found in Baltic amber from the Eocene of Kaliningrad Oblast.
"This new species is named in memory of the Danish women's rights activist and pacifist Pauline Matilde Theodora Bajer"
[236]
Lactobacillus curieae Lei, Sun, Xie & Wei, 2013 Bacterium Marie Curie A lactic acid bacterium isolated from stinky tofu brine in China.
"named after Marie Curie, a role model for female scientists."
[237]
Ladeaschistus borgesi Cioato, Bianchi, Eger & Grazia, 2015 True bug Jorge Luis Borges "Named in honor of Jorge Luis Borges, one of the most important writers from South-America. This late Argentinean writer is a milestone of literary fiction with his metaphysical tales, essays, and poetry." [238]
Lamprolia victoriae Finsch, 1874 Bird Victoria, Princess Royal "I have great pleasure in naming this most remarkable and brilliant new species Lamprolia victoriae, in honour of Her Imperial and Royal Highness Victoria, Crown-Princess of the German Empire and of Prussia."
Known as the Taveuni silktail, this bird is endemic to the island of Taveuni in Fiji.
[239]
Lathrolestes fiedleri Reshchikov, 2015 Wasp Arkady Fiedler [240]
Leda whitmani Dall, 1909 Bivalve Marcus Whitman A fossil clam from the Pleistocene of Oregon, US.
Genus Leda was subsequently synonymised with Nuculana.
[241]
Leiochrodes georgi Pic, 1918 Beetle George V The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which George V was an important figure. [74]
Leiochrodes haigi Pic, 1918 Beetle Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Haig was an important figure. [74]
Leiochrodes kitchneri Pic, 1918 Beetle Horatio Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Kitchener was an important figure. [74]
Leiorhagium korngoldi Haase & Bouchet, 1998 Freshwater snail Erich Wolfgang Korngold "dedicated to Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897–1957), one of the favourite composers of the first author." [242]
Leiorhagium mussorgskyi Haase & Bouchet, 1998 Freshwater snail Modest Mussorgsky "named after one of the first author's favourite composers, Modest Mussorgsky (1839–1881)." [242]
Leistus becheti Allegro, 2007 Beetle Sidney Bechet "I dedicate this species to the saxophonist Sidney Bechet, the pioneer of soprano sax players in jazz." [243]
Lelapsomorpha myersi Girault, 1913 Wasp Frederic W. H. Myers [18]
Leninia Fischer et al., 2013 Ichthyosaur Vladimir Lenin "The museum where [the type specimen] is housed is located within the Lenin Memorial and Lenin school complex in Ulyanovsk; accordingly, the generic name reflects the geohistorical location of the find." [244]
Lepidoteuthis grimaldii Joubin, 1895 Squid Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. [40]
Lepithrix freudi Schein, 1959 Beetle Sigmund Freud [56]
Lepralia grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently synonymised with Cheiloporina circumcincta.
[136][245]
Leptacis kierkegaardi Buhl, 1997 Wasp Søren Kierkegaard The specimens used to describe this species (collected in New Guinea) were deposited in the University of Copenhagen Zoological Museum, Denmark. [246]
Leucothoe tolkieni Vinogradov, 1990 Crustacean J. R. R. Tolkien [247]
Leviathan melvillei Lambert et al., 2010 Whale Herman Melville An extinct whale: Melville is the author of Moby Dick. [56]
Limitolagus roosevelti Fostowicz-Frelik, 2013 Rabbit Theodore Roosevelt A fossil species of rabbit from the Eocene-Oligocene boundary of Wyoming, US, named "after Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th president of the United States of America and a keen naturalist." [248]
Lincolna Girault, 1940 Wasp Abraham Lincoln [249]
Lincolnanna Girault, 1939 Wasp Abraham Lincoln This genus was subsequently synonymised with Pterisemoppa Girault, 1933. [182][250]
Liolaemus gardeli Varrastro, Maneyro, da Silva & Farias, 2017 Lizard Carlos Gardel "This new species is named after the famous Uruguayan tango singer, Carlos Gardel, who died in a plane crash in 1935. Gardel's birthplace was widely disputed and claimed by Uruguay, France, and Argentina, but recent research has confirmed that Gardel is the illegitimate son of a Uruguayan farmer. According to historical data from the book, Carlos Gardel – el silencio de Tacuarembó, authored by Selva Ortiz (1994), Gardel was born in the Tacuarembó Department (Uruguay), in the same region of the type locality of this newly described species." (NOTE: Gardel's birthplace is still controversial) [251]
Liphanthus yrigoyeni Packer, 2019 Bee Hipólito Yrigoyen A species from Argentina; "An alternative name for Iturbe, the type locality, is Hipólito Yrigoyen, after Juan Hipólito del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús Yrigoyen Alem, a progressive politician and two-time president of Argentina." [252]
Lithodes grimaldii A. Milne-Edwards & Bouvier, 1894 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. Known as porcupine crab, this species of king crab was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. Immediately after its formal description, in the appendix of the same paper, it was transferred to the newly-created genus Neolithodes. [253]
Litomylus osceolae Van Valen, 1978 Condylarth (an extinct order of mammals) Osceola A fossil mammal from the Paleocene of New Mexico. Subsequently transferred to the genus Hemithlaeus. [141]
Lophyrus victoria Fraser, 1844 Pigeon Queen Victoria A species of crowned pigeon from New Guinea, named "In honour of Her Most Gracious Majesty, the Patroness of the Society" (Zoological Society of London).
Subsequently transferred to genus Goura.
[254]
Lumieria Benedetti & Pinto-da-Rocha, 2022 Harvestman Lumière brothers "derived from Auguste Marie Louis Nicholas Lumière (1862–1954) and Louis Jean Lumière (1864–1948), the Lumière brothers, who were the inventors of [the] cinematograph, being frequently referred like the parents of the "Cinema"." [255]
Lycoriella pearyi Menzel & Vilkamaa, 2021 Fly Robert Peary A dark-winged fungus gnat native to Greenland, "named after the polar explorer Robert Edwin Peary (1856–1920), one of the pioneers in the study of Greenland." [256]
Lyngbya shackletoni West & G.S. West, 1911 Bacterium Ernest Shackleton A freshwater cyanobacterium native to Antarctica, described from specimens collected at Hut Point Peninsula by the Nimrod Expedition, led by Shackleton.
Subsequently transferred to the genus Porphyrosiphon.
[257]
Macellicephala grimaldii Fauvel, 1913 Polychaete worm Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species of scale worm was described from specimens collected in the Bay of Biscay by two of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle and the Princesse Alice. [258]
Macrocyphon deporti Pic, 1918 Beetle Joseph-Albert Deport The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Deport's invention, the Canon de 75 modèle 1897, had been widely used by the French Army. [74]
Macrocyphon fochi Pic, 1918 Beetle Ferdinand Foch The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Foch was an important figure. [74]
Macrocyphon ronarchi Pic, 1918 Beetle Pierre Alexis Ronarc'h The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Ronarc'h was an important figure. [74]
Macropoliana haileselassiei Eitschberger & Melichar, 2016 Moth Haile Selassie A species native to Ethiopia and named "to commemorate the last regent of Ethiopia and the last Emperor of Abyssinia, who was born on 23.VII.1892 and died in captivity under mysterious circumstances on 27.VIII.1975 after doing nothing about the 1974 famine in the country and being deprived of power. He is said to have been the 225th successor of King Solomon." [259]
Macrostylis roaldi Riehl & Kaiser, 2012 Crustacean Roald Amundsen "dedicated to the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen, eponym of the type locality (Amundsen Sea), in order to mark the 100th anniversary of Amundsen as the first person to reach the geographic South Pole on December 14th 1911." [260]
Mahidolia H. M. Smith, 1932 Fish Mahidol Adulyadej A genus of gobies described from specimens collected in Thailand (then known as Siam). "The genus is named in honor of His Royal Highness Prince Mahidol of Songkla, deceased, in appreciation of his substantial interest in the fishes and fisheries of Siam. This interest was manifested in various ways, notably by the setting aside of a large fund for sending young Siamese abroad for special training in fishery work." [261]
Marginella roosevelti Bartsch & Rehder, 1939 Sea snail Franklin D. Roosevelt Described from specimens collected by the 1938 Presidential Cruise aboard USS Houston.
Subsequently transferred to genus Prunum.
[262]
Malthodes henningseni Fanti & Damgaard, 2018 Beetle Poul Henningsen A fossil soldier beetle found in Baltic amber from the Eocene of Kaliningrad Oblast, "named in memory of the Danish author, critic, architect and designer Poul Henningsen [...], in recognition of his cultural contributions." [236]
Martesia tolkieni Kennedy, 1974 Bivalve J. R. R. Tolkien [56]
Marxella Girault, 1932 Wasp Karl Marx [56]
Marxiana Girault, 1932 Wasp Karl Marx [56]
Mathilda (Fimbriatella) amundseni Marincovich, 1993 Sea snail Roald Amundsen A fossil species from the Paleocene of Prince Creek Formation in Arctic Alaska, "named in honor of the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen, whose conquest of the Northwest Passage in the ship Gjøa ended in 1905 along the Arctic coast not far from Ocean Point." (the type locality) [36]
Mayopyge zapata Adrain & Fortey 1997 Trilobite Emiliano Zapata "The pygidial spines droop in the style of a moustache." [263]
Membraniporella alice Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Alice, Princess of Monaco Species described from specimens collected by one of Prince Albert I of Monaco's (Alice's husband) research yachts, the Hirondelle. [136]
Memorocyphon gallienii Pic, 1918 Beetle Joseph Gallieni The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Gallieni was an important figure. [74]
Menura alberti Bonaparte, 1850 Bird Albert, Prince Consort [264]
Merriamium roosevelti de Laubenfels, 1939 Sponge Franklin D. Roosevelt Described from specimens collected by the 1938 Presidential Cruise aboard USS Houston.
Subsequently transferred to genus Lissodendoryx.
[265]
Mesabolivar borgesi Huber, 2018 Spider Jorge Luis Borges This species is native to Argentina. [266]
Mesenteripora grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [136]
Metallonella longfellowi Girault, 1915 Wasp Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Subsequently transferred to genus Mesorhopella. [20][267]
Micromaldane shackletoni Darbyshire, 2013 Polychaete worm Ernest Shackleton A species from the Falkland Islands, "named after Sir Ernest Shackleton, Antarctic explorer, for whom the Shackleton Scholarship Fund is commemorated, in recognition of the Fund's support of this work." [268]
Microplitis kovalevskayae Kittel, 2016 Wasp Sofya Kovalevskaya Proposed as replacement name for Microplitis bicoloratus Chen, 2004, which was preoccupied by Microplitis bicoloratus Xu & He, 2003. However, it was later found that Microplitis bicoloratus Chen, 2004 is a junior synonym of Microplitis prodeniae Rao & Kurian, 1950, making Kittel's replacement name unnecessary. [41][269]
Mimatuta makpialutae Van Valen, 1978 Condylarth (an extinct order of mammals) Red Cloud A fossil mammal from the Paleocene of Wyoming, named after Red Cloud's Lakota name, Makhapialuta. [141]
Mischocyttarus verissimoi Silveira, 2015 Wasp José Veríssimo A paper wasp native to Brazil and Colombia, named "in homage to José Veríssimo Dias de Matos (1857–1916), a Brazilian writer and former director of the Pará State Board of Education who had a very important role in the reorganization of the Museu Paraense in 1891." [270]
Mitra berlineri Maury, 1917 Sea snail Emile Berliner A fossil species from the Pliocene of the Dominican Republic. "I take the greatest pleasure in naming this splendid Mitra in honor of Mr. Emile Berliner, of Washington, D.C., as a slight token of appreciation of his generous gift of the Sarah Berliner Foundation, which has made this work possible." [127]
Muntiacus rooseveltorum Osgood, 1932 Deer Theodore Roosevelt Jr. and Kermit Roosevelt [271][272]
Mymar tyndalli Girault, 1912 Wasp John Tyndall Subsequently synonymised with Mymar taprobanicum Ward, 1875. [178][273]
Myrmarachne coppeti Berland & Millot, 1941 Spider Jules Marcel de Coppet A species of jumping spider that mimics ants, described from a specimen collected in Senegal, where Coppet had been colonial governor-general (as part of French West Africa).
Subsequently synonymised with Myrmarachne elongata.
[274][275]
Nabokovia Hemming, 1960 Butterfly Vladimir Nabokov A nomen novum for a genus Nabokov previously named [56]
Nannenus maughami Prószyński & Deeleman-Reinhold, 2012 Spider W. Somerset Maugham A species of jumping spider native to Sumatra, Indonesia. [276]
Nanocthulhu lovecrafti Buffington, 2012 Wasp H. P. Lovecraft The genus name invokes Lovecraft's character Cthulhu [277]
Navicula (Pinnularia) shackletoni West & G.S. West Diatom Ernest Shackleton A freshwater species native to Antarctica, described from specimens collected at Cape Royds by the Nimrod Expedition, led by Shackleton.
The subgenus Pinnularia was subsequently elevated to genus status.
[257]
Neanastatus reymondi Girault, 1915 Wasp Paul du Bois-Reymond [20]
Neanthes roosevelti Hartman, 1939 Polychaete worm Franklin D. Roosevelt Described from specimens collected by the 1938 Presidential Cruise aboard USS Houston. [278]
Neapterolelaps lodgei Girault, 1913 Wasp Oliver Lodge "Respectfully dedicated to Sir Oliver J. Lodge for his interest in and contributions to a difficult field of Psychology, one of the highest importance to mankind but of the least acknowledged." [18]
Nearretocera johnstoni Girault, 1913 Wasp Mary Johnston "This beautiful species is respectfully dedicated to Mary Johnston for her war-incriminating novel Cease Firing." [51]
Neobisium chaimweizmanni Ćurčić & Dimitrijević, 2002 Pseudoscorpion Chaim Weizmann "After the name of a famous chemist and statesman, otherwise the first President of Israel." [279]
Neobisium davidbengurioni Ćurčić & Dimitrijević, 2002 Pseudoscorpion David Ben-Gurion "After the name of a noted politician and publicist, David BenGurion, otherwise the first Prime Minister of Israel." [279]
Neobisium goldameirae Ćurčić & Dimitrijević, 2002 Pseudoscorpion Golda Meir "After the name of the Mother of Israel, Ms. Golda Meir, a noted Israeli politician and the former Prime Minister of the country." [279]
Neobisium marcchagalli Ćurčić & Ćurčić, 2002 Pseudoscorpion Marc Chagall "After the name of Marc Chagall, a famous Russian-Jewish painter." [279]
Neomegamphopus roosevelti Shoemaker, 1942 Crustacean Franklin D. Roosevelt An amphipod described from specimens collected by the 1938 Presidential Cruise aboard USS Houston. "I take great pleasure in naming this species for the Hon. Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States of America, in appreciation of his interest in the biological bollections of the U.S. National Museum". [280][249]
Neomerinthe hemingwayi Fowler, 1935 Fish Ernest Hemingway A species of scorpionfish from the Atlantic Ocean, known as spiny-cheek scorpionfish. It is the type species of its genus. "For Ernest Hemingway, author and angler of great game fishes, in appreciation of his assistance in my work on Gulf Stream fishes." [281][282]
Neozygina zapatai Dietrich & Dmitriev, 2007 Leafhopper Emiliano Zapata A species native to Jalisco, Mexico, "named in memory of Emilano Zapata Salazar (1879–1919), hero of the Mexican Revolution." [283]
Neptunides stanleyi Janson, 1984 Beetle Henry Morton Stanley A flower chafer beetle first collected near Boyoma Falls (then known as Stanley Falls), in the present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo. "I propose naming this fine species after the illustrious leader of the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition and explorer of Central Africa."
Subsequently transferred to genus Taurhina.
[284]
Noctua fransenii Schlegel, 1866 Owl Isaäc Dignus Fransen van de Putte "The epithet, conferred on this very rare species, is attached to the name of His Excellency the present Minister of the Colonies, Mr. Fransen van de Putte, who was kind enough to authorise the continuation of the exploration of New Guinea and of the research aimed at making the natural history of our Archipelago known."
Subsequently synonymised with Ninox rufa subsp. humeralis.
[77][285]
Notiomaso shackletoni Lavery & Snazell, 20134 Spider Ernest Shackleton A money spider from the Falkland Islands, whose name refers "to the links between the Shackleton family and the Falkland Islands. Sir Ernest Shackleton (1874–1922) visited the islands during his epic rescue of the crew of the Endurance in 1915." [286]
Notothenia scotti Boulenger, 1907 Fish Robert Falcon Scott Known as crowned rockcod, this is a species of cod icefish from the Southern Ocean, first collected by the Discovery Expedition, led by Scott.
It was subsequently transferred to the genus Trematomus.
[287][288]
Nyctalus joffrei Thomas, 1915 Bat Joseph Joffre "The species is named in honour of General Joffre, Commander-in-Chief of the French Army."
This species was named during World War I, in which Joffre was an important figure. Known as Joffre's pipistrelle, it has since been moved to the genus Mirostrellus. It is found in Southeast Asia, from Nepal to Vietnam.
[289][290]
[291]
Odontophorus balliviani Gould, 1846 Fowl José Ballivián The stripe-faced wood quail, native to Bolivia and Peru, was named after General Ballivián, who was President of Bolivia at the time of publication. [292]
Odontophotopsis hammetti Pitts, 2010 Wasp Dashiell Hammett A velvet ant from the Colorado Desert, California, "Named after Samuel Dashiell Hammett (1894–1961), who was a well-known American author of hardboiled detective novels and short stories, and creator of the famous protagonist, Sam Spade." [293]
Odynerus (Ancistrocerus) kitcheneri Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Horatio Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener "Dedicated to the English Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, who died on 5 June 1916, when the cruiser Hampshire sank." This species was named during World War I, in which Kitchener was an important figure.
Subsequently, subgenus Ancistrocerus was elevated to the rank of genus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Hoplomerus) goltzi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Colmar Freiherr von der Goltz "Dedicated to the German General Von Goltz, reorganizer of the Turkish army." This species was named during World War I, in which Goltz was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to subgenus Monoplomerus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Hoplomerus) wilhelmi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Wilhelm II, German Emperor This species was named during World War I, in which Wilhelm II was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to subgenus Spinocoxa.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) alberti Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Albert I of Belgium This species was named during World War I, in which Albert I was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Antepipona.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) brussiloffi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Aleksei Brusilov "Dedicated to the Russian General Brussiloff, who in 1916 conquered Bukovina and part of Volhynia." This species was named during World War I, in which Brusilov was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Leptochilus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) falkenhayni Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Erich von Falkenhayn "Dedicated to the German Marshal Falkenhayn, who conquered Romania at the end of 1916." This species was named during World War I, in which Falkenhayn was an important figure.
Subsequently reclassified as a subspecies of Leptochilus medanae.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) frenchi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp John French, 1st Earl of Ypres "Dedicated to General John French, who commanded for a long time the English armies in France." This species was named during World War I, in which French was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Pseudoleptochilus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) hindenburgi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Paul von Hindenburg "Dedicated to the German Marshal Hindenburg, victor of Augustów [sic; probably meant Tannenberg] and the Masurian Lakes and conqueror of Poland." This species was named during World War I, in which Hindenburg was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Pseudosymmorphus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) hoetzendorfi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf "Dedicated to General Conrad von Hötzendorf, Chief of Staff of the Austrian armies." This species was named during World War I, in which Hötzendorf was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Microdynerus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) koenigi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Paul König "Dedicated to Herr König, commander of the merchant submarine Deutschland, which on 10 July 1916 arrived in the United States, crossing the Atlantic for the first time."
Subsequently transferred to genus Allodynerus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) mackenseni Dusmet, 1917 Wasp August von Mackensen "Dedicated to the German General Mackensen, conqueror of Poland and Serbia." This species was named during World War I, in which Mackensen was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Chlorodynerus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) muelleri Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Karl von Müller "Dedicated to Captain Müller, who, with the German cruiser Emden made a remarkable campaign in the Indian Ocean." This species was named during World War I, in which Müller was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Stenodynerus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) romanoffi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1856–1929) "Dedicated to H.H. the Grand Duke Nicholas Michailovitch [sic] Romanoff of Russia, for some time commander in chief of the Russian Armies." This species was named during World War I, in which Duke Nicholas was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Antepipona.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Lionotus) weddigeni Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Otto Weddigen "Dedicated to the German lieutenant Weddigen who, with the submarine U-9, sank, on 22 September 1914, the British cruisers Aboukir, Hogue and Crecy [sic]" This species was named during World War I, in which Weddigen was an important figure.
Subsequently transferred to genus Leptochilus.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Microdynerus) leopoldi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Prince Leopold of Bavaria "Dedicated to Prince Leopold of Bavaria, conqueror of Warsaw." This species was named during World War I, in which Prince Leopold was an important figure.
Subsequently synonymised with Microdynerus abdelkader.
[294][296]
Odynerus (Microdynerus) ludendorffi Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Erich Ludendorff "Dedicated to the German General Ludendorff, Marshal Hindenburg's Chief of Staff." This species was named during World War I, in which Ludendorff was an important figure.
Subsequently reclassified as Microdynerus (Alastorynerus) ludendorffi.
[294][295]
Odynerus (Microdynerus) russky Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Nikolai Ruzsky "Dedicated to the Russian General Russky, victor of the battles of Lemberg on September 1914." This species was named during World War I, in which Ruzsky was an important figure.
Subsequently synonymised with Microdynerus timidus.
[294][295]
Oedichirus hochimini Rougemont, 2018 Beetle Ho Chi Minh This species is native to Vietnam. [297]
Ogyges sandinoi Cano, 2014 Beetle Augusto César Sandino "The name of this species is in honor of Augusto César Sandino, a Nicaraguan hero, born in the Segovia Mountains."
All the specimens used to describe this species were collected from a mountain in Nueva Segovia Department, Nicaragua. Sandino was actually born further South, but it was in Las Segovias that he started recruiting his army.
[298]
Oligosita poincarei Girault, 1913 Wasp Henri Poincaré [299]
Ommatophoca rossii Gray, 1844 Seal James Clark Ross Described from specimens collected by the Ross expedition. [300]
Onchopora grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [136]
Onychodus jandemarrai Andrews et al., 2006 Fish Jandamarra A fossil lobe-finned fish from the Devonian of Kimberley (Western Australia). "Jandemarra was the name of the Aboriginal warrior who fought for Aboriginal rights in the Kimberleys and lived in caves in the Devonian reefs." [301]
Opheliminus longfellowi Girault, 1913 Wasp Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Subsequently transferred to the genus Sympiesis. [5][302]
Ophichthus bonaparti Kaup, 1856 Snake Eel Napoleon III [40]
Opisthoproctus grimaldii Zugmayer, 1911 Fish Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. Known as mirrorbelly, this species of barreleye was described from specimens first collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice. Subsequently transferred to the genus Monacoa. [58][303]
Opius (Tolbia) karlmayi Fischer, 2014 Wasp Karl May "Named on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the death of youth writer Karl May (died 1912)." [304]
Orcus nietzschei Łączyński, 2012 Ladybird Friedrich Nietzsche "This species is dedicated to the memory of a great German philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, who devoted his life to understanding the nature of will and morality." [305]
Ornismya anna Lesson, 1829 Bird Anna Masséna, Duchess of Rivoli This species has since been moved to the genus Calypte. [33]
Oxyacodon josephi Van Valen, 1978 Condylarth (an extinct order of mammals) Chief Joseph A fossil mammal from the Paleocene of Wyoming. Subsequently transferred to the genus Hemithlaeus. [141]
Oxyethira (Loxotrichia) gracilianoi Souza & Santos, 2017 Caddisfly Graciliano Ramos A Brazilian microcaddisfly "named in memory of Graciliano Ramos (1852–1953). Graciliano was author of such Brazilian classic literature as Caetés (1933) and Vidas Secas (1938). Graciliano was born in the city of Quebrangulo, type locality of this new species." [306]
Oxynoemacheilus theophilii Stoumboudi, Kottelat & Barbieri, 2006 Fish Theophilos Hatzimihail This freshwater stone loach was described from specimens collected in the Greek island of Lesbos, where Theophilos was born. [307]
Paedasterias joffrei Koehler 1920 Starfish Joseph Joffre "It pleased me, in writing my memoir at the beginning of 1919, to recall, in the name applied to the first new species described here, the absolute and complete victory won by France and her Allies [...]. I have also taken the liberty of dedicating two other new species to the two great men of war to whom we owe the victory, I have named Marechal Joffre and Marechal Foch [see Podasterias fochi], those two beautiful glories of France, whose valour fills every Frenchman's heart with admiration and gratitude."
Subsequently, genus Paedasterias was synonymised with Lysasterias.
[308]
Pancorius tagorei Prószyński, 1992 Spider Rabindranath Tagore An Indian jumping spider native to West Bengal, Tagore's home state. [309]
Papilio (Ornithoptera) victoriae Gray, 1856 Butterfly Queen Victoria A large butterfly found in the Solomon Islands and Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea. Subsequently transferred to the genus Troides, and then back to Ornithoptera, which was elevated to genus level. [310][311]
Paradisornis rudolphi Finsch & A.B. Meyer, 1885 Bird Rudolf, Crown Prince of Austria The blue bird-of-paradise, endemic to Papua New Guinea, was named "In honour of His Imperial and Royal Highness the Lord Archduke Rudolf, Crown Prince of Austria, the high and mighty protector of ornithological research throughout the world" [43]
Paraenasomyia johnsoni Girault, 1922 Wasp Jack Johnson (boxer) dedicated to "A man allied with Heaven, pugilistic, fashionable, dissipated, improvident, and non-poetical." [312]
Paraleptomastix thoreauini Girault, 1915 Wasp Henry David Thoreau Subsequently transferred to genus Neocladia. [20][313]
Paranthemus spenceri Girault, 1915 Wasp Herbert Spencer Genus Paranthemus was subsequently synonymised with Cales. [314][315]
Parasecodella dickensi Girault, 1915 Wasp Charles Dickens [14]
Pardosa mabinii Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 Spider Apolinario Mabini This species is endemic to the Philippines. [203]
Pardosa royi Biswas & Raychaudhuri, 2003 Spider Prafulla Chandra Roy A wolf spider native to Bangladesh, where Roy was born. [316]
Pardosa sacayi Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 Spider Macario Sakay This species is endemic to the Philippines. Subsequently synonymised with Venatrix magkasalubonga. [203][317]
Parectromoidella thackerayi Girault, 1915 Wasp William Makepeace Thackeray "Dedicated to the author of Vanity Fair." [20]
Paroecanthus roosevelti Rehn, 1917 Cricket Theodore Roosevelt "We take pleasure in dedicating this very interesting form to Theodore Roosevelt, in token of our appreciation of his scholarship as a zoologist and a historian and ability as a statesman. The name Roosevelt long will be associated with the Madeiran region as a result of the work of the Expediçao Cientifica Roosevelt-Rondon."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Angustitrella.
[318]
Paruscanoidea dickensi Girault, 1915 Wasp Charles Dickens [319]
Passadena mistralae Cepeda, 2018 Moth Gabriela Mistral A species of snout moth from Chile, whose name "honors Chilean Gabriela Mistral (1889–1957), the first Latin American woman awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature." [320]
Pediobopsis spenceri Girault, 1913 Wasp Herbert Spencer [5]
Peloridinannus moe Weirauch & Frankenberg, 2015 True bug Moe Howard One of three schizopterid bugs named concurrently after the 1934–1946 Three Stooges (see also List of organisms named after famous people (born 1900–1949)). [321]
Petaloconchus laddfranklinae Maury, 1917 Sea snail Christine Ladd-Franklin A fossil species from the Pliocene of the Dominican Republic. Ladd-Franklin was the first chair of the awarding committee of the Sarah Berliner Research Fellowship, which funded the expedition. [127]
Pheidole roosevelti Mann, 1921 Ant Theodore Roosevelt [322][40]
Pheretima aguinaldoi Hong & James, 2010 Earthworm Emilio Aguinaldo This species is endemic to the Philippines. [323]
Philodina shackletoni Iakovenko et al., 2015 Rotifer Ernest Shackleton "Named in honor of the leading Antarctic explorer, Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton, who in 1909 established his base on Cape Royds where the species was discovered." [324]
Phintella conradi Prószyński & Deeleman-Reinhold, 2012 Spider Joseph Conrad A species of jumping spider native to Sumatra, Indonesia, "named after Joseph Conrad (Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski, 1857–1924) – a Polish novelist who wrote in English, and for many years was a Merchant Navy captain sailing around the Malay Archipelago, as described in his novels." [276]
Pholcus hochiminhi Yao, Pham & Li, 2015 Spider Ho Chi Minh A cellar spider native to Vietnam. [325]
Pholcus lanieri Huber, 2011 Spider Sidney Lanier A cellar spider native to Georgia, USA. [326]
Photinus diegoriverai Zaragoza-Caballero & Domínguez-León, 2023 Firefly Diego Rivera This species is native to Mexico. [327]
Phyllium bonifacioi Lit & Eusebio, 2014 Leaf insect Andrés Bonifacio This species, native to the Philippines, was dedicated in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of Bonifacio's birth on November 30, 2013. [328]
Picassocrinus Cole et al., 2017 Sea lily Pablo Picasso A fossil genus of crinoids from the Ordovician of Zaragoza, Spain, named "in recognition of the Spanish abstract artist Pablo Picasso and in reference to the atypical plating of the posterior interray" [329]
Piestopleura milnei Buhl, 1997 Wasp A. A. Milne [246]
Pimoa gandhii Hormiga, 1994 Spider Mahatma Gandhi The holotype was collected in Pahalgam, India. [330]
Pipistrellus kitcheneri Thomas, 1915 Bat Horatio Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener This species was named during World War I, in which Kitchener was an important figure. Known as the red-brown pipistrelle, it has since been moved to the genus Hypsugo. It is endemic to the island of Borneo. [117][289]
Pipistrellus sturdeei Thomas, 1915 Bat Doveton Sturdee This species was named during World War I, in which Sturdee was an important figure. Known as Sturdee's pipistrelle or Bonin pipistrelle, the only documented specimen ever found (in Hahajima island, Japan) is the one that Thomas used to describe the species, which has since been declared officially extinct. Later scholarship has placed doubt on the validity of this single specimen's origin and taxonomy. [289][331]
Pisaboa fombonai Huber, 2020 Spider Rufino Blanco Fombona "This species is named for Rufino Blanco Fombona (1874–1944), Venezuela-born writer, nominated six times for the Nobel Prize in Literature between 1928 and 1935." [332]
Platymantis quezoni Brown et al., 2015 Frog Manuel L. Quezon A forest frog from Quezon, Philippines, named "honoring Manuel Luis Molina Quezon. Quezon served as president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines during the American colonial period from 1935 through the conclusion of the Second World War. An exemplary statesman, he led the struggle for Philippine independence from American rule. Suggested common name: Quezon Limestone Forest Frog." [333]
Platyptilia stanleyi Ustjuzhanin & Kovtunovich, 2016 Moth Henry Morton Stanley A large plume moth from Rwenzori Mountains, Uganda, "named after the famous British traveler, journalist and explorer of Africa, Henry Morton Stanley, the first European who visited the Rwenzori Mountains in 1876." [334]
Pleisticanthoides piccardorum Ng & Richer de Forges, 2012 Crustacean Auguste Piccard and Jacques Piccard "The name honors the Piccard family, Auguste Piccard (1884–1962), the inventor of the bathyscaphe, and his son, Jacques Ernest-Jean Piccard (1922–2008), who, together with U.S. Navy officer Don Walsh, were the first men to dive to a record depth of 10,915 m in the Mariana Trench in the Trieste on January 23, 1960." [335]
Podasterias fochi Koehler 1920 Starfish Ferdinand Foch "It pleased me, in writing my memoir at the beginning of 1919, to recall, in the name applied to the first new species described here, the absolute and complete victory won by France and her Allies [...]. I have also taken the liberty of dedicating two other new species to the two great men of war to whom we owe the victory, I have named Marechal Joffre [see Paedasterias joffrei] and Marechal Foch, those two beautiful glories of France, whose valour fills every Frenchman's heart with admiration and gratitude."
Subsequently synonymised with Diplasterias brucei.
[308]
Poecilia limantouri Jordan & Snyder, 1899 Fish José Yves Limantour "We take pleasure in dedicating this pretty fish to Señor Jose Yves de Limantour, the accomplished minister of the "Hacienda" for Mexico, in recognition of favors received through his courtesy."
Subsequently synonymized with Poecilia mexicana.
[93]
Poecilimon ataturki Ünal, 2000 Katydid Mustafa Kemal Atatürk "This interesting new species is named in honor of the first president of Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, who founded the modern Turkish Republic in 1923."
The species is native to western Turkey.
[336]
Pogonophryne scotti Regan, 1914 Fish Robert Falcon Scott Known as saddleback plunderfish, this is a species of Antarctic fish that was first collected by the Terra Nova Expedition, led by Scott, and was named in his memory. [337][338]
Polycystoides tennysoni Girault, 1913 Wasp Alfred, Lord Tennyson Subsequently transferred to genus Psilocera. [339][340]
Polynema draperi Girault, 1912 Wasp John William Draper "Dedicated to John William Draper, the physiologist, who has shown so clearly that civilisations, societies and all human populations are as immutably ruled by natural law as is the development of the individual human or the evolution of a species of bird or plant. The works of this man are neglected by nations at their peril." [178]
Polynema lodgei Girault, 1913 Wasp Oliver Lodge "This truly remarkable species, a striking example of the development of a similar wing pattern in unrelated genera, is respectfully dedicated to Sir Oliver W. [wrong initial] Lodge for his part in the development of a difficult part of human psychology, namely, that relating to telepathy and prevision."
Subsequently transferred to genus Agalmopolynema.
[179][341]
Polynema mendeleefi Girault, 1913 Wasp Dmitri Mendeleev "Respectfully dedicated to the Russian chemist who propounded the periodic law in chemistry."
Subsequently transferred to genus Palaeoneura.
[179][341]
Polynema nordaui Girault, 1913 Wasp Max Nordau Subsequently transferred to genus Palaeoneura. [342][341]
Polynema poincarei Girault, 1913 Wasp Henri Poincaré "This remarkable species is dedicated to the great French mathematician, Jules Henri Poincaré."
Subsequently transferred to genus Palaeoneura.
[343][341]
Polynema spenceri Girault, 1912 Wasp Herbert Spencer "Respectfully dedicated to Herbert Spencer, great philosopher and forceful exponent of reason as based on experience."
Subsequently transferred to genus Palaeoneura.
[178][341]
Polynema thoreauini Girault, 1915 Wasp Henry David Thoreau Subsequently transferred to genus Palaeoneura. [314][341]
Polynema zangwilli Girault, 1913 Wasp Israel Zangwill Subsequently transferred to the genus Palaeoneura. [179][341]
Polynema zolai Girault, 1915 Wasp Émile Zola "Respectfully dedicated to Émile Zola for his La Débâcle, wherein the horrors of war are ably pictured to us."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Palaeoneura.
[344][341]
Polynemoidea lincolni Girault, 1913 Wasp Abraham Lincoln Subsequently transferred to genus Pseudanaphes. [179][345]
Polytelis alexandrae Gould, 1863 Parrot Alexandra of Denmark An Australian species known as princess parrot, and named "in honour of that Princess who, we may reasonably hope, is destined at some future time to be queen of these realms and their dependencies, of which Australia is by no means the most inconspicuous." [346]
Pomboa Huber, 2000 Spider Rafael Pombo "The generic name honors the Colombian poet Rafael Pombo, loved by children for his "El Renacuajo paseador" ("The Strolling Frog")." [65]
Potentilla regis-borisii Stoj. Flowering plant Boris III of Bulgaria A species of cinquefoil endemic to the Balkan peninsula, described during Tsar Boris III's reign in Bulgaria and named in his honour. Subsequently transferred to genus Drymocallis. [347]
PotteromycesStrullu-Derrien & Hawksworth, 2023 Fungi Beatrix Potter "In honor of Helen Beatrix Potter (1866–1943) the well-known children’s author, conservationist, and amateur naturalist, who used her artistic abilities to draw and document a variety of Fungi. She made detailed observations and was one of the first mycologists to study the growth of fungi from spores in culture and to understand that lichens were an association between an alga and a fungus. She also had a keen interest in fossils. She was a critical observer of fungi microscopically making novel and at the time controversial observations. Her contribution really merits acknowledgment in the fungal kingdom." [348]
Pristimantis teslai Páez & Ron, 2019 Frog Nikola Tesla "The specific epithet [...] is a patronym for Nikola Tesla, a revolutionary inventor of the late 19th and early 20th century. It is named after him in recognition of his contributions to physics and his dedication to the ideal of providing free wireless electric power" The common name "Tesla's rain frog" was proposed for this species, native to Ecuador. [349]
Pristionchus maxplancki Kanzaki et al., 2013 Roundworm Max Planck "The specific name [...] commemorates the German physicist Max Planck, the honorary namesake of the Society that sponsored this work." [350][351]
Pristomerus nedkellyi Klopfstein, 2016 Wasp Ned Kelly This species is native to Australia. [352]
Proplina sibeliusi Stinchcomb, 1986 Monoplacophoran, a primitive class of molluscs Jean Sibelius A fossil species from the Early Ordovician of Missouri, US. "The species name is in honor of J. Sibelius, Finnish composer, whose first symphony and other works have evoked personal feelings comparable to those evoked by local Ozark landscapes developed on the gnarled, stromatolitic cherts of the Gasconade Formation where the form has been collected." [353]
Protopliomerella okeeffeae McAdams & Adrain, 2011 Trilobite Georgia O'Keeffe [354]
Protula alberti Fauvel, 1909 Polychaete worm Albert I, Prince of Monaco This species was described from specimens collected in the Azores by two of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle and the Princesse Alice. [355]
Prunum gregorioi Espinosa & Ortea, 2018 Sea snail Gregorio Fuentes A species native to Cuba, "named in honour of Gregorio Fuentes, emigrant from the Canary Islands (Charco de San Ginés, Lanzarote, 1897), who became skipper of the yacht El Pilar [sic, actually a fishing boat named Pilar], owned by the writer Ernest Hemingway, and his companion in fishing and adventures in the Gulf of Mexico and the coasts of Cuba. He died in Cojímar, Cuba, on 13 January 2002 at the age of 104." Another species was concurrently named Dentimargo elpilar after the boat. [356]
Prunum rosasi Espinosa & Ortea, 2018 Sea snail Juventino Rosas "Dedicated to the Mexican composer Juventino Rosas, on the 150th anniversary of his birth in Guanajuato, author of the famous waltz "Sobre las olas", a work inspired by the sounds of water, as its author sailed over the waves of the Gulf of Batabanó [the type locality] on his way to Mérida, Mexico." [357]
Pseudancistrus carnegiei Eigenmann, 1916 Fish Andrew Carnegie A freshwater catfish found in rivers of Colombia, whose description was published in the Annals of Carnegie Museum.
Subsequently transferred to genus Dolichancistrus.
[358]
Pseudoligosita arnoldi Girault, 1913 Wasp Matthew Arnold [299]
Pseudomacromia regis-alberti Schouteden, 1934 Dragonfly Albert I of Belgium A species described from specimens collected in the Belgian Congo (present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo). Subsequently transferred to genus Zygonyx, and the hyphen of the specific name was eliminated, making the current accepted name Zygonyx regisalberti. [217]
Pseudoparamys cezannei Hartenberger, 1987 Rodent Paul Cézanne [40]
Pseudotanais amundseni Błażewicz, Jakiel, Bamber & Bird, 2021 Crustacean Roald Amundsen A deep-sea tanaid found near Antarctica; "The name of the species, whose type locality is the Amundsen Sea, is given in honour of Roald Engelbregt Gravning Amundsen, the Norwegian Polar pioneer." [9]
Pseudotanais chanelae Jakiel, Palero & Błażewicz, 2020 Crustacean Coco Chanel A deep-sea tanaid found in the Kuril–Kamchatka Trench, "dedicated to Coco Chanel, the French fashion icon, founder of the Chanel brand." [359]
Pseudotanais chaplini Jakiel, Palero & Błażewicz, 2019 Crustacean Charlie Chaplin A deep-sea tanaid found in the Clipperton Fracture Zone of the Pacific Ocean, "dedicated to the great actor and film director of the silent film epoch Charles "Charlie" Chaplin." [360]
Pseudotanais chopini Jakiel, Palero & Błażewicz, 2019 Crustacean Frédéric Chopin A deep-sea tanaid found in the Clipperton Fracture Zone of the Pacific Ocean, described by scientists of the University of Łódź, Poland, and "dedicated to Frédéric Chopin, a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist." [360]
Pseudotanais curieae Jakiel, Palero & Błażewicz, 2020 Crustacean Marie Curie A deep-sea tanaid found in the Kuril–Kamchatka Trench, described by scientists of the University of Łódź, Poland, and "dedicated to Maria Skłodowska-Curie, a Polish physicist and chemist; the first woman who was Nobel Prize Laureate in two categories." [359]
Pseudotanais georgesandae Jakiel, Palero & Błażewicz, 2019 Crustacean George Sand The sister species to P. chopini, "named in recognition of Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin known as George Sand, a French novelist and essayist, well known for her partnership with the composer and pianist Frédéric Chopin." [360]
Pseudotanais kobro Jakiel, Palero & Błażewicz, 2019 Crustacean Katarzyna Kobro A deep-sea tanaid found in the Clipperton Fracture Zone of the Pacific Ocean, described by scientists of the University of Łódź, Poland. [360]
Pseudotanais palmeri Błażewicz, Jakiel, Bamber & Bird, 2021 Crustacean Nathaniel Palmer A deep-sea tanaid found near Antarctica, "The species, whose type locality is the Palmer Bay, (South Orkney Islands) was named in honour of Nathaniel Brown Palmer, the sailing captain and ship designer." [9]
Pseudotanais scotti Błażewicz, Jakiel, Bamber & Bird, 2021 Crustacean Robert Falcon Scott A deep-sea tanaid found in Southern Thule, "named in honour of Capitan Robert Falcon Scott, an officer of the British Royal Navy, the explorer of the Antarctic and leader of the Discovery Expedition." [9]
Pseudotanais shackletoni Błażewicz, Jakiel, Bamber & Bird, 2021 Crustacean Ernest Shackleton A deep-sea tanaid found in South Georgia, "named in honour of Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton, the polar explorer and leader of heroic cruise of HMS Endurance [sic]." [9]
Pseudotrogulus trotskyi DaSilva & Pinto-da-Rocha, 2010 Harvestman Leon Trotsky "In honor of Leon Trotsky (1879-1940), one of the Russian socialist revolution leaders, who definitively changed 20th century history. He was killed by order of Josef Stalin who transformed the Soviet Union into a dictatorial bureaucracy." [198]
Psiliglossa zeppelini Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Ferdinand von Zeppelin "Dedicated to Count Zeppelin, builder of the airships that have taken his name." [294]
Psittacula gulielmi III Schlegel, 1866 Parrot William III of the Netherlands "The New Guinea expedition having taken place under the auspices of His Majesty King William III, we have made it our duty to dedicate to this sovereign, who has so many titles to our gratitude, one of the most beautiful discoveries made during this important undertaking." The specific name was subsequently amended to gulielmitertii, and transferred to genus Cyclopsitta. [77][33]
Pterocheilus besseleri Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Hans Hartwig von Beseler "Dedicated to the German General Besseler, conqueror of Antwerp and of Nowo-Georgiewsk." This species was named during World War I, in which Beseler was an important figure.
Subsequently synonymised with Onychopterocheilus hasdrubal.
[294][361]
Pterocheilus joffrei Dusmet, 1917 Wasp Joseph Joffre "Dedicated to Marshal Joffre, commander-in-chief for two years of the French armies." This species was named during World War I, in which Joffre was an important figure. [294]
Pteropus livingstonii Gray, 1866 Bat David Livingstone A fruit bat from the Comoros, described from a specimen that had been shot by Livingstone. [362]
Ptiloris victoriae Gould, 1850 Bird Queen Victoria "I cannot possibly have a better opportunity than now presents itself of paying a just tribute of respect to our most gracious Queen, by bestowing upon this lovely denizen of the Australian forests the specific appellation of Victoriae" [363]
Pycnomma roosevelti Ginsburg, 1939 Fish Franklin D. Roosevelt A species of Caribbean goby collected during the 1938 Presidential Cruise aboard USS Houston. Subsequently transferred to genus Chriolepis. [364][365]
Quetzalcoatlus northropi Lawson, 1975 Pterosaur Jack Northrop Quetzalcoatlus northropi is one of the largest flying creatures known to have ever existed. Its genus was named after the Aztec feathered serpent god, Quetzalcoatl; the specific epithet honors Jack Northrop, the aeronautical engineer who first experimented with flying wing aircraft designs in the 1940s. The issue of the journal Science in which the discovery was reported featured a cover depicting one of Northrop's flying wing aircraft designs, a Quetzalcoatlus, a Pteranodon, and a condor, one of the largest extant flying animals, which looked tiny in comparison. [366][367]
[368]
Ragnarok wovokae Van Valen, 1978 Arctocyonian (an extinct order of mammals) Wovoka A fossil mammal from the Paleocene of Wyoming. The genus Ragnarok was created concurrently and referred to "The twilight of the gods, from the Eddas, with reference to the extinction of the dinosaurs, which occurred while Ragnarok lived and in which it probably assisted." (the Alvarez hypothesis about an asteroid impact had not been formulated yet). This genus was subsequently synonymised with Baioconodon Gazin, 1941. [141]
Rangifer pearyi J. A. Allen, 1902 Reindeer Robert Peary Described from specimens collected by Peary in Ellesmere Island.
Subsequently demoted to the status of subspecies of Rangifer arcticus, as Rangifer arcticus pearyi.
[369][370]
[371]
Rebutia einsteinii Frič Cactus Albert Einstein [372]
Renaniana Girault, 1931 Wasp Ernest Renan [56]
Retepora grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to the genus Reteporella.
[136][373]
Rhabdopleura grimaldii Jullien, 1890 Pterobranch Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
It is currently considered a nomen dubium.
[374][375]
Rhachomyces schweitzeri Balazuc Fungus Albert Schweitzer A parasitic fungus found on Perigona beetles in Gabon, where Schweitzer founded his hospital. [376]
Rhacophorus rizali Boettger, 1897 Frog José Rizal "This successful writer in the fields of linguistics, history, geography and literature, who was of Tagalog descent, has also remained a respected sculptor, and who as a doctor, especially as an ophthalmologist, developed a recognised activity, collected for years in the fields of zoology and ethnography for the Dresden Museum during his political imprisonment in Mindanao. As one of the intellectual instigators of the revolution now taking place in the Philippines, he was shot by the Spaniards on 30 December 1896, and the future will be shaped by his efforts and his work!"
Subsequently synonymised with Rhacophorus pardalis. This was one of the species Rizal collected.
[377]
Rhagonycha nielsenae Fanti & Damgaard, 2018 Beetle Nielsine Nielsen A fossil soldier beetle found in Baltic amber from the Eocene of Kaliningrad Oblast, "named in memory of Nielsine Mathilde Nielsen (Svendborg, 10 June 1850 - Copenhagen, 8 October 1916), the first female academic and physician in Denmark." [236]
Rhicnopeltomyia douglassi Girault, 1913 Wasp Frederick Douglass Subsequently transferred to the genus Chrysonotomyia. [5][378]
Rhicnopeltomyia washingtoni Girault, 1913 Wasp Booker T. Washington Subsequently transferred to the genus Neochrysocharis. [5][379]
Rissoella ameliae Ortea & Espinosa, 2004 Sea snail Amelia Peláez A species native to Cuba, named "in honour of painter Amelia Peláez (1896-1968), born in Yaguajay, Sancti Spiritus, an undisputed master of Cuban plastic arts, whose work deserves to be rediscovered as the basis of a female genre of painting that began to have international transcendence." [380]
Rochlingia Guthörl, 1934 Palaeodictyoptera, an extinct order of insects Hermann Röchling The genus was named after German industrialist and Nazi supporter Hermann Röchling. [24]
Rochlingia hitleri Guthörl, 1934 Palaeodictyoptera, an extinct order of insects Adolf Hitler [24]
Rooseveltia frankliniana O.F.Cook Palm Franklin D. Roosevelt Genus and species described from specimens collected in Cocos Island during the 1938 Presidential Cruise. Subsequently synonymised with Euterpe precatoria (a species of açaí). [381]
Rubus × mussolinii Hruby Flowering plant Benito Mussolini Hybrid blackberry from northeastern Libya. [382]
Saldula ourayi Drake & Hottes, 1949 True bug Chief Ouray "Named in memory of the famous Indian Chief Ouray, who was a sincere friend of the pioneers and early settlers of the Rocky Mountain region." (which this species is native to).
Subsequently synonymised with Saldula dispersa.
[383][384]
Saturnia isabellae Graells, 1849 Moth Isabella II of Spain This species, known as Spanish moon moth, was first identified in Spain during Isabella II's reign (subsequently it has also been found in France and Switzerland). The queen reportedly thanked the entomologist for the tribute, wearing a specimen of the species mounted on an emerald necklace at a reception in the Royal palace.
Subsequently transferred to the monotypic genus Graellsia, named after the discoverer of this species.
[385][386]
Scinax garibaldiae Lourenço, Lingnau, Haddad & Faivovich, 2019 Frog Anita Garibaldi This species is native to Brazil [387]
Scirtes guillaumati Pic, 1918 Beetle Adolphe Guillaumat The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Guillaumat was an important figure. [74]
Scirtes townshendi Pic, 1918 Beetle Charles Townshend (British Army officer) The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Townshend was an important figure. [74]
Scoterpes jackdanieli Shear, 2010 Millipede Jack Daniel A millipede collected from Lynchburg, Tennessee, home of Daniel and his eponymous whiskey distillery, "a favorite libation of the author". [388]
Scrupocellaria grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently synonymised with Scrupocellaria inermis.
[136][389]
Secodes sumneri Girault, 1913 Wasp Charles Sumner "Respectfully dedicated to Charles Sumner, for his addresses on war and the war systems of nations."
Subsequently transferred to genus Euderus.
[18][390]
Sedum carnegiei Raym.-Hamet Flowering plant Andrew Carnegie A stonecrop from Tibet, described from a specimen that had been collected years prior and was growing in the Herbarium of the Carnegie Museum; "I am happy to dedicate this plant to Mr. Carnegie as proof of my sincere admiration." [391]
Shackletoniella Strunecky, Raabova & Bernardova 2019 Bacterium Ernest Shackleton "derived from the name of Sir Ernest Shackleton, a polar explorer who led British expeditions to the Antarctic including scientific investigations." This genus was applied to Phormidium antarcticum, a freshwater cyanobacterium originally described from specimens collected at Pony Lake by the Nimrod Expedition, led by Shackleton.
It is also found in the Arctic.
[257][392]
Shireplitis tolkieni Fernández-Triana & Ward, 2013 Wasp J. R. R. Tolkien Other species of Shireplitis are named after various Lord of the Rings characters. [393]
Siriella roosevelti Tattersall, 1941 Crustacean Franklin D. Roosevelt Described from specimens collected by the 1938 Presidential Cruise aboard USS Houston. "a new species [...] which I take pleasure in associating with the President of the United States as a mark of appreciation of his interest in marine biological research." [394]
Slodowskani Kittel, 2016 Wasp Marie Curie Replacement name for the genus Leptops Heinrich, 1968, which was preoccupied by Leptops Schoenherr, 1834. Named after the scientist's hyphenated surname, Marie Skłodowska-Curie, misspelt as "Marie Slodowska-Curie" in the paper. [41]
Smittia grimaldii Jullien, 1903 Bryozoan Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently synonymised with Porella compressa.
[136][395]
Sonitha picassoi Zolotuhin & Prozorov 2010 Moth Pablo Picasso "The species is named in honour of the famous Spanish painter, sculptor and designer Pablo Ruiz Picasso because of the wing pattern - somewhat reminiscent of the artist's style" [396]
Sonoma twaini Ferro, 2016 Beetle Mark Twain "named for the character Mark Twain, developed by Samuel Langhorne Clemens, an author, lecturer, philosopher, humanitarian, champion of science, and humorist. Clemens lived in California for awhile, but traveled nowhere near where this species occurs—the author forgives the oversight." [397]
Spathomeles rizali Strohecker, 1964 Beetle José Rizal A species of handsome fungus beetle native to Mindanao, Philippines. [398]
Sperosoma grimaldii Koehler, 1897 Sea urchin Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [399]
Sphaeralcyon scotti López-González & Gili, 2005 Coral Robert Falcon Scott A soft coral from the Southern Ocean, "named in honour of Captain Robert F. Scott, one of the most relevant explorers in polar areas, and leader of the British National Antarctic Expedition of 1901–1904 onboard the RRS Discovery." [400]
Sphaeralcyon shackletoni López-González & Gili, 2005 Coral Ernest Shackleton A soft coral from the Southern Ocean, "named in honour of Sir Ernest H. Shackleton, one of the most remembered explorers in polar areas, and leader of the Endurance Expedition (1914–1916) among other polar explorations." [400]
Sphaerodactylus roosevelti Grant, 1931 Lizard Theodore Roosevelt Jr. This species is endemic to Puerto Rico, where Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was governor at the time of its naming. [401]
Sphaeropthalma chandleri Pitts, 2010 Wasp Raymond Chandler A velvet ant from the Colorado Desert, California, "Named after Raymond Thornton Chandler (1888–1959), who was an American crime writer that greatly influenced the modern private eye story and created the famous protagonist, Philip Marlowe." [293]
Sphiximorpha garibaldii Rondani, 1860 Fly Giuseppe Garibaldi A hoverfly described from a specimen found in Parma, Italy; "This species was collected at the time when the Italian volunteers, led by Giuseppe Garibaldi, were defeating the Austrian soldiers near Varese, hence decorated by me with the name of Victor." [402]
Spiniphiline persei Caballer & Ortea, 2015 Sea slug Saint-John Perse Species described from specimens collected in Guadeloupe, named "to honour the local Marie-René-Auguste-Alexis Leger, born in Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe, on 31 May 1887, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1960, whose pseudonym was Saint-John Perse." [403]
Spintharus manrayi Chomitz & Agnarsson, 2018 Spider Man Ray "The species epithet honours the artist Man Ray, a relative of the first author of the species." [404]
Spirodiscus grimaldii Fauvel, 1909 Polychaete worm Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected in the Azores by two of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle and the Princesse Alice. [355]
Staphylococcus schweitzeri Tong et al., 2015 Bacterium Albert Schweitzer A bacterium isolated from the nares of a Red-tailed monkey from Gabon, Africa, and "named after Albert Schweitzer, founder of a hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon, and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate in 1952." [405]
Statira alberti Pic, 1918 Beetle Albert I of Belgium The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Albert I was an important figure. [74]
Statira allenbyi Pic, 1918 Beetle Edmund Allenby The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Allenby was an important figure. [74]
Statira castelnaui Pic, 1918 Beetle Édouard de Castelnau The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Castelnau was an important figure. [74]
Statira diazi Pic, 1918 Beetle Armando Diaz The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Diaz was an important figure. [74]
Statira fochi Pic, 1918 Beetle Ferdinand Foch The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Foch was an important figure. [74]
Statira francheti Pic, 1918 Beetle Louis Franchet d'Espèrey The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Franchet d'Espèrey was an important figure. [74]
Statira joffrei Pic, 1918 Beetle Joseph Joffre The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Joffre was an important figure. [74]
Statira lloydi Pic, 1918 Beetle David Lloyd George The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Lloyd George was an important figure. [74]
Statira pershingi Pic, 1918 Beetle John J. Pershing The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Pershing was an important figure. [74]
Statira petaini Pic, 1918 Beetle Philippe Pétain The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Pétain was an important figure. [74]
Statira venizelosi Pic, 1918 Beetle Eleftherios Venizelos The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Venizelos was an important figure. "Under the name of Venizelosi I pay homage to Greece, freed from harmful influences and reconquered to its glorious past" [74]
Statira wilsoni Pic, 1918 Beetle Woodrow Wilson The description of this species was published in France amid the celebrations for the Armistice of 11 November 1918, end of the hostilities of World War I, in which Wilson was an important figure. [74]
Steganopus graui Campbell, 1979 Bird Miguel Grau A fossil species of phalarope from the Pleistocene epoch, found in the Talara Tar Seeps of northwestern Peru, and "named for Admiral Miguel Grau, Peruvian patriot and hero of the War of the Pacific with Chile." [406]
Stenomorpha roosevelti Smith, Miller & Wheeler, 2011 Beetle Theodore Roosevelt "This species is named in honor of the 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, for his contributions to conservation." [407]
Stenotarsus kafkai Arriaga-Varela et al., 2013 Beetle Franz Kafka "Dedicated to the eminent Czech author Franz Kafka, who imagined what it would be like to wake up as an insect." [408]
Stentorceps abbotti Nielsen & Buffington, 2011 Wasp Edwin Abbott Abbott "Named in honour of E.A. Abbott, the author of Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions (Abbott 1884). This story is about a two-dimensional world populated by geometric figures, with circles as rulers. The distinctive flat, circular dorsal terminus of the corniculum of S. abbotti resembles one of the leaders of Flatland." [409]
Stethynium maxwelli Girault, 1915 Wasp James Clerk Maxwell Subsequently transferred to genus Parastethynium. [314][345]
Stethynium mayeri Girault, 1912 Wasp Julius von Mayer "Respectfully dedicated to [Julius] Robert Mayer, who with Hermann Helmholtz discovered the law of the conservation of energy."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Allanagrus.
[178][345]
Streptelasma tennysoni Pestana, 1960 Coral Alfred, Lord Tennyson A fossil species of horn coral from the Ordovician of California, US. [410]
Struthiolarella shackletoni Zinsmeister & Camacho, 1980 Sea snail Ernest Shackleton A fossil species from the Eocene of Seymour Island, Antarctica. [411]
Sundacossus gauguini Yakovlev, 2008 Moth Paul Gauguin "named in honor of the great French artist Paul Gauguin who praised Polynesian nature." (Though this species is from the island of Sumba in the Malay Archipelago, not Polynesia). [412]
Sympiesonecremnus boasi Girault, 1913 Wasp Franz Boas "Dedicated to Franz Boas for his book The Mind of Primitive Man".
Subsequently transferred to the genus Sympiesis.
[5][413]
Sympiesomorphelleus suttneri Girault, 1913 Wasp Bertha von Suttner "Respectfully dedicated to Bertha von Suttner for her Die Waffen nieder!."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Elachertus.
[51][414]
Sympiesomorphelleus thoreauini Girault, 1915 Wasp Henry David Thoreau Subsequently transferred to the genus Elachertus. [14][15]
Syndesmya grimaldii Dautzenberg & H. Fischer, 1906 Bivalve Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice.
Subsequently transferred to genus Abra.
[415]
Syntomosphyrum gregi Girault, 1913 Wasp William Rathbone Greg Subsequently transferred to the genus Aprostocetus. [5][416]
Tanais grimaldii Dollfus, 1897 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle. [417]
Tennysoniana Girault, 1920 Wasp Alfred, Lord Tennyson [56]
Tessmannella kiplingi Buffington & van Noort, 2012 Wasp Rudyard Kipling A species native to the Republic of the Congo, "Named in honor of Rudyard Kipling, author of Just So Stories and others about Africa." [418]
Tetrastichus cobdeni Girault, 1913 Wasp Richard Cobden Subsequently transferred to the genus Aprostocetus. [5][419]
Tetrastichus poincarei Girault, 1913 Wasp Henri Poincaré [343]
Thericium ataturki Landau, Harzhauser, İslamoğlu & Marques da Silva 2013 Sea snail Mustafa Kemal Atatürk A fossil species from the Miocene of Southern Turkey. [420]
Thoreauea J.K. Williams Flowering plant Henry David Thoreau A genus of plants of the dogbane family, native to Mexico. "It is an honor to name this new genus after Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862), noted essayist and naturalist [...] His loving, and often unrecognized, commitment to botany inspired me to undertake the subject." [421]
Thoreauella Girault, 1930 Wasp Henry David Thoreau [56]
Thoreauia Girault, 1916 Wasp Henry David Thoreau [40]
Thorichthys panchovillai Del Moral-Flores, López-Segovia & Hernández-Arellano, 2017 Fish Pancho Villa A freshwater cichlid fish native to the Coatzacoalcos River basin, Mexico. [422]
Thouarella amundseni Núñez-Flores, Gomez-Uchida & López-González, 2021 Coral Roald Amundsen A soft coral from the coast of Antarctica. [423]
Tolkienia Lieberman & Kloc, 1997 Trilobite J. R. R. Tolkien A genus of Devonian trilobites that has been found in Spain, France and the United States. [424]
Trachinocephalus gauguini Polanco, Acero & Betancur, 2016 Fish Paul Gauguin This species of lizardfish is endemic to the Marquesas Islands, where Gauguin lived for the last two years of his life and was buried. [425][426]
Tragelaphus scriptus meneliki Neumann, 1902 Antelope Menelik II Known as Menelik's bushbuck, this subspecies is endemic to Ethiopia. [427][428]
Trichaporoidella maupaussanti Girault, 1915 Wasp Guy de Maupassant Subsequently transferred to genus Neotrichoporoides. [14][15]
Trigoniophthalmus lermontovi Kaplin, 2015 Bristletail Mikhail Lermontov "Since the species was collected near the place of the duel of M. Yu. Lermontov, it was named in honor of this great Russian poet and writer in connection with his 200th birthday anniversary. " [429]
Triplocania einsteini González-Obando, Carrejo-Gironza & García Aldrete, 2021 Barklouse Albert Einstein "This species is dedicated to Albert Einstein, theoretical physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics in 1921, author of the Theory of Relativity." [430][431]
Tritropis grimaldii Chevreux, 1891 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Hirondelle.
Subsequently transferred to genus Rhachotropis.
[432]
Trochilus herrani Delattre & Bourcier, 1846 Hummingbird Pedro Alcántara Herrán Known as rainbow-bearded thornbill, this hummingbird native to Colombia, Ecuador and northern Peru was "Dedicated to General Herrán, former president of the Republic of New Granada; a man of rare dedication and a friend of Europeans who can spread useful knowledge and the development of natural sciences in his country."
Subsequently transferred to genus Chalcostigma.
[433]
Troides alexandrae Rothschild, 1907 Butterfly Alexandra of Denmark Recorded as the largest butterfly in the world, Queen Alexandra's birdwing is restricted to the forests of Oro Province in eastern Papua New Guinea. "On account of the relationship of this new species with Troides victoriae [protonym Papilio (Ornithoptera) victoriae, also in this list], we think the name alexandrae to be very appropriate."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Ornithoptera.
[311]
Trophon shackletoni Hedley, 1911 Sea snail Ernest Shackleton A species native to the Southern Ocean, described from specimens collected at Cape Royds by the Nimrod Expedition, led by Shackleton. "As the handsomest novelty in the collection, it is dedicated to the intrepid leader of the Expedition."
Subsequently transferred to the genus Trophonella.
[434]
Tropidophis cacuangoae Ortega-Andrade et al., 2022 Snake Dolores Cacuango A wood snake native to Ecuador, named "honoring Dolores Cacuango, an Ecuadorian benchmark of feminism and human rights of the early twentieth century. She claimed the identity and rights of the Ecuadorian indigenous people, leading them to defend themselves from abuse and discrimination. Also, she demanded the teaching of Quechua and founded the first bilingual schools in Ecuador and the Ecuadorian Indigenous Federation." [435]
Trypanosoma livingstonei Teixeira & Camargo, 2013 Protist Mary Moffat Livingstone "The name was given because Trypanosoma livingstonei n. sp. was first discovered in bats captured in Chupanga, Mozambique, a small village in the margin of the Zambezi River, where Mary Livingstone, the wife of David Livingstone, died of "fevers" in 1862; her grave remains in an small cemetery from a Portuguese Mission practically destroyed by the Mozambique wars." [436]
Tschaidicancha chaplini Benedetti & Pinto-da-Rocha, 2022 Harvestman Charlie Chaplin "dedicated to the English actor, composer, director and producer Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin (1889–1977), a worldwide icon in the era of silent film through his screen persona "The Tramp"." [255]
Tylenchorhynchus quaidi Golden, Maqbool & Handoo, 1987 Roundworm Muhammad Ali Jinnah A plant parasitic nematode from Pakistan; "The species name is given in honor of the founder of Pakistan, Quaidi-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah." [437]
Typhloponemys schweitzeri Pace, 2009 Beetle Albert Schweitzer A rove beetle from Gabon, "dedicated to the memory of Dr. Albert Schweitzer, a famous German physician, musicologist and theologian, Nobel Peace Prize winner, 1952. In Gabon he founded the famous leprosarium of Lambaréné." [438]
Ummidia colemanae Godwin & Bond, 2021 Spider Bessie Coleman A trapdoor spider from Texas, named "in honor of Texas native Bessie Coleman (1892–1926), the first African American and Native American woman to obtain her pilot's license." [439]
Ummidia macarthuri Godwin & Bond, 2021 Spider Douglas MacArthur A trapdoor spider from Arkansas, "named in honor of Arkansas native General Douglas MacArthur." [439]
Uriolelaps poei Girault, 1915 Wasp Edgar Allan Poe Genus Uriolelaps was subsequently synonymised with Dipara. [171][440]
Urothoe grimaldii Chevreux, 1895 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This species was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse Alice. [441]
Vampirococcus lugosii Moreira et al., 2021 Bacterium Bela Lugosi "after Bela Lugosi (1882–1956), who played the role of the vampire in the iconic 1931 film Dracula. [It is an] epibiotic bacterium that preys on anoxygenic photosynthetic gammaproteobacterial species of the genus Halochromatium." [442]
Vetelia gandhii Esteban & Nasif, 1996 Armadillo Mahatma Gandhi A fossil species of dasypodidae from the Miocene of Catamarca Province, Argentina. [443]
Victoria Lindl. Flowering plant Queen Victoria [56]
Volvarina hemingwayi Espinosa & Ortea, 2015 Sea snail Ernest Hemingway A species native to Cuba, "named in honour of the American writer Ernest Hemingway, Nobel laureate in Literature, a great friend of Cuba, its people and its sea, where his surname is synonymous with all that is great and with the spirit of adventure." [444]
Wendyichthys lautreci Lund & Poplin, 1997 Fish Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec A fossil species from the Carboniferous of Montana, US. [445]
Whittieria Girault, 1938 Wasp John Greenleaf Whittier [56]
Zamenhofella Girault, 1941 Wasp L. L. Zamenhof Subsequently synonymised with the genus Austroencyrtus Girault, 1923. [446][447]
Zonophryxus grimaldii Koehler, 1911 Crustacean Albert I, Prince of Monaco The prince was born Albert Grimaldi. This parasitic isopod, which affects the shrimp Heterocarpus grimaldii (also in this list), was described from specimens collected by one of the prince's research yachts, the Princesse-Alice. [448]
Zonothrips smutsi Faure, 1957 Thrips Jan Smuts This species is native to South Africa.
Subsequently transferred to genus Hydatothrips.
[449][450]
Zovax vangoghi Błeszyński, 1965 Moth Vincent van Gogh [451]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Charles Darwin, for instance, has over 300 eponymous organisms.

References[edit]

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