Lepidopterist
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A lepidopterist is a person who catches and collects, studies, or simply observes (see butterfly watching) lepidopterans, members of an order encompassing moths and the three superfamilies of butterflies, skipper butterflies, and moth-butterflies.
[edit] Famous lepidopterists
- Jean-Baptiste Boisduval
- Bernard d'Abrera
- Henry Doubleday
- Edmund Brisco Ford
- Frederick William Frohawk
- Walter Gieseking
- Frederick DuCane Godman
- William Jacob Holland, the author of The Moth Book (1903)[3]
- Johann Siegfried Hufnagel
- Julian Jumalon [1]
- Bernard Kettlewell
- Vladimir Nabokov
- L. Hugh Newman
- Frederic Prokosch
- Walter Rothschild
- Camille Saint-Saëns
- Otto Staudinger
- James William Tutt
- Geoffrey de Havilland
- Edward Pelham-Clinton, 10th Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne
- Georgy Sergeevich Zolotarenko
- Princess Olga of Greece
[edit] Fictional lepidopterists
- The father, Ben, in the TV series Butterflies
- The character Red Jack, who claimed to be both Jack the Ripper and God, in the comic book Doom Patrol
- The character Judge Holden in Cormac McCarthy's novel Blood Meridian.
- Stein in Lord Jim
- Ada in Vladimir Nabokov's "ada, or ardor: a family chronicle", has dreams as a young girl of being a lepidopterist on the fictional planet 'anti-terra'
- The character Freddie Glegg in the movie The Collector (1965), directed by William Wyler and based on the novel by John Fowles.
- The character of 'M' from the James Bond film series is revealed to be a lepidopterist, as evidenced in the film On Her Majesty's Secret Service. This can be seen when James Bond visits M at his country estate, upon which 007 finds the latter working with a specimen box.
[edit] References
- ^ [1][2]About Julian Jamulon's "butterfly sancturay" in Philippines