Florence E. Bemis: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
(15 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{short description|American entomologist}} |
|||
{{Infobox person |
{{Infobox person |
||
}} |
|||
|occupation=entomologist |
|||
|employer=[[Stanford University]]}} |
|||
'''Florence Eugenie Bemis''' (1861?–?) was a late 19th and early 20th century American [[entomologist]] and expert in [[whiteflies]].<ref name=swan/> |
'''Florence Eugenie Bemis''' (1861?–?) was a late 19th and early 20th century American [[entomologist]] and expert in [[whiteflies]].<ref name=swan/> |
||
==Scientific career== |
==Scientific career== |
||
Bemis worked at [[Stanford University]] in the laboratory of entomologist [[Vernon Lyman Kellogg]] and in the field collecting specimens and making biological observations.<ref name=bemis/><ref name=swan/> She studied insects of the [[Aleyrodidae]] family, which are known as [[whiteflies]] and at the time were also called mealy-winged flies for the waxy white secretion that covers their wings.<ref name=jarvis/> In 1904, she published a long monograph on a subset of these insects, entitled ''The Aleyrodds, or Mealy-Winged Flies, of California, with References to Other American Species''. In it she described 19 new species of whiteflies found in California, together with a catalogue of whitefly species found |
Bemis worked at [[Stanford University]] in the laboratory of entomologist [[Vernon Lyman Kellogg]] and in the field collecting specimens and making biological observations.<ref name=bemis/><ref name=swan/> She studied insects of the [[Aleyrodidae]] family, which are known as [[whiteflies]] and at the time were also called mealy-winged flies for the waxy white secretion that covers their wings.<ref name=jarvis/> In 1904, she published a long monograph on a subset of these insects, entitled ''The Aleyrodds, or Mealy-Winged Flies, of California, with References to Other American Species''. In it she described 19 new species of whiteflies found in California, together with a catalogue of whitefly species found elsewhere in America.<ref name=bemis/> Although she placed them all in the genus [[Aleyrodes]], many of them have since been moved into other whitefly [[genera]], including [[Aleuropleurocelus]], [[Aleuroparadoxus]], [[Aleurothrixus]], [[Pealius]], [[Tetraleurodes]], and [[Trialeurodes]]. Her work is credited with greatly advancing knowledge of California species of whiteflies.<ref name=swan/> |
||
The taxonomic genus ''[[Bemisia]]'' within the family Aleyrodidae, comprising some of the whiteflies, is named in her honor.<ref name=swan/> |
The taxonomic genus ''[[Bemisia]]'' within the family Aleyrodidae, comprising some of the whiteflies, is named in her honor.<ref name=swan/> |
||
Line 46: | Line 48: | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bemis, Florence Eugenie}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bemis, Florence Eugenie}} |
||
[[Category:American |
[[Category:20th-century American zoologists]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:American women entomologists]] |
||
[[Category:American women scientists]] |
[[Category:20th-century American women scientists]] |
||
[[Category:19th-century American zoologists]] |
|||
[[Category:19th-century American women scientists]] |
|||
[[Category:Stanford University people]] |
Latest revision as of 02:35, 14 April 2024
Florence E. Bemis | |
---|---|
Occupation | entomologist |
Employer | Stanford University |
Florence Eugenie Bemis (1861?–?) was a late 19th and early 20th century American entomologist and expert in whiteflies.[1]
Scientific career
[edit]Bemis worked at Stanford University in the laboratory of entomologist Vernon Lyman Kellogg and in the field collecting specimens and making biological observations.[2][1] She studied insects of the Aleyrodidae family, which are known as whiteflies and at the time were also called mealy-winged flies for the waxy white secretion that covers their wings.[3] In 1904, she published a long monograph on a subset of these insects, entitled The Aleyrodds, or Mealy-Winged Flies, of California, with References to Other American Species. In it she described 19 new species of whiteflies found in California, together with a catalogue of whitefly species found elsewhere in America.[2] Although she placed them all in the genus Aleyrodes, many of them have since been moved into other whitefly genera, including Aleuropleurocelus, Aleuroparadoxus, Aleurothrixus, Pealius, Tetraleurodes, and Trialeurodes. Her work is credited with greatly advancing knowledge of California species of whiteflies.[1]
The taxonomic genus Bemisia within the family Aleyrodidae, comprising some of the whiteflies, is named in her honor.[1]
Species discovered
[edit]- Aleyrodes amnicola
- Aleyrodes diasemus
- Aleyrodes errans: now Tetraleurodes errans
- Aleyrodes extraniens
- Aleyrodes glacialis: now Trialeurodes glacialis
- Aleyrodes hutchingsi: now Trialeurodes hutchingsi
- Aleyrodes interrogationis: now Aleurothrixus interrogationis
- Aleyrodes iridescens: now Aleuroparadoxus iridescens
- Aleyrodes kelloggi: now Pealius kelloggi
- Aleyrodes madroni: now Trialeurodes madroni
- Aleyrodes maskelli: now Pealius maskelli
- Aleyrodes merlini: now Trialeurodes merlini
- Aleyrodes nigrans: now Aleuropleurocelus nigrans
- Aleyrodes pruinosus
- Aleyrodes quaintancei
- Aleyrodes stanfordi
- Aleyrodes splendens: now Tetraleurodes errans
- Aleyrodes tentaculatus: now Trialeurodes tentaculatus
- Aleyrodes wellmanae
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Swan, Lawrence Wesley. The Ecology of Arthropods Associated with Photinia Arbutifolia. Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, 1952.
- ^ a b c Bemis, Florence E. The Aleyrodds, or Mealy-Winged Flies, of California, with References to Other American Species. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 27, pp. 471–537. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1904.
- ^ Jarvis, T.D. "Aleyrodidae of Ontario." Annual Report of the Entomological Society of Ontario, vols. 38-41, 1911, p. 78.