John Hartley Durrant

British entomologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish entomologist
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasZoologist Entomologist
Work fieldBiology
Gender
Male
Birth10 January 1863
Death18 January 1928 (aged 65 years)
The details

Biography

John Hartley Durrant (10 January 1863 in Hitchin – 18 January 1928 in Putney) was an English entomologist who specialised in Lepidoptera.
Durrant was an authority nomenclature. He was Lord Walsingham's secretary and had charge of his collections. When these were left to the Natural History Museum, London Walsingham provided funds for Durrant to continue to curate it. He was author, with Lionel Walter Rothschild, of Lepidoptera of the British Ornithologists' Union and Wollaston Expeditions in the Snow Mountains, Southern Dutch New Guinea. Macrolepidoptera. Tring, Zoological Museum (1915) and very many scientific papers on Lepidoptera.
In 1914 Durrant began a collaboration with Francis David Morice in a significant nomenclatural work entitled The authorship and first publication of the "Jurinean" Genera of Hymenoptera: being a reprint of a long-lost work by Panzer, with a translation into English, an introduction, and bibliographical and critical notes. Transactions of the Entomological Society of London 1914:339-436 (corrections, additionsTransactions of the Entomological Society of London 1916:432-442.
He was a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society.
His collections are divided between the Natural History Museum, London and the Hope Department at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.

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