Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell

Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell
Profile portrait of Cockerell
Born (1866-08-22)August 22, 1866
Norwood, Greater London
Died San Diego, California
Resting place Columbia Cemetery, Boulder, Colorado
Citizenship United States
Nationality English
Fields Zoology, Botany
Institutions New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station, New Mexico Normal University, University of Colorado, University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
Alma mater Middlesex Hospital Medical School
Notable students Charlotte Cortlandt Ellis
Author abbrev. (botany) Cockerell
Spouses Annie Fenn Cockerell; Wilmatte Porter Cockerell

Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell (1866–1948) was an American zoologist, born at Norwood, England, and brother of Sydney Cockerell. He was educated at the Middlesex Hospital Medical School, and then studied botany in the field in Colorado in 1887–90. Subsequently, he became a taxonomist and published numerous papers on the Hymenoptera, Hemiptera, and Mollusca, as well as publications on paleontology and evolution.

Personal life

Cockerell with his wife Wilmatte Porter Cockerell, 1935

Cockerell was born in Norwood, Greater London and died in San Diego, California.

He married Annie Penn in 1891 (she died in 1893) and Wilmatte A. Porter in 1900. In 1901, he named the ultramarine blue chromodorid Mexichromis porterae in her honor. Before and after their marriage in 1900, they frequently went on collecting expeditions together and assembled a large private library of natural history films, which they showed to schoolchildren and public audiences to promote the cause of environmental conservation.

After his death he was buried in Columbia Cemetery, Boulder, Colorado.[1]

Professional life

Between 1891 and 1901 Cockerell was curator of the public museum of Kingston, Jamaica, professor of entomology of the New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station. In 1900–03 he was instructor in biology at the New Mexico Normal University. While there he taught and mentored the botanist Charlotte Cortlandt Ellis.[2] In 1903–04 Cockerell was the curator of the Colorado College Museum; and in 1904 he became lecturer on entomology and in 1906 professor of systematic zoology, at the University of Colorado, where he worked with Junius Henderson in establishing the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History. During World War II he operated the Desert Museum in Palm Springs, California.[3]

Publications

Cockerell was author of more than 2,200 articles in scientific publications, especially on the Hymenoptera, Hemiptera, and Mollusca, and on paleontology and various phases of evolution, plus some 1700 additional authored works, including treatises on social reform and education. He was one of the most prolific taxonomists in history, publishing descriptions of over 9,000 species and genera of insects alone, some 6,400 of which were bees, and some 1,000 mollusks, arachnids, fungi, mammals, fish and plants.[4] This includes descriptions of numerous fossil taxa, such as the landmark study, Some Fossil Insects from Florissant, Colorado (1913). The standard author abbreviation Cockerell is used to indicate this individual as the author when citing a botanical name.[5]

Honors

A dorm in the Engineering Quad at the University of Colorado at Boulder and the moth Givira theodori are named in his honor.

Taxa

Taxa named by Cockerell include:

Name Year Unit Location Notes Images

Anthidium exhumatum

1906

Florissant Formation

 USA

A mason bee

Anthidium scudderi

1906

Florissant Formation

 USA

A mason bee

Archimyrmex rostratus

1923

Green River Formation

 USA

A myrmeciine ant

Elisolimax

1893

Extant

a land slug genus

Dinopanorpa megarche

1924

Khutsin Formation

 Russia

A scorpion fly

Hydriomena? protrita

1922

Florissant Formation

 USA

A Butterfly

Hydriomena? protrit

Protostephanus ashmeadi

1906

Florissant Formation

A crown wasp

Palaeovespa

1906

Baltic amber & Florissant Formation, Colorado

 Europe
 USA

an Eocene wasp genus

Tortrix? destructus

1917

Florissant Formation

 USA

a moth

Tortrix? florissantana

1907

Florissant Formation

 USA

A moth

Trigona corvina 1913 Central America & South America A stingless bee

References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Gilman, D. C.; Thurston, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "article name needed". New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.  The Nautilus 1902 16:19-21.

  1. Theodore D. A. Cockerell at Find a Grave
  2. Eugene Jercinovic (February 21, 2008). "Charlotte Ellis of the Sandia Mountains" (PDF). The New Mexico Botanist.
  3. Young, Patricia Mastick (1983). Desert Dream Fulfilled: The History of the Palm Springs Desert Museum. Palm Springs, California: Palm Springs Desert Museum, Inc. pp. 24–25. LCCN 83080384. OCLC 19266381. LCC QH541.5.D4 Y68 1983
  4. "?". Archived from the original on 13 June 2007.
  5. IPNI.  Cockerell.
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