File:Bruchus Lichenicola - John Obadiah Westwood - 528 1911.jpg

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John Obadiah Westwood: Bruchus Lichenicola   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Artist
John Obadiah Westwood  (1805–1893)  wikidata:Q1236294 s:en:Author:John Obadiah Westwood
 
John Obadiah Westwood
Alternative names
Westwood; John Westwood; John O. Westwood; J. O. Westwood
Description British lepidopterist, archaeologist, illustrator and scientific illustrator
Date of birth/death 22 December 1805 Edit this at Wikidata 2 January 1893 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Sheffield Edit this at Wikidata Oxford Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
artist QS:P170,Q1236294
Title
Bruchus Lichenicola
Description

Thomas Vernon Wollaston published this drawing in his book ‘Insecta Maderensia’ in 1854. In the book he thanks Westwood for providing the illustrations, ‘Particularly, however, would I draw attention to the valuable help which I have received from J. O. Westwood, Esq., whose pencil has been so elaborately employed in the figures which I am thus enabled to attach, and by whom many of the minutest of the dissections were accomplished, — with a degree of delicacy, moreover, to which I did not myself at the commencement of this Work (though I have since succeeded in anatomizing the larger portion of them, likewise) lay claim.’ Wollaston wrote the following about this species:

‘A most distinct and truly indigenous little Bruchus —being moreover the smallest member of the genus with which I am acquainted, averaging about three quarters of a line in length. [...] Its habits are of a very exclusive nature, it being confined, so far as I have hitherto observed, to the lichen of the exposed weather-beaten peaks,—amongst the thick masses of which in the crevices of the rocks of Porto Santo and the Dezerta Grande it literally teems. I have not as yet detected it in Madeira proper, but in the former of those islands I might have captured it by thousands during December 1848 and April 1849 ; whilst, in May of 1850, it was scarcely less abundant on the latter,—particularly in the dried bunches of Ramalina scopulorum and Evernia prunastri, in company with the Ptinus fragilis and other insects which delight in such situations.’
Date 1852
date QS:P571,+1852-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
institution QS:P195,Q7373646
Current location
Fine Art
Accession number
528/1911
Credit line Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery
Inscriptions 324. Bruchus lichenicola, Woll. (Tab. VIII. fig. 9.).
Source/Photographer Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery
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