James Wood-Mason (December 1846 – 6 May 1893) was an English zoologist. He was the director of the Indian Museum at Calcutta, after John Anderson. He collected marine animals and lepidoptera, but is best known for his work on two other groups of insects, phasmids (stick insects) and mantises (praying mantises).

James Wood-Mason
Portrait of Professor Wood-Mason by Bourne & Shepherd (1876)
BornDecember 1846
Died6 May 1893 (aged 47)
At sea
NationalityEnglish
Alma materQueen's College, Oxford
Known forPhasmids and Mantises
Scientific career
FieldsEntomology
InstitutionsIndian Museum, Calcutta
Doctoral advisorJ.O. Westwood

The genus Woodmasonia Brunner, 1907, and at least ten species of phasmids, are named after him.[1]

Life and career

edit

Wood-Mason was born in Gloucestershire, England, where his father was a doctor. He was educated at Charterhouse School and Queen's College, Oxford. He went out to India in 1869 to work in the Indian Museum, Calcutta, which in 2008 still housed his collection of insects.[1]

In 1872 he sailed to the Andaman Islands, mostly studying marine animals, but also collecting and later describing two new phasmids, Bacillus hispidulus and Bacillus westwoodii.[1][2]

 
The Indian Museum, Calcutta, where Wood-Mason was superintendent from 1887

Wood-Mason described 24 new species of phasmids, mostly from South Asia but also some from Australia, New Britain, Madagascar, the Malay peninsula and Fiji. His naming of Cotylosoma dipneusticum (Wood-Mason, 1878) is particularly curious as he never formally described the species; it was wrongly imagined to be semi-aquatic; it was "described with what is probably the least precise measurement ever used for a phasmid", namely ""between three and four inches in length"; and he gave its locality as Borneo, when in fact it came from Fiji.[1]

In 1887 he became Superintendent of the Indian Museum. Also in 1887, he became vice-president of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.[1]

In 1888 he sailed on the Indian Marine Survey steamship HMS Investigator, working on and later describing new species of Crustacea,[1] along with Alfred William Alcock, who recorded the voyage in his classic natural history book A Naturalist in Indian Seas (1902).[3][4]

For several years he suffered from Bright's disease. On 5 April 1893, unable to work, he left India for England, but died at sea on 6 May 1893.[1]

Flower mantis drawing

edit
 
Drawing of nymph of the flower mantis Hymenopus bicornis by James Wood-Mason, 1889

Wood-Mason gave his flower mantis drawing to Alfred Russel Wallace, who wrote in his 1889 book Darwinism:

A beautiful drawing of this rare insect, Hymenopus bicornis (in the nymph or active pupa state), was kindly sent me by Mr. Wood-Mason, Curator of the Indian Museum at Calcutta. A species, very similar to it, inhabits Java, where it is said to resemble a pink orchid. Other Mantidae, of the genus Gongylus, have the anterior part of the thorax dilated and coloured either white, pink, or purple; and they so closely resemble flowers that, according to Mr. Wood-Mason, one of them, having a bright violet-blue prothoracic shield, was found in Pegu by a botanist, and was for a moment mistaken by him for a flower. See Proc. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1878, p. liii.

— Alfred Russel Wallace[5]

Wallace passed the drawing to Edward Bagnall Poulton, who published it in his 1890 book The Colours of Animals.[6]

Honours

edit

Wood-Mason was a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society. In 1888 he became a Fellow of the University of Calcutta.[1]

Over 10 marine animals have the specific name woodmasoni in his honour, including several described by Alcock of the Investigator : Heterocarpus woodmasoni, Coryphaenoides woodmasoni, Thalamita woodmasoni, and Rectopalicus woodmasoni.[1]

Two species of snake are named in his honour: Oligodon woodmasoni and Uropeltis woodmasoni.[7]

Publications

edit
 
Illustration of Squillidae, including at left what is now Heterosquilla tricarinata by James Wood-Mason

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bragg, 2008.
  2. ^ Despite the generic name, these are insects, not bacteria.
  3. ^ Alcock, Alfred William (1902). A Naturalist in Indian Seas, or, Four years with the Royal Indian marine survey ship 'Investigator'. London: John Murray.
  4. ^ W. T. C., S. W. K. & P. M.-B. (1933). "Alfred William Alcock. 1859–1933". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 1 (2): 119–126. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1933.0008.
  5. ^ Wallace, 1889. Note 80.
  6. ^ Poulton, 1890. pp 74-75.
  7. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Wood-Mason", p. 289).

Sources

edit
edit