British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans

Laura Roscoe Thornely was born on 6 March 1860 in Blundellsands, Lancashire, England. On approaching age 30, in the late 1880s, she became interested in the taxonomy of hydroids and bryozoans under Prof. W.A. Herdman at University College, Liverpool. Her studies during much of the 1890s were based l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dale R. Calder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Taxonomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-6500/1/3/17
id doaj-fa837ba7682c426cb40193b8d651e8cc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fa837ba7682c426cb40193b8d651e8cc2021-09-26T01:32:11ZengMDPI AGTaxonomy2673-65002021-08-0111723424210.3390/taxonomy1030017British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and BryozoansDale R. Calder0Department of Natural History, Royal Ontario Museum, 100 Queen’s Park, Toronto, ON M5S 2C6, CanadaLaura Roscoe Thornely was born on 6 March 1860 in Blundellsands, Lancashire, England. On approaching age 30, in the late 1880s, she became interested in the taxonomy of hydroids and bryozoans under Prof. W.A. Herdman at University College, Liverpool. Her studies during much of the 1890s were based largely on the relatively well-known fauna of the boreal northeastern North Atlantic Ocean. Around the turn of the century, however, her focus shifted to collections from the species-rich tropical Indo-West Pacific region, the hydroids and bryozoans of which were then little-known. The publications by Thornely on hydroids from the tropical western Pacific, from Sri Lanka, and from the Sudanese Red Sea, the most noteworthy of her works on the group, are still frequently cited. Concurrently, papers were published on the Bryozoa from Northern Ireland, the Indian Ocean, and Antarctica. Overall, she described 70 new species, with 26 of them based on hydroids and 44 on bryozoans; one hydroid species was assigned by her to a new genus. A person of affluent means, the motivation for her research appears to have been pure academic interest; she never held a university appointment or degree. Thornely died on 18 July 1951 at age 91 in Troutbeck, Westmorland, England.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-6500/1/3/17taxonomynatural historyzoologyhydroidsbryozoansbiography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dale R. Calder
spellingShingle Dale R. Calder
British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans
Taxonomy
taxonomy
natural history
zoology
hydroids
bryozoans
biography
author_facet Dale R. Calder
author_sort Dale R. Calder
title British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans
title_short British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans
title_full British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans
title_fullStr British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans
title_full_unstemmed British Naturalist Laura Roscoe Thornely (1860–1951), Taxonomist of Hydroids and Bryozoans
title_sort british naturalist laura roscoe thornely (1860–1951), taxonomist of hydroids and bryozoans
publisher MDPI AG
series Taxonomy
issn 2673-6500
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Laura Roscoe Thornely was born on 6 March 1860 in Blundellsands, Lancashire, England. On approaching age 30, in the late 1880s, she became interested in the taxonomy of hydroids and bryozoans under Prof. W.A. Herdman at University College, Liverpool. Her studies during much of the 1890s were based largely on the relatively well-known fauna of the boreal northeastern North Atlantic Ocean. Around the turn of the century, however, her focus shifted to collections from the species-rich tropical Indo-West Pacific region, the hydroids and bryozoans of which were then little-known. The publications by Thornely on hydroids from the tropical western Pacific, from Sri Lanka, and from the Sudanese Red Sea, the most noteworthy of her works on the group, are still frequently cited. Concurrently, papers were published on the Bryozoa from Northern Ireland, the Indian Ocean, and Antarctica. Overall, she described 70 new species, with 26 of them based on hydroids and 44 on bryozoans; one hydroid species was assigned by her to a new genus. A person of affluent means, the motivation for her research appears to have been pure academic interest; she never held a university appointment or degree. Thornely died on 18 July 1951 at age 91 in Troutbeck, Westmorland, England.
topic taxonomy
natural history
zoology
hydroids
bryozoans
biography
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-6500/1/3/17
work_keys_str_mv AT dalercalder britishnaturalistlauraroscoethornely18601951taxonomistofhydroidsandbryozoans
_version_ 1716868815072002048