Edward Ernest Green
Edward Ernest Green (20 February 1861 – 2 July 1949) was an Ceylon-born
Biography
Edward was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka to Jane Mary née Akers (d. 1863) and John Philip Green who owned coffee and tea plantations in Ceylon. His paternal grandfather Philip James Green was Consul-General for Ceylon. An uncle, Staniforth Green was a partner of the German planter and entomologist John Nietner[1] and had hosted Ernst Haeckel[2] and corresponded with entomologists like J.O. Westwood.[3][4] After schooling at Charterhouse, Edward returned to the family plantations at Pundaluoya in 1880 and became familiar with the ravages of Hemileia vastatrix and Coccus viridis which were to cause the end of coffee cultivation in Ceylon. He met Harry Marshall Ward who was in Ceylon to study the coffee rust[5] and conducted his own studies on Coccus viridis which he published in 1886 and wrote another influential paper on the Insect Pests of Tea in 1890. Around the same time, he went to study under T.H. Huxley at the Royal College of Science in Kensington.[6] Returning to Ceylon he was later invited by the Planters' Association to visit estates and provide advice. This led to travel around Ceylon and Southern India, although this was entirely voluntary and this led to him being appointed "honorary entomologist" of Ceylon in 1897. In 1899 he was made a Government Entomologist with his office in the Royal Botanical Gardens, Peradeniya. He retired and moved to England in 1913. He moved to Camberley where he lived in Way's End and continued his research on scale insects of which he had made a large collection.[7]
Green was awarded the Barclay Medal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1901. Green served as a president of the Royal Entomological Society of London in 1923-24 and as a vice-president (1915, 1925). He married Edith Mary, daughter of Alfred Burnaby Antram in 1891 and they had two sons and a daughter. His specimen collections were donated to the Natural History Museum (BMNH) after he feared damage from bombing during the Second World War. The collection donated in 1940 included 6505 slides and 2172 boxes of dry specimens.[8] He died in Camberley in 1949.[7]
Contributions to entomology
Green's major writings include The Coccidae of Ceylon, that was published by Dulau & Co. in London (five volumes 1896–1922),
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Orthezia insignis
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Monophlebus furcatus
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Ceroplastes rubens
References
- ^ Lewis, J. Penry (1913). List of inscriptions on tombstones and monuments in Ceylon, of historical or local interest, with an obituary of persons uncommemorated. Colombo: H.C. Cottle. p. 138.
- ^ Haeckel, Ernst (1911). A visit to Ceylon (translated by Clara Bell). New York: Peter Eckler. p. 106.
- ^ Westwood, J.O. (1888). "Notes on the life-history of various species of the Neuropterous genus Ascalaphus". Transactions of the Entomological Society of London: 1–12.
- ^ Pethiyagoda, Rohan (2007). Pearls, Spices, and Green Gold: An Illustrated History of Biodiversity Exploration in Sri Lanka. WHT Publications. pp. 196–197.
- ISBN 9788120613355.
- ISBN 9788120613355.
- ^ a b c Laing, F. (1949). "Obituary—Edward Ernest Green". Entomologist's Monthly Magazine. 85: 215–216.
- ISSN 1175-5334.
- JSTOR 2453289
- ^ Osborn, H. (1952). A Brief History of Entomology Including Time of Demosthenes and Aristotle to Modern Times with over Five Hundred Portraits. Columbus, Ohio: The Spahr & Glenn Company.
- ^ Oudemans, A.C. (1902). "Notes on Acari. Third series". Tijdschrift der Nederlandsche Dierkundige Vereeniging. 2. 7: 50–88.
External links
Media related to Edward Ernest Green at Wikimedia Commons