Filippo Silvestri

Filippo Silvestri
Born June 22, 1873
Bevagna
Died June 10, 1949 (1949-06-11) (aged 75)
Portici
Nationality Italian
Fields Entomology

Filippo Silvestri (22 June 1873 10 June 1949) was an Italian entomologist. He specialised in world Protura, Thysanura, Diplura and Isoptera, but also worked on Hymenoptera, Myriapoda and Italian Diptera. He is also noted for describing and naming the previously unknown order Zoraptera. In 1938 he was nominated to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, the scientific academy of the Vatican.[1]

Silvestri was born in Bevagna. A keen young naturalist, he became assistant to Giovanni Battista Grassi (1854–1925), Director of the Institute of Anatomical Research of the University of Rome. In 1904, Silvestri became Director of the Institute of Entomology and Zoology at the agricultural college in Portici (the Laboratorio di Zoologia Generale e Agraria, now Faculty of Agriculture), a position he held for 45 years. He discovered polyembryony in the 1930s while working on Litomatix truncatellus Hymenoptera. His collection is in the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova. Duplicates of Isoptera are in the Swedish Museum of Natural History and a few Diplopoda (millipede) types are in the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin. Filippo Sivestri has been entitled a square in his home town, Bevagna, a high school in Portici, the town where he worked and died, and a street in Rome (00134 Borgo Lotti).

Publications on termites.

Translated from Wikipedia France

References

  1. "Filippo Silvestri". The Pontifical Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 2014-11-21.


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