BeetleJewsBeetleJews

13 insects and other organisms named after Jews

Arachnid named after Spiderman actor Andrew Garfield, a moth for Harry Houdini, and dinosaur for Jurassic Park director Steven Spielberg

The Coloborhynchus spielbergi dinosaur is named after Steven Spielberg. (Wikimedia Commons via JTA)
The Coloborhynchus spielbergi dinosaur is named after Steven Spielberg. (Wikimedia Commons via JTA)

JTA — The Cleveland Museum of Natural History last week announced that a newly identified species of praying mantis was named after Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Researchers from the museum said they meant to honor the Jewish justice’s “relentless fight for gender equality.”

It makes sense. Ilomantis ginsburgae is the first mantis classified by distinct qualities in its female reproductive parts, rather than its male ones. Plus, the bug has a neck plate that resembled Gisburg’s trademark ruffled collars.

As it happens, Ginsburg is far from the first Jewish celebrity to be so honored. Here are 13 more of the world’s most Jewish insects and organisms, preceded by their namesakes.

Lou Reed — Loureedia (spider)

This species is classified among a rare group of “velvet spiders” and lives underground — so it’s only natural that it bears the name of the late Velvet Underground frontman. Israel is one of the few countries in the world where the species is found.

Loureedia (Wikimedia Commons via JTA)
Loureedia (Wikimedia Commons via JTA)

Joey Ramone — Mackenzieurus joeyi (trilobite)

Since 1997, this extinct marine arthropod (an invertebrate creature with an exoskeleton and antennae) from the Silurian geological period has been named after the late punk icon (née Jeffrey Ross Hyman). The other, non-Jewish members of The Ramones have their own trilobite namesakes as well.

Andrew Garfield — Pritha garfieldi (spider)

This one is a no-brainer. The Jewish actor starred as Spider-Man in two films released in 2012 and 2014. And yes, Tobey Maguire, who played Spider-Man in a series before Garfield did, also has a spider species named after him.

(Anthropoda Selecta via JTA)
(Anthropoda Selecta via JTA)

Karl Marx — Marxella, Marxiana (wasps)

The German-Jewish philosopher and economist (whose maternal grandfather was a rabbi) has a pair of wasps named for him. No word on the wasps’ feel about the division of labor in their nests.

Steven Spielberg — Coloborhynchus spielbergi (pterosaur)

The “Jurassic Park” director has a real-life dinosaur — a pterosaur found in Brazil — named after him.

Harry Houdini — Houdinia flexilissima (moth)

This moth is described as one of the thinnest in the Lepidoptera (moth and butterfly) family, and it burrows so deep inside the plant it feeds off of that it seems to disappear. Sound like a magic trick?

Noam Chomsky — Megachile chomskyi (bee)

Some forget that the far-left political theorist was first a linguistics professor — which may be the reason this long-tongued bee species was named after him.

Megachile chomskyi (Wikimedia Commons via JTA)
Megachile chomskyi (Wikimedia Commons via JTA)

Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel — Avalanchurus simoni, Avalanchurus garfunkeli (trilobites)

Other musicians who have Avalanchurus trilobites named for them include John Lennon and Ringo Starr.

Jon Stewart — Aleiodes stewarti (wasp)

Researchers didn’t explain why this specific wasp was named after the former “Daily Show” host. But Stewart was known to make the occasional WASP joke.

Aleiodes stewarti (Screenshot from ZooKeys via JTA)
Aleiodes stewarti (Screenshot from ZooKeys via JTA)

Carole King — Anacroneuria carole (stonefly)

The legendary songwriter’s dedication to environmental causes inspired Mississippi College professor Bill Stark to name one of the 390 or so stoneflies he classified after her.

L.L. Zamenhof — Zamenhofella (wasp)

Eccentric American taxonomist Alexandre Girault named this wasp after the Polish-Lithuanian inventor who created Esperanto, the world’s most successful constructed language, because he liked him. You need a better reason?

Sigmund Freud — Cyclocephala freudi, Lepithrix freudi (beetles)

In 1897, the pioneering psychologist wrote about a patient who had an anxiety-inducing experience with scarab beetle as a child and associated a variety of feelings with the bug. But what really motivated researchers to name this beetle after him is anyone’s guess.

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