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Robert Templeton

Robert Templeton (12 December 1802 – 2 June 1892[1]) was a naturalist, artist, and entomologist, and was born at Cranmore House, Belfast, Ireland.

Robert Templeton

Life and work edit

 
A watercolour plate by Robert Templeton illustrating Sri Lankan butterflies

Robert Templeton was the son of John Templeton, and was educated in Belfast Academical Institution, which was in part his father's creation. In 1821 he left Ireland for Edinburgh, Scotland to study medicine and following graduation practised in the university hospital. In the same year he became a Member of the Belfast Natural History Society. In 1833 (6 May) he was commissioned as Assistant Surgeon in the Royal Artillery, initially stationed at the Royal Artillery Barracks, Woolwich, close to London, England.

In 1834, Templeton was stationed to Mauritius and in 1835 to Rio de Janeiro and Recife. From Rio (1835) he took ship to Colombo, Ceylon, via the Cape of Good Hope and in this year became a Corresponding Member of the Zoological Society of London. A brief sojourn in Ceylon was followed by a stay in Malta (1836). Later in 1836 he moved on to Corfu and Albania. In all these places Templeton collected insects and other invertebrates and in 1839 he became a Corresponding Member of the Entomological Society of London.

A twelve-year stay in Ceylon (1839–1851) followed, and in 1847 Templeton was promoted from Assistant Surgeon to Surgeon. In these years at various times he visited Southern India – Madras, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Karnataka- and twice Northern India Uttarakhand and Kashmir. Recalled from Ceylon in 1852 due to the unrest in Europe which was to erupt in the bloody and terrible Crimean War, he served in the Crimea from March 1854 – 1856 and was promoted to Surgeon-Major on 7 December 1855. He retired with the honorary rank of Deputy Inspector General of Hospitals on 31 January 1860.

Work on Thysanura edit

 
Thysanurae hibernicaePlate 11

Templeton was particularly interested in the Thysanura and his first published entomological paper concerns these insects. Thysanurae hibernicae (Irish bristle tails and spring-tails) was published in the first volume of the Transactions of the Entomological Society of London for 1836 and is the first significant work in English on these primitive insects, remaining so until 1875. In this short work prefaced by John Obadiah Westwood Templeton described two new genera and twelve new species accompanied by two plates showing whole animals and details of structure. Forty years later the entomologist Lubbock paid tribute to Templeton's early work by naming a thysanuran genus after him — Templetonia.

Work on spiders edit

Much of Templeton's early work and very much in Ceylon was on spiders. Studies of Irish spiders were passed to John Blackwall who incorporated the notes and drawings into his own work. Oddly, although he collected my old pets the spiders, he published very little on them.

Work on Sri Lankan arthropods edit

In Ceylon Templeton worked mainly on Lepidoptera, Coleoptera and Hymenoptera alongside Edgar Leopold Layard (1824–1900). New species of Lepidoptera collected by Templeton and Layard were described by Frederic Moore, Francis Walker and George Robert Gray. The new Coleoptera were described by Joseph Sugar Baly, Francis Walker, John Obadiah Westwood, Carl August Dohrn and Francis Polkinghorne Pascoe. Templeton's publications on Lepidoptera amount to some general comments on papilionid butterflies and two species descriptions — Oiketicus terlius and Oiketicus (Cryptothelia) consortus.

 
A Ceylon blue oakleaf butterfly Kallima philarchus from the Templeton Collection at the Ulster Museum

The bulk of the new beetles, some of the Hymenoptera (the rest were described by Frederick Smith) and other insects in Templeton's collection were described by Francis Walker who also compiled the first list of the insects of Ceylon for Tennent's book Ceylon, Physical, Historical and Topographical based on the collections of Templeton, Layard, the British Museum and the Museum of the East India Company; there are 2,000 species and Layard and Templeton captured between them 932 species of butterflies and moths in Ceylon, many new to science. Templeton supplied many of the insects incorporated in Westwood's book Oriental Cabinet, one of which, the beetle Compsosternus templetonii bears his name.

Unfortunately only the published part of Templeton's correspondence with Westwood (the Secretary of the Entomological Society) survived, the manuscripts are apparently lost. Templeton's Ceylon insect collection was apparently divided between the Belfast Museum (now in the National Museum of Ireland), the Entomological Society of London and the British Museum (the Entomological Society's collections are now incorporated in those of the latter institution). Templeton's watercolour paintings of Ceylon butterflies are in the Ulster Museum, Belfast. Templeton, Layard and George Henry Kendrick Thwaites and later John Nietner (died 1874) contributed almost all that was known of the insect fauna of the island at the end of the first half of the nineteenth century including a privately printed list of Thysanura, Myriapoda, Scorpionidea, Cheliferidae and Phrynidae (now Amblypygi) from Ceylon which is not traced, and remarked on the habits of the large poisonous centipedes Scolopendra pallipes and S. crassa in two (published) communications to Westwood. Many of his manuscripts were lost when the clipper Memnon sank in 1851.

Templeton Insect Collection edit

The Ceylon insects are in the Natural History Museum, London. Many are Types of the new species described by Francis Walker.

  • Walker F. 1858 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 2 1858: 202–209 [1]
  • Walker F. 1858 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 2 1858: 280–286 [2]
  • 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 3 : 50–56 [3]
  • 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 3: 258–265 [4]
  • 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 4:217–224 [5]
  • 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 4:370–376 [6]
  • 1860 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume5:304–311 [7]
  • 1860 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 6: 357–360 [8]

Work on Mollusca and Annelida edit

Part of Templeton's Mollusca collection was described as comprising several new and rare species hitherto undescribed. Amongst others are new species of each of these genera: Achatina, Helix, Neritina, Ampullaria, Valvata, Planorbis and Melania. Robert Templeton sent back to the Belfast Museum specimens of the Ceylonese pearl mussel showing growth stages of the mussels from the famous pearl fisheries of Ceylon. He also described two species of land-slug (Vaginula maculata and Parfnacella tennenti) from Ceylon. It was Templeton who described the extraordinary giant earthworm Megascole caeruleus from Ceylon which is between 20 and 40 inches long and has a thickness of nearly an inch or more.

Work on birds and mammals edit

 
Bronzewinged jacana

Templeton also studied the vertebrates of the island, especially the fish, birds and monkeys. Amongst the birds were five endemic species new to science. These were described by Edward Blyth in the Calcutta Journal as Athene castanotus, the chestnut-winged hawk owl; Malacocercus rufescens, the red dung thrush; Dicrurus edoliformis, the kingcrow, Dicrurus leucopyygialis the Ceylon kingcrow, and Eulabes ptilogenes, Templeton's mynah. The monkeys were studiously appraised and some of the results communicated to the Zoological Society of London. These communications, one of the monkey Cercopithecus pileatus and the loris Loris gracilis and the other on a supposed new species Semnopithecus leucoprymnus cephalopterus which turned out to be identical with Bennet's Semnopithecus nestor, are Templetons only personal contribution to the literature on the vertebrates of Ceylon. His knowledge of the smaller mammals, birds, reptiles and fishes was instead incorporated in the work of others, notably George Robert Waterhouse and his coworker Edgar Leopold Layard who in the introduction to Notes on the Ornithology of Ceylon says "I have had the advantage of consulting with Mr. Blyth and Drs. Templeton and Kelaart with each of whom i have been on terms of the closest intimacy and we mutually communicated our discoveries".

Insects named for Templeton edit

  • Campsosternus templetoni Westwood, 1848 (Oxynopterinae, Elateridae )
  • Chrysomela templetoni Baly, 1860 (Chrysomelinae, Chrysomelidae )
  • Sebasmia templetoni Pascoe, 1859 (Cerambycinae, Cerambycidae )
  • Pseudanophthalmus templetoni Valentine

Reptiles named for Templeton edit

Works edit

  • 1833 Figures and descriptions of Irish Arachnida and Acari . Unpublished Ms. Hope Department of Entomology Library. University of Oxford.
  • 1833a. On the spiders of the genus Dysdera Latr. with the descriptions of a new allied genus. Zoological Journal 5: 400 -406, pl. 17.[9]
  • 1834. (as C. M. ) An illustration of the structure of some of the organs of a spider, deemed the type of a new genus and proposal to be called Trichopus libratus. Magazine of Natural History 7: 10 13.[10]
  • 1834a. (as C. M. ) Illustrations of some species of British animals which are not generallv known or have hitherto not been described. Mag. Nat. Hist. 3: 129–131.[11] 1834a
  • 1838. Descriptions of a few vertebrate animals obtained at the Isle of France Proc. Zool. Soc.Lond. 2: 111–112 [12]
  • 1836. Catalogue of Irish Crustacea, Myriapoda and Arachnoida, selected from the papers of the late John Templeton Esq. Mag. Nat. Hist. . 9: 9–14 [13]
  • 1836a. A catalogue of the species annulose animals and of rayed ones found in Ireland as selected from the papers of the late J Templeton Esq. of Cranmore with localities, descriptions and illustrations. Mag. Nat. Hist. . 9: 233- 240; 301 305; 417–421; 466 -472.[14]
  • 1836b. Thysanurae Hibernicae or descriptions of such species of spring-tailed insects (Podura and Lepisma Linn. ) as have been observed in Ireland. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1: 89–98, pls. 11, 12. [15]
  • 1836c. Descriptions of some undescribed exotic Crustacea. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1: 185 198, pls. 20, 21, 22. [16]
  • 1836d. Description of a new hemipterous insect from the Atlantic Ocean. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. . 1: 230–232, pl. 22.[17]
  • 1837. Irish vertebrate animals selected from the papers of the late . John Templeton Esq., Mag. Nat. Hist . 1: (n. s. ): 403–413 403 -413.[18]
  • 1837a. Description of a new Irish crustaceous animal. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 2: 34–40, pl. 5. .[19]
  • 1838a. Description of a new Irish crustaceous animal. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 2: 114 120, pl. 12.[20]
  • 1840. Description of a minute crustaceous animal from the island of Mauritius. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 2: 203 206, pl. 18.[21]
  • 1841. Description of a new strepsipterous insect. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 3: 51–56, pl. 4. [22]
  • 1841a. Positions in Ceylon. Geogr. Soc. Journ. 1841 10: 579–580.
  • 1843. Memoir on the genus Cermatia and some other exotic Annulosa. Trans. Ent Soc. Lond 3: 302- 309, pls. 16, 17. [23]
  • 1844. Description of Megascolex caeruleus Proc. Zoo. Soc. Lond. 12:89–91 [24] Froriep. ? Notizen 1845 34: 181 183.
  • 1844a. On some varieties of the monkeys of Ceylon, Cercopithecus pileatus and Loris gracilis. Proc. Zoo. Soc. Lond. 1844: 3; Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 1844 14: 361–362.[25][26]
  • 1844b. Communication, accompanied with drawings of Semnopithecus leucoprymnus nestor Benn. Proc. Zool. Soc. 1844: 1.[27]
  • 1847. Description of some species of the lepidopterous genus Oiketicus from Ceylon. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 5: 30–40. [28]
  • 1847a. Notes upon Ceylonese Lepidoptera. Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 5: 44–45. [29]
  • 1851. Description of a new species of Sorex from India. Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1851 21: 106;
  • 1855 ? Ann. Nat. Hist. 15: 238–239.
  • 1858. On a new species of Vaginula from Ceylon. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 1: 49–50, plate 18 – Acetate of Strychnine useful to entomologists.
  • 18- List of Thysanura, Myriapoda, Scorpionidae, Cheliferidae and Phrynidae of Ceylon. Author, Colombo.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Pethiyagoda, Rohan (2007). Pearls, Spices, and Green Gold: An Illustrated History of Biodiversity Exploration in Sri Lanka. WHT Publications (Private) Limited. p. 215.
  2. ^ 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. ("Templeton", p. 263).

Further reading edit

  • Nash, R. and Ross, H.C.G (1980) Robert Templeton (Roy Art) Naturalist and Artist (1802–1892). Ulster Museum, 48pp + 8 plates.
  • Nash, R., Ross, H.C.G. and Vane-Wright, R. (1980) Contributions to natural history by Dr Robert Templeton, R.A., with special reference to Ceylon. Irish Naturalists' Journal 20:31–33.

External links edit

  • Tennent's Ceylon
  • Sri Lanka Wildlife
  • BHL Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. Volume 1
  • BHL Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. Volume 2
  • BHL Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. Volume 3
  • BHL Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. Volume 5

robert, templeton, other, people, named, disambiguation, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, august, 2018, december, 1802, june, 1892. For other people named Robert Templeton see Robert Templeton disambiguation This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article August 2018 Robert Templeton 12 December 1802 2 June 1892 1 was a naturalist artist and entomologist and was born at Cranmore House Belfast Ireland Robert Templeton Contents 1 Life and work 2 Work on Thysanura 3 Work on spiders 4 Work on Sri Lankan arthropods 5 Templeton Insect Collection 6 Work on Mollusca and Annelida 7 Work on birds and mammals 8 Insects named for Templeton 9 Reptiles named for Templeton 10 Works 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Further reading 13 External linksLife and work edit nbsp A watercolour plate by Robert Templeton illustrating Sri Lankan butterflies Robert Templeton was the son of John Templeton and was educated in Belfast Academical Institution which was in part his father s creation In 1821 he left Ireland for Edinburgh Scotland to study medicine and following graduation practised in the university hospital In the same year he became a Member of the Belfast Natural History Society In 1833 6 May he was commissioned as Assistant Surgeon in the Royal Artillery initially stationed at the Royal Artillery Barracks Woolwich close to London England In 1834 Templeton was stationed to Mauritius and in 1835 to Rio de Janeiro and Recife From Rio 1835 he took ship to Colombo Ceylon via the Cape of Good Hope and in this year became a Corresponding Member of the Zoological Society of London A brief sojourn in Ceylon was followed by a stay in Malta 1836 Later in 1836 he moved on to Corfu and Albania In all these places Templeton collected insects and other invertebrates and in 1839 he became a Corresponding Member of the Entomological Society of London A twelve year stay in Ceylon 1839 1851 followed and in 1847 Templeton was promoted from Assistant Surgeon to Surgeon In these years at various times he visited Southern India Madras Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Kerala Karnataka and twice Northern India Uttarakhand and Kashmir Recalled from Ceylon in 1852 due to the unrest in Europe which was to erupt in the bloody and terrible Crimean War he served in the Crimea from March 1854 1856 and was promoted to Surgeon Major on 7 December 1855 He retired with the honorary rank of Deputy Inspector General of Hospitals on 31 January 1860 Work on Thysanura edit nbsp Thysanurae hibernicaePlate 11 Templeton was particularly interested in the Thysanura and his first published entomological paper concerns these insects Thysanurae hibernicae Irish bristle tails and spring tails was published in the first volume of the Transactions of the Entomological Society of London for 1836 and is the first significant work in English on these primitive insects remaining so until 1875 In this short work prefaced by John Obadiah Westwood Templeton described two new genera and twelve new species accompanied by two plates showing whole animals and details of structure Forty years later the entomologist Lubbock paid tribute to Templeton s early work by naming a thysanuran genus after him Templetonia Work on spiders editMuch of Templeton s early work and very much in Ceylon was on spiders Studies of Irish spiders were passed to John Blackwall who incorporated the notes and drawings into his own work Oddly although he collected my old pets the spiders he published very little on them Work on Sri Lankan arthropods editIn Ceylon Templeton worked mainly on Lepidoptera Coleoptera and Hymenoptera alongside Edgar Leopold Layard 1824 1900 New species of Lepidoptera collected by Templeton and Layard were described by Frederic Moore Francis Walker and George Robert Gray The new Coleoptera were described by Joseph Sugar Baly Francis Walker John Obadiah Westwood Carl August Dohrn and Francis Polkinghorne Pascoe Templeton s publications on Lepidoptera amount to some general comments on papilionid butterflies and two species descriptions Oiketicus terlius and Oiketicus Cryptothelia consortus nbsp A Ceylon blue oakleaf butterfly Kallima philarchus from the Templeton Collection at the Ulster Museum The bulk of the new beetles some of the Hymenoptera the rest were described by Frederick Smith and other insects in Templeton s collection were described by Francis Walker who also compiled the first list of the insects of Ceylon for Tennent s book Ceylon Physical Historical and Topographical based on the collections of Templeton Layard the British Museum and the Museum of the East India Company there are 2 000 species and Layard and Templeton captured between them 932 species of butterflies and moths in Ceylon many new to science Templeton supplied many of the insects incorporated in Westwood s book Oriental Cabinet one of which the beetle Compsosternus templetonii bears his name Unfortunately only the published part of Templeton s correspondence with Westwood the Secretary of the Entomological Society survived the manuscripts are apparently lost Templeton s Ceylon insect collection was apparently divided between the Belfast Museum now in the National Museum of Ireland the Entomological Society of London and the British Museum the Entomological Society s collections are now incorporated in those of the latter institution Templeton s watercolour paintings of Ceylon butterflies are in the Ulster Museum Belfast Templeton Layard and George Henry Kendrick Thwaites and later John Nietner died 1874 contributed almost all that was known of the insect fauna of the island at the end of the first half of the nineteenth century including a privately printed list of Thysanura Myriapoda Scorpionidea Cheliferidae and Phrynidae now Amblypygi from Ceylon which is not traced and remarked on the habits of the large poisonous centipedes Scolopendra pallipes and S crassa in two published communications to Westwood Many of his manuscripts were lost when the clipper Memnon sank in 1851 Templeton Insect Collection editThe Ceylon insects are in the Natural History Museum London Many are Types of the new species described by Francis Walker Walker F 1858 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 2 1858 202 209 1 Walker F 1858 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 2 1858 280 286 2 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 3 50 56 3 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 3 258 265 4 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 4 217 224 5 1859 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 4 370 376 6 1860 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume5 304 311 7 1860 Characters of some apparently undescribed Ceylon insects Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3rd series Volume 6 357 360 8 Work on Mollusca and Annelida editPart of Templeton s Mollusca collection was described as comprising several new and rare species hitherto undescribed Amongst others are new species of each of these genera Achatina Helix Neritina Ampullaria Valvata Planorbis and Melania Robert Templeton sent back to the Belfast Museum specimens of the Ceylonese pearl mussel showing growth stages of the mussels from the famous pearl fisheries of Ceylon He also described two species of land slug Vaginula maculata and Parfnacella tennenti from Ceylon It was Templeton who described the extraordinary giant earthworm Megascole caeruleus from Ceylon which is between 20 and 40 inches long and has a thickness of nearly an inch or more Work on birds and mammals edit nbsp Bronzewinged jacana Templeton also studied the vertebrates of the island especially the fish birds and monkeys Amongst the birds were five endemic species new to science These were described by Edward Blyth in the Calcutta Journal as Athene castanotus the chestnut winged hawk owl Malacocercus rufescens the red dung thrush Dicrurus edoliformis the kingcrow Dicrurus leucopyygialis the Ceylon kingcrow and Eulabes ptilogenes Templeton s mynah The monkeys were studiously appraised and some of the results communicated to the Zoological Society of London These communications one of the monkey Cercopithecus pileatus and the loris Loris gracilis and the other on a supposed new species Semnopithecus leucoprymnus cephalopterus which turned out to be identical with Bennet s Semnopithecus nestor are Templetons only personal contribution to the literature on the vertebrates of Ceylon His knowledge of the smaller mammals birds reptiles and fishes was instead incorporated in the work of others notably George Robert Waterhouse and his coworker Edgar Leopold Layard who in the introduction to Notes on the Ornithology of Ceylon says I have had the advantage of consulting with Mr Blyth and Drs Templeton and Kelaart with each of whom i have been on terms of the closest intimacy and we mutually communicated our discoveries Insects named for Templeton editCampsosternus templetoni Westwood 1848 Oxynopterinae Elateridae Chrysomela templetoni Baly 1860 Chrysomelinae Chrysomelidae Sebasmia templetoni Pascoe 1859 Cerambycinae Cerambycidae Pseudanophthalmus templetoni ValentineReptiles named for Templeton editOligodon templetoni Templeton s kukri snake 2 junior synonym of Oligodon calamariusWorks edit nbsp Scholia has a profile for Robert Templeton Q3436389 1833 Figures and descriptions of Irish Arachnida and Acari Unpublished Ms Hope Department of Entomology Library University of Oxford 1833a On the spiders of the genus Dysdera Latr with the descriptions of a new allied genus Zoological Journal 5 400 406 pl 17 9 1834 as C M An illustration of the structure of some of the organs of a spider deemed the type of a new genus and proposal to be called Trichopus libratus Magazine of Natural History 7 10 13 10 1834a as C M Illustrations of some species of British animals which are not generallv known or have hitherto not been described Mag Nat Hist 3 129 131 11 1834a 1838 Descriptions of a few vertebrate animals obtained at the Isle of France Proc Zool Soc Lond 2 111 112 12 1836 Catalogue of Irish Crustacea Myriapoda and Arachnoida selected from the papers of the late John Templeton Esq Mag Nat Hist 9 9 14 13 1836a A catalogue of the species annulose animals and of rayed ones found in Ireland as selected from the papers of the late J Templeton Esq of Cranmore with localities descriptions and illustrations Mag Nat Hist 9 233 240 301 305 417 421 466 472 14 1836b Thysanurae Hibernicae or descriptions of such species of spring tailed insects Podura and Lepisma Linn as have been observed in Ireland Trans Ent Soc Lond 1 89 98 pls 11 12 15 1836c Descriptions of some undescribed exotic Crustacea Trans Ent Soc Lond 1 185 198 pls 20 21 22 16 1836d Description of a new hemipterous insect from the Atlantic Ocean Trans Ent Soc Lond 1 230 232 pl 22 17 1837 Irish vertebrate animals selected from the papers of the late John Templeton Esq Mag Nat Hist 1 n s 403 413 403 413 18 1837a Description of a new Irish crustaceous animal Trans Ent Soc Lond 2 34 40 pl 5 19 1838a Description of a new Irish crustaceous animal Trans Ent Soc Lond Trans Ent Soc Lond 2 114 120 pl 12 20 1840 Description of a minute crustaceous animal from the island of Mauritius Trans Ent Soc Lond 2 203 206 pl 18 21 1841 Description of a new strepsipterous insect Trans Ent Soc Lond 3 51 56 pl 4 22 1841a Positions in Ceylon Geogr Soc Journ 1841 10 579 580 1843 Memoir on the genus Cermatia and some other exotic Annulosa Trans Ent Soc Lond 3 302 309 pls 16 17 23 1844 Description of Megascolex caeruleus Proc Zoo Soc Lond 12 89 91 24 Froriep Notizen 1845 34 181 183 1844a On some varieties of the monkeys of Ceylon Cercopithecus pileatus and Loris gracilis Proc Zoo Soc Lond 1844 3 Ann Mag Nat Hist 1844 14 361 362 25 26 1844b Communication accompanied with drawings of Semnopithecus leucoprymnus nestor Benn Proc Zool Soc 1844 1 27 1847 Description of some species of the lepidopterous genus Oiketicus from Ceylon Trans Ent Soc Lond 5 30 40 28 1847a Notes upon Ceylonese Lepidoptera Trans Ent Soc Lond 5 44 45 29 1851 Description of a new species of Sorex from India Proc Zool Soc Lond 1851 21 106 1855 Ann Nat Hist 15 238 239 1858 On a new species of Vaginula from Ceylon Ann Mag Nat Hist 1 49 50 plate 18 Acetate of Strychnine useful to entomologists 18 List of Thysanura Myriapoda Scorpionidae Cheliferidae and Phrynidae of Ceylon Author Colombo See also editWilliam de AlwisReferences editCitations edit Pethiyagoda Rohan 2007 Pearls Spices and Green Gold An Illustrated History of Biodiversity Exploration in Sri Lanka WHT Publications Private Limited p 215 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 Templeton p 263 Further reading edit Nash R and Ross H C G 1980 Robert Templeton Roy Art Naturalist and Artist 1802 1892 Ulster Museum 48pp 8 plates Nash R Ross H C G and Vane Wright R 1980 Contributions to natural history by Dr Robert Templeton R A with special reference to Ceylon Irish Naturalists Journal 20 31 33 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Templeton naturalist nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Notes and papers relating to Robert Templeton Tennent s Ceylon Sri Lanka Wildlife Butterflies of Sri Lanka Environment Lanka Soft Coral Project BHL Trans Ent Soc Lond Volume 1 BHL Trans Ent Soc Lond Volume 2 BHL Trans Ent Soc Lond Volume 3 BHL Trans Ent Soc Lond Volume 5 Retrieved from https en 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