C. A. W. Jeekel | |
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Jeekel in 1979
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Born | 1922 Medan, Indonesia |
Died | 2010 |
Nationality | Dutch |
Fields | Myriapodology |
Institutions | Zoological Museum Amsterdam |
Alma mater | University of Amsterdam |
Known for | Advancing taxonomy of millipedes and centipedes |
Influenced | Richard L. Hoffman |
Author abbrev. (zoology) | Jeekel |
Casimir Albrecht Willem Jeekel (1922–2010) was a Dutch myriapodologist and entomologist known for his major contributions to the taxonomy of millipedes. His 1971 monograph Nomenclator Generum et Familiarum Diplopodorum is credited as launching the "modern era" of millipede taxonomy, and has been considered the "most important single work ever published on the Diplopoda". He served as director of the Zoological Museum Amsterdam, and authored over 150 works on the taxonomy of millipedes and other myriapods.
Jekel was born in 1922 in Medan, on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, and his family moved back to the Netherlands when he was still young. His publications began in 1950, with a pair of papers on millipedes from Suriname. The following year he published a study of the genus Tectoporus (Paradoxosomatidae) and described a new species of Sphaeropoeus (Zephroniidae); both works were praised by colleague Richard L. Hoffman, the former as setting a standard in generic revision, and both of which influenced Hoffman's own work. During the 1960s Jeekel worked at the Zoological Museum Amsterdam and was librarian for the Netherlands Entomological Society.
He studied at the University of Amsterdam and his doctoral thesis, published in 1968, concerned the classification and geographic distribution of the Paradoxosomatidae, a large family of millipedes. In 1969 he assumed the position of director of the Zoological Museum, a move which "greatly improved his standard of living, but at the expense of his research and health". In 1971, he published the Nomenclator Generum et Familiarum Diplopodorum, a taxonomic listing of all known millipede genera and families described between 1758 and 1957; a hugely influential work credited with starting the "modern era" of millipede taxonomy. Hoffman characterized the Nomenclator as "the most important single work ever published on the Diplopoda".