- George and Elizabeth Peckham
George William Peckham (
March 23 ,1845 -January 10 ,1914 ) and Elizabeth Maria Gifford Peckham (December 19 ,1854 -February 10 ,1940 ) were early Americanteacher s, taxonomists, ethologists, arachnologists, and entomologists, specializing inanimal behavior and in the study ofjumping spider s "(Salticidae)" andwasps .Lives and careers
George Peckham was born in Albany, New York. At age 18, he enlisted in the
U.S. Army to fight in theAmerican Civil War , reaching the rank of first lieutenant. After the war, he resumed his studies and earned his M.D. in 1872. Rather than practice medicine, however, he chose to teachbiology at East Division High School ofMilwaukee ,Wisconsin . In 1880 he organized the firstAmerican biological laboratory program in any high school. He married his colleague, Elizabeth Maria Gifford, one of the first science graduates fromVassar . In 1888, Peckham became principal of East Division, and in 1891, an inspector for the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction. In 1897, he became the director of theMilwaukee Public Library , in which position he served until retirement in 1910.Natural science studies
Together, they introduced Darwinian concepts into
secondary education and began their studies on the taxonomy and behavior of jumping spiders "(Salticidae)", a large group of visually-orientedspiders . They were among the earliest taxonomists to emphasize the value of behavior in classification. In 1889-1890 they published "Observations on Sexual Selection in Spiders of the Family" Attidae, and "Additional Observations on Sexual Selection in Spiders of the Family" Attidæ," with Some Remarks on Mr. Wallace's Theory of Sexual Ornamentation", among the first studies onsexual selection , supporting Darwin's concept against Wallace's alternative explanation of courtship behavior. In 1898 they produced "On the Instincts and Habits of the Solitary Wasps", a work considered a scientific classic for its style as well as its scholarship. Unlike the later work of Fabre, which praised the supposed "perfection" of insect behavior, the Peckhams identified series of behaviors which were subject tonatural selection .The Peckhams were lifetime collaborators, as researchers and educators. From 1883 to 1909 they described 63 genera and 366 species. The North American "Peckham Society" is named after them. It is dedicated to salticid research; its irregular publication is titled "Peckhamia".
Taxa named after the Peckhams
The salticid genus "
Peckhamia " is named in their honor, along with at least 20 species and one subspecies:* "
Cicurina peckhami " (Simon, 1898)
* "Acragas peckhami " (Chickering, 1946)
* "Bellota peckhami " Galiano, 1978
* "Chapoda peckhami " Banks, 1929
* "Compsodecta peckhami " Bryant, 1943
* "Corythalia peckhami " Petrunkevitch, 1914
* "Goleta peckhami " Simon, 1900
* "Habrocestum peckhami " Rainbow, 1899
* "Habronattus peckhami " (Banks, 1921)
* "Hasarius peckhami " Petrunkevitch, 1914
* "Heliophanus peckhami " Simon, 1902
* "Hyllus brevitarsis peckhamorum" Berland & Millot, 1941
* "Myrmarachne peckhami " Roewer, 1951
* "Pachomius peckhamorum " Galiano, 1994
* "Pelegrina peckhamorum " (Kaston, 1973)
* "Pensacola peckhami " Bryant, 1943
* "Salticus peckhamae " (Cockerell, 1897)
* "Telamonia peckhami " Thorell, 1891
* "Thiodina peckhami " (Bryant, 1940)
* "Uroballus peckhami " Zabka, 1985
* "Viciria peckhamorum " Lessert, 1927
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