Ref NoMS/262
TitleNotice of an insect destructive to Oranges - William Sharp MacLeay
AdminHistoryWilliam Sharp MacLeay, eldest son of Alexander MacLeay, was a scholar and naturalist, born on 21 July 1792 in London and died in Sydney on 26 January 1865. In 1818 he became secretary to the board for liquidating British claims in France on the peace of 1815; commissary judge in Havana, 1830-1837; went to New South Wales, 1839, where he enlarged his father's entomological collection. His chief work was Horae Entomologicae, propounding the circular or quintary system of classification.
DescriptionRough draft of MacLeay's "Notice of Ceratitis citriperda, an an insect destructive to oranges" published in the Zoological Journal, 1829, Vol 4, pp 475-482. Together with a 3pp questionnaire on the same subject, with answers and a note of "Mr Adam's" reply to the 14th question.
Date1829
LevelItem
Extent1 file
LanguageEnglish
Creator NameMacLeay, William Sharp (1792-1865) [also spelt McLeay or M'Leay]
Access_StatusOpen
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