DURHAM, N.C. 鈥 A newly discovered species of wasp, native to the cloud forests of Colombia鈥檚 tropical Andes, has been named in honor of 91社区福利 conservation scientist Stuart Pimm.

The scientists who discovered the previously unknown species named it Dolichomitus pimmi in recognition of Pimm鈥檚 leadership in efforts to protect and restore disappearing wildlife habitats in the remote region. Colombia鈥檚 tropical Andes are home to tens of thousands of species of plants and animals, many of which are increasingly threatened by development and climate change.

Stuart Pimm
Stuart Pimm

Pimm, who is the Doris Duke Professor of Conservation Ecology at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment, has led numerous widely cited studies documenting threats to endangered species in the region.

Through his nonprofit , he works with local conservationists, community organizations and property owners to purchase critical patches of threatened land 鈥 often already degraded or partially developed 鈥 and restore them to a state where they can once again benefit both wildlife and humans.

Dolichomitus pimmi is distinguishable from other neotropical wasp species by its distinctive tiger-striped orange-yellow body; amber-hued, black-tipped wings; and the shape, size and somewhat menacing appearance of its head and jaw. It measures about two-thirds of an inch long, with an only slightly smaller wingspan.

Like all 25,000 other known species of Darwin wasps, D. pimmi is parasitic: it lives in or on its prey, feeding on the prey鈥檚 living body before eventually killing it. Caterpillars are Darwin wasps鈥 meal of choice, but beetles, flies, spiders and other invertebrates 鈥 even other wasps 鈥 could find themselves on the menu, too.

The genus earned its common name because naturalist Charles Darwin once famously said the wasps鈥 fascinating but grisly behavior made him question the existence of 鈥渁 beneficent and omnipotent God.鈥

Despite their bad rap, the wasps pose no threat to humans and play an ecologically and economically important role as a natural control for diamondback moths and other agricultural pests that can devastate crops in the Andean region. They also provide food for larger species.

鈥淗aving a species named after you is, of course, a singular honor,鈥 said Pimm, who previously has been recognized for his contributions to conservation science with three of the environmental field鈥檚 highest honors: the Heineken Prize for Environmental Sciences in 2006, the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement in 2010, and the International Cosmos Prize in 2019.  

Regardless of Darwin鈥檚 qualms about the genus, the newly discovered wasp 鈥渋s lovely in my view,鈥 Pimm said.

D. pimmi is one of five new species of Darwin鈥檚 wasps described by South American scientists in published June 1 in the journal Zoo Keys. In naming the wasp for Pimm, the paper鈥檚 authors noted that his support of the Mesenia-Paramillo Nature Reserve conservation project on the western slopes of the tropical Andes 鈥渉as been invaluable鈥 for helping restore degraded areas and reconnect forest fragments there.

Dolichomitus pimmi

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