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1 June 2023 Why did William Elford Leach call a small damselfly a ‘pirate’? – Revisiting the etymology of the genus Lestes (Odonata: Lestidae)
Matti Hämäläinen, Heinrich Fliedner
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Abstract

We present evidence supporting the widely accepted interpretation that the genus name Lestes Leach, 1815, is based on the Greek masculine word λῃστής [lēstēs] meaning ‘robber or pirate’. Comparison of Leach’s brief definition of Lestes with that of the genus Agrion Fabricius, 1775, from which the new genus was split, suggests that W.E. Leach selected the piratical name because the males of species in this genus are armed with pincer-shaped appendages; hence the name is an allusion to the edged weapons carried by pirates. The common view that the name was suggested by the voracious predatory behaviour of lestids, as well as the interpretation that the genus name is based on the French word leste [= nimble] are both rejected.

Matti Hämäläinen and Heinrich Fliedner "Why did William Elford Leach call a small damselfly a ‘pirate’? – Revisiting the etymology of the genus Lestes (Odonata: Lestidae)," Notulae odonatologicae 10(1), 8-16, (1 June 2023). https://doi.org/10.60024/nodo.v10i1.a2
Received: 4 January 2023; Published: 1 June 2023
KEYWORDS
cutlass
damselfly
history of odonatology
Zygoptera
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