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Volume 54 (2019)

Edited by J.W. Early and L. Furey
ISSN 2422-8567

https://doi.org/10.32912/ram.2019.54

Blaschka glass model of the octopus \u003cem\u003eOcythoe tuberculata\u003c/em\u003e Rafinesque, 1814. Blaschka #585; \u003ca href=\"~/collections-research/collections/record/am_naturalsciences-object-852134\"\u003eMA124293\u003c/a\u003e.

Blaschka glass model of the octopus Ocythoe tuberculata Rafinesque, 1814. Blaschka #585; MA124293.

Philonexis (Octopus) catenulatus Philippi, 1844.© Auckland Museum CC-BY

Our 2019 volume includes articles on the papers of our first director, T.F. Cheeseman; correspondence between Cheeseman and Henry Ward, of Ward’s Natural Science Establishment, Rochester, N.Y., U.S.A., during the period 1878 to 1905; fossil and recent molluscan types Gastropoda (Patellogastropoda and Vetigastropoda); and the establishment of the green lacewing (Mallada basalis) on mainland New Zealand.

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  • Thomas Frederick Cheeseman, Auckland Museum’s curator from 1874 to 1923, was a careful and meticulous administrator who kept a detailed record of his activities. In this report we summarise the extent and organisation of the Cheeseman papers held at Auckland Museum. There are at least 3500 pages of outgoing correspondence, addressed to around 800 different people and organisations, and we provide a preliminary alphabetical index to these correspondents. The Cheeseman papers form a rich and useful legacy for an understanding of museology and the history of science—and social history in general—both for Auckland and for New Zealand.
  • An overview of the archived papers of T.F. Cheeseman, Auckland Museum’s curator from 1874 to 1923
  • Thomas Frederick Cheeseman, Auckland Museum’s curator from 1874 to 1923, was a careful and meticulous administrator who kept a detailed record of his activities. In this report we summarise the extent and organisation of the Cheeseman papers held at Auckland Museum. There are at least 3500 pages of outgoing correspondence, addressed to around 800 different people and organisations, and we provide a preliminary alphabetical index to these correspondents. The Cheeseman papers form a rich and useful legacy for an understanding of museology and the history of science—and social history in general—both for Auckland and for New Zealand.
  • Last updated on: 10 Dec 2019 | File Size: 2.3 MB

  • Henry Ward, of Ward’s Natural Science Establishment, Rochester, N.Y., U.S.A., visited Auckland in March 1881 (and again in November 1896) where he met Thomas Cheeseman, curator of Auckland Museum. The two men formed a professional friendship and corresponded for 27 years. During this time they arranged a series of exchanges of natural history specimens, despite Auckland Museum being only a minor customer of Ward’s because it had little material to exchange and small budgets for purchase. From Cheeseman, Ward obtained bird specimens (especially kiwi Apteryx), ethnographic items, kauri gum and volumes of Transactions of the New Zealand Institute. Ward sent Cheeseman casts of ‘celebrated fossils’ and of the Rosetta Stone, articulated skeletons of a human and an ostrich, Blaschka glass models, mineral specimens, a lungfish and a giant salamander.
  • The Cheeseman-Ward correspondence (1878–1905) and exchanges of natural history specimens between Auckland Museum and H.A. Ward of Rochester, N.Y.
  • Henry Ward, of Ward’s Natural Science Establishment, Rochester, N.Y., U.S.A., visited Auckland in March 1881 (and again in November 1896) where he met Thomas Cheeseman, curator of Auckland Museum. The two men formed a professional friendship and corresponded for 27 years. During this time they arranged a series of exchanges of natural history specimens, despite Auckland Museum being only a minor customer of Ward’s because it had little material to exchange and small budgets for purchase. From Cheeseman, Ward obtained bird specimens (especially kiwi Apteryx), ethnographic items, kauri gum and volumes of Transactions of the New Zealand Institute. Ward sent Cheeseman casts of ‘celebrated fossils’ and of the Rosetta Stone, articulated skeletons of a human and an ostrich, Blaschka glass models, mineral specimens, a lungfish and a giant salamander.
  • Last updated on: 10 Dec 2019 | File Size: 3.4 MB

  • The Marine Department of Auckland War Memorial Museum has an actively growing type collection with over 1770 primary types and a further 1836 paratypes and paralectotypes. The majority are molluscan, and this third part of a catalogue of these collections reviews the types for 12 Patellogastropoda and 184 Vetigastropoda species and subspecies. It deals with 130 primary types and 142 secondary type lots, which are split between 140 Recent taxa and 56 fossil taxa. Eleven of the holotypes reviewed here are illustrated for the first time.
  • Fossil and Recent molluscan types in the Auckland War Memorial Museum. Part 3: Gastropoda (Patellogastropoda and Vetigastropoda)
  • The Marine Department of Auckland War Memorial Museum has an actively growing type collection with over 1770 primary types and a further 1836 paratypes and paralectotypes. The majority are molluscan, and this third part of a catalogue of these collections reviews the types for 12 Patellogastropoda and 184 Vetigastropoda species and subspecies. It deals with 130 primary types and 142 secondary type lots, which are split between 140 Recent taxa and 56 fossil taxa. Eleven of the holotypes reviewed here are illustrated for the first time.
  • Last updated on: 10 Dec 2019 | File Size: 2.6 MB

  • Laoma s.str., based on Laoma leimonias (Gray, 1850), also includes L. marina (Hutton, 1883), L. ordishi Climo n. sp., L. labyrinthica Powell, 1948 and L. nerissa (Hutton, 1883), which is reinstated as a valid species. Recently collected material of these Laoma spp. from a wide spread of localities in New Zealand shows that reabsorption of apertural lamellae during growth does not change their configuration in the manner proposed by Suter (1891: 283–285). All species discussed here are endemic to New Zealand. They overlap tightly in their distribution but are often allopatric at local scale, around Auckland–Waitemata–Hauraki Gulf, North Island, while elsewhere they are geographically well-separated. The naturally uncommon L. labyrinthica (Three Kings Islands) is the only species of conservation concern in this group.
  • Description of Laoma ordishi new species (Eupulmonata: Punctidae) and reinstatement of Laoma nerissa (Hutton, 1883)
  • Laoma s.str., based on Laoma leimonias (Gray, 1850), also includes L. marina (Hutton, 1883), L. ordishi Climo n. sp., L. labyrinthica Powell, 1948 and L. nerissa (Hutton, 1883), which is reinstated as a valid species. Recently collected material of these Laoma spp. from a wide spread of localities in New Zealand shows that reabsorption of apertural lamellae during growth does not change their configuration in the manner proposed by Suter (1891: 283–285). All species discussed here are endemic to New Zealand. They overlap tightly in their distribution but are often allopatric at local scale, around Auckland–Waitemata–Hauraki Gulf, North Island, while elsewhere they are geographically well-separated. The naturally uncommon L. labyrinthica (Three Kings Islands) is the only species of conservation concern in this group.
  • Last updated on: 19 Dec 2019 | File Size: 4.7 MB

Table of Contents

  • An overview of the archived papers of T.F. Cheeseman, Auckland Museum’s curator from 1874 to 1923

    By B.J. Gill, M.R. Collett & Elizabeth Lorimer
    pp. 1–20

    Thomas Frederick Cheeseman, Auckland Museum’s curator from 1874 to 1923, was a careful and meticulous administrator who kept a detailed record of his activities. In this report we summarise the extent and organisation of the Cheeseman papers held at Auckland Museum. There are at least 3500 pages of outgoing correspondence, addressed to around 800 different people and organisations, and we provide a preliminary alphabetical index to these correspondents. The Cheeseman papers form a rich and useful legacy for an understanding of museology and the history of science—and social history in general—both for Auckland and for New Zealand.

    Read more
  • The Cheeseman-Ward correspondence (1878–1905) and exchanges of natural history specimens between Auckland Museum and H.A. Ward of Rochester, N.Y.

    By B.J. Gill, H.R. Grenfell, & W.M. Blom
    pp. 21–36

    Henry Ward, of Ward’s Natural Science Establishment, Rochester, N.Y., U.S.A., visited Auckland in March 1881 (and again in November 1896) where he met Thomas Cheeseman, curator of Auckland Museum. The two men formed a professional friendship and corresponded for 27 years. During this time they arranged a series of exchanges of natural history specimens, despite Auckland Museum being only a minor customer of Ward’s because it had little material to exchange and small budgets for purchase. From Cheeseman, Ward obtained bird specimens (especially kiwi Apteryx), ethnographic items, kauri gum and volumes of Transactions of the New Zealand Institute. Ward sent Cheeseman casts of ‘celebrated fossils’ and of the Rosetta Stone, articulated skeletons of a human and an ostrich, Blaschka glass models, mineral specimens, a lungfish and a giant salamander.

    Read more
  • Fossil and Recent molluscan types Part 3: Gastropoda (Patellogastropoda and Vetigastropoda)

    By Wilma M. Blom
    pp. 37–62

    The Marine Department of Auckland War Memorial Museum has an actively growing type collection with over 1770 primary types and a further 1836 paratypes and paralectotypes. The majority are molluscan, and this third part of a catalogue of these collections reviews the types for 12 Patellogastropoda and 184 Vetigastropoda species and subspecies. It deals with 130 primary types and 142 secondary type lots, which are split between 140 Recent taxa and 56 fossil taxa. Eleven of the holotypes reviewed here are illustrated for the first time.

    Read more
  • Description of Laoma ordishi new species (Eupulmonata: Punctidae) and reinstatement of Laoma nerissa (Hutton, 1883)

    By Frank Climo et al.
    pp. 63–80

    Laoma s.str., based on Laoma leimonias (Gray, 1850), also includes L. marina (Hutton, 1883), L. ordishi (Climo n. sp.), L. labyrinthica (Powell, 1948) and L. nerissa (Hutton, 1883), which is reinstated as a valid species. Recently collected material of these Laoma spp. from a wide spread of localities in New Zealand shows that reabsorption of apertural lamellae during growth does not change their configuration in the manner proposed by Suter (1891: 283–285).

    Read more
  • Establishment of the green lacewing Mallada basalis (Walker, 1853) (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae) on mainland New Zealand

    By John W. Early
    pp. 81–86

    The chrysopid lacewing Mallada basalis has recently established in the north of the North Island of New Zealand. Information on its life cycle, distribution and seasonality is presented.

    Read more