Peter Michael Hammond
Peter Michael Hammond | |
|---|---|
| Born | 17 February 1941 |
| Died | 17 September 2021 (aged 80) |
| Occupation | |
Peter Michael Hammond (17 February 1941 โ 17 September 2021) was a British entomologist who specialised in Coleoptera (beetles). For many years he was the head of the Coleoptera section at the Natural History Museum, London.
After working for a time in China, Hammond was appointed to his job at the NHM in the 1960s by the museum's then-head Coleopterist Jack Balfour-Browne (1907โ2002). By the late 1960s Hammond was appearing in newspapers as a Museum spokesperson for the Coleoptera section.
Hammond's special interest area was the Staphylinidae (rove beetles), but he worked on all families of beetle.
Hammond, with Jane Marshall, worked on Fritz van Emden's (1898โ1958) specimens in the 1970s and contributed to the Monograph originally instigated by van Emden's research into beetle larvae, published by the Royal Entomological Society in 2019: British Coleoptera Larvae. A guide to the families and major subfamilies, edited by Max Barclay and Beulah Garner.
From 1981, Hammond served as an editor on the Entomologist's Monthly Magazine, and contributed book reviews.
Hammond was known for his talent for surveying areas for beetles, whether researching unpopulated forest areas or suburban spaces, for example using Chinese lanterns and takeaway food containers to entice Oxypoda nigrocincta, Clambus apllidulus and Cossonus linearis during a beetle survey undertaken with the London Wildlife Trust in Hounslow in 1998.
Because of what was then a museum rule for mandatory retirement at age 60, in 2001 Hammond retired and became a Scientific Associate at the NHM. He continued to travel, collect specimens, research and publish his work.
The Carabidae beetle species Clinidium hammondi R.T. & J.R.Bell, 1985, was named in honour of Hammond.