• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

7 Animals With Some Of The Silliest Scientific Names

April 11, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Trying to identify a new species of animal isn’t the easiest task in the world, but the lucky people who do manage to find one appear to have quite the sense of humor when it comes to giving them a scientific name.

Here are some of our favorites.

Advertisement

Gelae fish

Fun fact: Gelae fish isn’t actually a fish, or a jellyfish. It’s a small, round fungus beetle and belongs to a genus first described in 2004, alongside the equally amusingly named Gelae bean, Gelae belae, Gelae donut, and Gelae rol. 

Rather than meaning something in Latin like a lot of scientific names, the entomologists who named G. fish described its moniker as “a whimsical arrangement of letters that is pronounced like the English word, ‘’fish’”. Just in case you were calling it f-eye-sh or something.

The Mini frogs

Scientists adopted a similar level of whimsy when it came to classifying three new species of frogs, because what do you do when tasked with naming tiny animals? Give them tiny size-related names, of course.

And so, in 2019, the genus Mini was born, with its member species Mini ature, Mini mum, and Mini scule. Found in the lowland forests of southern Madagascar, these diddy frogs live up to their little names; male members of M. mum are just 9.7 millimeters long. That makes it one of the smallest known frogs in the world, although it’s not the smallest.

Vini vidivici

Hypothetical restoration of the conquered Lorikeet, based on fossils and related species

RIP Vinividi vici, you would’ve loved Julius Caesar.

The list of silly scientific names is pretty entomology-heavy, but occasionally other animals get a look-in too – although in the case of the extinct conquered lorikeet, the sense of humor applied is somewhat darker.

Only known through fossils found on Polynesian islands, this parrot’s species name alludes to the Latin phrase veni, vidi, vici as it is thought to have gone extinct at the hands of humans 700 to 1,300 years ago.

“The meaning, “I came, I saw, I conquered,” may be projected into the prehistoric situation in the Marquesas and elsewhere in Polynesia, where people came to an island, saw the native parrots, and then conquered them, leaving behind only the bones,” wrote the scientists who named this unfortunate lorikeet.

Aha ha

Nope, I didn’t accidentally put my reply to my colleague’s funny Teams message here – Aha ha is actually a species of wasp endemic to Australia.

Advertisement

It was named by US entomologist Arnold S. Menke, who recalled how the name came about in a 1983 issue of wasp biology publication, Sphecos.

“My recollection is that while going over some sphecid material collected “down under” by [fellow entomologists Howard E. Evans and Bob Matthews], I came upon a cute little gray wasp with strange tarsal ungues and exclaimed, ‘aha, a new genus’. Eric Grissell, resident wit, who happened to be standing nearby observing the master, retorted with some skepticism, ‘ha’.”

And thus, the funniest wasp species was born.

Agra vation

We can thank entomologist Terry Erwin for another fantastically silly beetle name. A species of Carabidae or ground beetle, Agra vation isn’t particularly aggravating in itself, but apparently collecting samples of the Agra genus is something of a painstaking task, hence the name.

Advertisement

Erwin is also responsible for a number of other humorous names within this genus, including Agra cadabra and Agra katewinsletae after Titanic actress Kate Winslet. “Her character did not go down with the ship, but we will not be able to say the same for this elegant canopy species, if all the rain forest is converted to pastures,” wrote Erwin in the study describing the species. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Factbox-Top announcements from Apple event
  2. WTO chief says trade must do more to address ‘devastating’ vaccine inequity
  3. Internet Figures Out Which Muppets Are Predators And Which Are Prey Based On Their Eyes
  4. AI Discovers New Material That Could Slash Lithium Use In Batteries

Source Link: 7 Animals With Some Of The Silliest Scientific Names

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Stratus: What Are The Symptoms Of The Latest COVID-19 Subvariant To Spread Around The World?
  • In 1927, Henry Ford Tried To Build A Town In The Amazon And Things Went Very, Very Badly
  • Human Botfly: Say Hello To The Parasite That Would Love To Get Under Your Skin
  • Is The Weather Making Your Headache Worse?
  • “Zoning Out” Actually Helps You Learn? Data From Up To 90,000 Brain Cells Says So
  • Over Past 250,000 Years, Three Major Waves Of Human-Neanderthal Interbreeding Have Been Identified
  • Zebrafish “Catch” Yawns Just Like Us – We Might Need To Rethink Evolution To Account For That
  • 80,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Footprints Reveal How Children Hunted On Beaches
  • 5 Animals That Have Absolutely No Business Jumping (In Our Very Humble, Definitely Unbiased Opinion)
  • Polar Vortex Patterns Explain Winter Cold Snaps Against Background Warming Trend
  • Scientists Tracked An Olm For 2,569 Days And It Did Not Move An Inch
  • Look Out For “Fireballs”: The Best Meteor Shower Of 2025 Is About To Commence, According To NASA
  • Why Do Many Large Language Models Give The Same Answer To This “Random” Number Query?
  • Adidas Jabulani: The World Cup Football So Bad NASA Decided To Study It
  • Beluga Whales Shake Their Blob-Like Melons To Say Hello And Even Woo A Mate, But How?
  • Gravitational Wave Detected From Largest Black Hole Merger Yet: “It Presents A Real Challenge To Our Understanding Of Black Hole Formation”
  • At Over 100 Years Of Age, The World’s Oldest Elephant Passes Away In India
  • Ancient Human DNA Reveals Earliest Zoonotic Diseases Appeared 6,500 Years Ago
  • Boys Are Better At Math? That Could Be Because School Favors Them Over Girls
  • Looptail G: Most People Can’t Recognize A Letter You Have Seen Millions Of Times
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version