Dropping like flies…but what species of fly, named after who?

First Lemmy, then Bowie and then Glen Frey. January was a tough month for rock iconography.

First Lemmy, then Bowie and then Glen Frey. January wasย a tough month for rock iconography.

And, as we are left reeling in the void with nothing more than cheap imitators and sugar coated pretenders to take their place, our minds turn to legacy. Their musical legacy is, of course, safe. But could science help give them another facet to their artistic immortality? ย We think so, and the key, surely, must be scientific nomenclature. There is a long and, at least partially, distinguished history of this. Cultural icons often find themselves embedded in obscure journals following an eager scientistโ€™s insistence that their career defining discovery be named after them.

There is Funkotriplogynium iagobadius โ€“ the mite named in honour of James Brown (iago being the Latin for James, and badius being the Latin for brown). Anomphalus jaggerius named for Mick Jaggerโ€ฆit just happens to be a fossilised mollusc. And you can all stop smirking right now โ€“ there is nothing funny about that. Nothing at all. In this new, whimsical era of binomial nomenclature, Frank Zappa turns out to be one of the most cited of all the rock gods. There is Pachygnatha zappa โ€“ the orb-weaver spider named due a black marking under its abdomen curiously reminiscent of Frankโ€™s moustache. And, if future generations needed any reminder of his significance, then they should be mindful of the fact he also has a mudskipper, an extinct gerbil and a bacteria named in his honour. Although there is also a warning here for future scientific brandersโ€ฆ the bacteria Propionibacterium acnes type Zappa can cause a nasty eye disease โ€“ not, perhaps, something entirely in line with Zappaโ€™s desired legacy.

Speaking of which โ€“ perhaps the most curious case of misplaced honour from a scientific name comes in the form of a rare beetle. In 1933, Oscar Scheibel โ€“ a German entomologist โ€“ found a small, brown, eyeless beetle. It was, and still is, very rare indeed โ€“ having only ever been found in five caves in Slovenia. So far so good, next on Scheibelโ€™s agenda was a name, and he chose one based on his hero โ€“ Adolf Hitler. And so it came to pass that Anophthalmus hitleri enters the scientific lexicon (โ€ฆas if life for a rare, eyeless beetle wasnโ€™t hard enough eh?). But, the tale doesnโ€™t end there โ€“ in recent years these apparently inert little bugs are fetching up to ยฃ1000 each because of their growing popularity as a neo-Nazi collectorโ€™s item; so much so in fact that the insect is now considered under threat of extinction. There is an unmistakable whiff of irony in the near extinction of a species being linked to Hitler, and whilst this may not be the worst of the neo-nazi fraternityโ€™s crimes โ€“ it must rank as the most unforeseeable.

But back to our recently departed rockers โ€“ and it isnโ€™t all about biological nomenclature. David Bowie has fabulously had a constellation named after him โ€“ a set of stars in the shape of his iconic lightning bolt. Philippe Mollet from the MIRA Observatory in California chose seven stars โ€“ Sigma Librae, Spica, Alpha Virginis, Zeta Centauri, SAA 204 132, and the Beta Sigma Octantis Trianguli Australis โ€“ in the vicinity of Mars. The constellation is an eerily accurate copy of the iconic Bowie lightning streak he wore across his face, and was recorded at the exact time of his death โ€“ what could be more fitting?

As for Lemmy โ€“ well, you can potentially influence this one. Head over to change.org and youโ€™ll find a petition has been launched to name one of the four recently discovered heavy metal elements โ€˜Lemmiumโ€™ in his honour. Die-hard fans are crying foul as they claim the band wasnโ€™t heavy metal per-se, but really, isnโ€™t this the perfect honour?

And that just leaves Glen Frey, our departed Eagle. As far as we can see, there is nothing officially named after him โ€“ and so ornithologists of the world, we say unite. Unite and discover a hitherto unknown species of eagle, preferably one with a habitat located in Californiaโ€ฆ and ideally with a particular fondness for nest building in the rafters of a hotel.

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