Christa L. Deeleman-Reinhold

Christa L. Deeleman-Reinhold
Born (1930-11-23) November 23, 1930 (age 93)
NationalityDutch
EducationLeiden University
SpousePaul Robert Deeleman
Scientific career
Fieldsarachnology
Author abbrev. (zoology)Deeleman-Reinhold

Christa Laetitia Deeleman-Reinhold (born 23 November 1930)[1] is a Dutch arachnologist. She specializes in spiders from Southeast Asia and Southern Europe, particularly cave-dwelling and tropical spiders. She donated a collection of about 25,000 Southeast Asian spiders, the largest collection of Southeast Asian spiders in existence, to the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden.[2] In addition to numerous articles, she has written the book Forest Spiders of South East Asia (2001).[3]

She born in 1930 to Dutch parents on the island of Java, Dutch East Indies. Her family returned to the Netherlands in 1935, and she entered Leiden University in 1949. after three years she began working at entered the Dutch National Museum of Natural History, studying mantises under museum director Hilbrand Boschma. She began studying spiders as a postgraduate, first studying Dutch ground spiders, and later cave spiders of the genus Troglohyphantes under the supervision of J. T. "Koos" Wiebes [nl], and earned a PhD. from Leiden University in 1978. She was married to businessman Paul Robert Deeleman, who accompanied her on multiple collecting expeditions to Yugoslavia and Southeast Asia.[1] Her husband died in 1989,[4] and she spent the next decade working on her mangum opus, Forest Spiders of South East Asia (2001), a nearly-600 page work in which she revised six spider families, describing 18 new genera and 115 new species.[5][1] She continues to actively publish at the age of 90.[1][6]

  1. ^ a b c d van Dorp, Karen (2020). "A life of spiders: Christa Deeleman and her collection". Nieuwsbrief SPINED. 39: 9–13.
  2. ^ de Jong, R., ed. (2004). "Naturalis Exploring Biodiversity: Thirty years of zoological research in the forests of South-east Asia" (PDF). Naturalis Biodiversity Center. Leiden, The Netherlands. p. 27. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  3. ^ Deeleman-Reinhold, Christa L. (2001). Forest Spiders of South East Asia. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. ISBN 9004119590. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  4. ^ van Dorp, Karen (2020). "Een leven lang spinnen: Christa Deeleman en haar collectie". Nieuwsbrief SPINED (in Dutch). 39: 2–8.
  5. ^ Jäger, Peter (2001). "C.L. Deeleman-Reinhold: Forest Spiders of South East Asia". Arachnologische Mitteilungen (in German). 21: 59–61. doi:10.5431/ARAMIT2110.
  6. ^ Yuri M. Marusik; Danniella Sherwood (27 June 2022). "Matronymic genera in spiders (Araneae) named for arachnologists". Arachnology. 19 (sp1). doi:10.13156/ARAC.2022.19.SP1.150. ISSN 2050-9928. Wikidata Q113667188.