James Wood-Mason

James Wood-Mason
Portrait of Professor Wood-Mason by Bourne & Shepherd (1876)
BornDecember 1846
Died6 May 1893 (aged 47)
At sea
NationalityEnglish
Alma materQueen's College, Oxford
Known forPhasmids and Mantises
Scientific career
FieldsEntomology
InstitutionsIndian Museum, Calcutta
Doctoral advisorJ.O. Westwood

James Wood-Mason (December 1846 – 6 May 1893) was an English zoologist. He was the director of the Indian Museum at Calcutta, after John Anderson. He collected marine animals and lepidoptera, but is best known for his work on two other groups of insects, phasmids (stick insects) and mantises (praying mantises).

The genus Woodmasonia Brunner, 1907, and at least ten species of phasmids, are named after him.[1]

  1. ^ Bragg, 2008.