Butterfly Naming Rights Sold for $40,800

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The New York Sun

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A butterfly species discovered in a Florida museum has a new name after an anonymous bidder paid $40,800 for naming rights in order to honor a woman who died in 1972.

The butterfly’s common name will be the Minerva owl butterfly. It’s being named after the late Margery Minerva Blythe Kitzmiller of Malvern, Ohio.

While the bidder’s name was not disclosed, the payment was made on behalf of Kitzmiller’s grandchildren.

The butterfly’s scientific name will be Opsiphanes blythekitzmillerae.

University of Florida researchers George Austin and Andrew Warren discovered the new species while looking through a butterfly collection at the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville earlier this year. They found it was misidentified as an example of another species.

The 4-inch butterfly is brown, white, and black and lives in Sonora, a Mexican state bordering Arizona. Proceeds from the auction will go toward further research of Mexican butterflies.

The director of development for the museum, Beverly Sensbach, said Kitzmiller’s grandchildren wanted to honor her through the name of a beautiful butterfly because she was “an extremely creative person who wrote poetry, played piano, and sang.”

The rights were sold via an online auction.


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