Butterfly species named after Lord of the Rings villain Sauron

Undated handout photo issued by the Natural History Museum of a new group of butterflies that have been named after Lord Of The Rings villain Sauron

Undated handout photo issued by the Natural History Museum of a new group of butterflies that have been named after Lord Of The Rings villain Sauron

Scientists have named a new group of butterflies after the villain Sauron from the Lord of the Rings novels.

Experts hit on the name Saurona because the black rings on the insect’s orange wings reminded them of the all-seeing eye described in JRR Tolkien’s books.

The Natural History Museum in London hopes the unusual title will draw attention to the species and help generate more research.

Two species of butterfly have been added to the newly named Saurona genus.

vCard QR Code

vCard.red is a free platform for creating a mobile-friendly digital business cards. You can easily create a vCard and generate a QR code for it, allowing others to scan and save your contact details instantly.

The platform allows you to display contact information, social media links, services, and products all in one shareable link. Optional features include appointment scheduling, WhatsApp-based storefronts, media galleries, and custom design options.

Saurona triangular and Saurona aurigera are the inaugural members of the group but it’s expected many more species will join them.

The name was picked by Dr Blanca Heurtas, curator of the butterflies at the museum, who is part of an international team who described the new genus in a paper published in the scientific journal Systematic Entomology.

A group of 30 scientists from around the world have spent a decade studying the butterfly subtribe Euptychiina.

The experts analysed more than 400 different species of butterfly, and used advances in DNA to identify the differences between them at a genetic level, as well as by their appearance.

Saurona triangula and Saurona aurigera are not the first creatures to be named after Sauron. The villain’s glowing eye has also been referenced in the names of a dung beetle, a frog and a dinosaur.

The team has also found another butterfly genus, which Dr Huertas has named Argenteria, meaning silver mine, on account of the silver scales on its wings.

source: yahoo.com


πŸ• Top News in the Last Hour By Importance Score

# Title πŸ“Š i-Score
1 No plans to extend Easter ceasefire in Ukraine, Putin says – as Zelensky accuses Russia of breaching the temporary truce more than 2,000 TIMES πŸ”΄ 78 / 100
2 US citizen wrongfully arrested by border patrol in Arizona held for nearly 10 days πŸ”΄ 75 / 100
3 DHL suspends high value US deliveries over tariffs πŸ”΄ 65 / 100
4 Subaru Solterra EV Debuts Divisive Look for 2026 Model Year πŸ”΅ 55 / 100
5 Jim Davidson shares astonishing comment made by police during Operation Yewtree enquiry πŸ”΅ 55 / 100
6 'I tried the viral Β£9.99 Aldi orange wine – but didn't agree with the reviews' πŸ”΅ 45 / 100
7 First look at Disneyland's newΒ World of Frozen and Lion King attraction as theme park unveils unprecedented 'magical' transformation πŸ”΅ 45 / 100
8 I Cut My Streaming Bill in Half and Still Watched Everything I Wanted πŸ”΅ 45 / 100
9 Oscar Piastri wins F1's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix as Max Verstappen fumes πŸ”΅ 40 / 100
10 Lewis Hamilton makes worrying Ferrari confession as Brit gets brutally honest in Jeddah πŸ”΅ 35 / 100

View More Top News ➑️