Richard Lydekker was born at Tavistock Square in London. His father was Gerard Wolfe Lydekker, a barrister-at-law with Dutch ancestry. The family moved to Harpenden Lodge soon after Richard's birth.[2] He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took a first-class in the Natural Science tripos (1872).[3] In 1874 he joined the Geological Survey of India and made studies of the vertebrate palaeontology of northern India (especially Kashmir). He remained in this post until the death of his father in 1881. His main work in India was on the Siwalik palaeofauna; it was published in Palaeontologia Indica. He was responsible for the cataloguing of the fossilmammals, reptiles, and birds in the Natural History Museum (10 vols., 1891).[4]
He named a variety of taxa including the golden-bellied mangabey; as a taxon authority he is named simply as "Lydekker".[5]
Biogeography
He was influential in the science of biogeography. In 1896 he delineated the biogeographical boundary through Indonesia, known as Lydekker's Line, that separates Wallacea on the west from Australia-New Guinea on the east.[6][4] It follows the edge of the Sahul Shelf, an area from New Guinea to Australia of shallow water with the Aru Islands on its edge. Along with Wallace's Line and others,[7] it indicates the definite effect of geology on the biogeography of the region, something not seen so clearly in other parts of the world.[8]
First cuckoo
Lydekker attracted amused public attention with a pair of letters to The Times in 1913, when he wrote on 6 February that he had heard a cuckoo, contrary to Yarrell'sHistory of British Birds which doubted the bird arrived before April. Six days later on 12 February 1913, he wrote again, confessing that "the note was uttered by a bricklayer's labourer". Letters about the first cuckoo became a tradition in the newspaper.[9]
The Royal Natural History[13][14] (with W. H. Flower), 6 vols., 12 sec. (1893–1896)
A Hand-book to the Marsupialia and Monotremata (1894)
Life and Rock: A Collection of Zooogical and Geological Essays (1894)
A Geographical History of Mammals (1896)
A Hand-book to the British Mammalia (1896)
A Handbook to the Carnivora : part 1 : cats, civets, and mongooses (1896)
The Deer of all Lands : A history of the family Cervidae, living and extinct (1898)
Wild Oxen, Sheep & Goats of all Lands, Living and Extinct (1898)
The Wild Animals of India, Burma, Malaya, and Tibet[15] (1900)
The great and small game of Europe, western & northern Asia and America (1901)
The New Natural History 6 vols. (1901)
Living Races of Mankind: A popular illustrated account of the customs, habits, pursuits, feasts, and ceremonies of the races of mankind throughout the world, 2 vols. (1902),[16] with Henry Neville Hutchinson and John Walter Gregory
Mostly Mammals: Zoological Essays (1903)
Guide to the Gallery of Reptilia and Amphibia in the British museum (1906)
^Burkill, I. H. (1943). "The biogeographic division of the Indo-Australian archipelago. 2. A history of the divisions which have been proposed". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London. 154 (2): 127–138. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1943.tb00310.x.