
Edward Blyth.
'Edward Blyth' (
December 23,
1810 -
December 27,
1873) was an
English zoologist and chemist. He is known as one of the founders of Indian
zoology.
Blyth was born in
London in 1810. In 1841 he travelled to
India to become the curator of the museum of the
Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal. He set about updating the museum's catalogues, publishing a ''Catalogue of the Birds of the Asiatic Society'' in 1849. He was prevented from doing much fieldwork himself, but received and described bird specimens from
Hume,
Tickell,
Swinhoe and others. He remained as curator until 1862, when ill-health forced his return to England. His ''The Natural History of the Cranes'' was published in 1881.
Species bearing his name include
Blyth's Reed Warbler and
Blyth's Pipit.
Early life and work
Blyth was the son of a clothier and he initially worked as a druggist but quit in 1837 to seek a living as an author and editor. He was offered a position of curator at the museum of the Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1841. He was so poor that he needed an advance of 100 pounds to make his trip to Calcutta. In India, Blyth was poorly paid (the Asiatic Society did not expect to find a European curator for the salary that they could offer) with a salary of pound 300 per year for twenty years and a house allowance of 4 pounds per month. He got married in 1854 and he tried various approaches to supplement his income. He wrote under a pseudonym to the ''Indian Sporting Review'' and also was involved in trading live animals between India and Britain to cater to wealthy collectors in Britain and India. In this venture he sought the collaboration of various eminent people including
Charles Darwin and
John Gould, both of whom declined the offers.
[Brandon-Jones, Christine 1997. Edward Blyth, Charles Darwin, and the Animal Trade in Nineteenth-Century India and Britain. Journal of the History of Biology 30:145-178]
Although a curator of a museum with multiple areas of work, he contributed largely to ornithology often forsaking other areas of work. His employers were unhappy in 1847 at his failure to produce a catalog of the museum. There were also factions in the Asiatic Society that were against Blyth and he complained to Richard Owen in 1848:
His work on ornithology led him to be recognized as the ''father of Indian ornithology'' a title which was later transferred to
Allan Octavian Hume.
[1]
Blyth's role in the development of Natural Selection
Edward Blyth accepted the principle that species could be modified over time, and his writings had a major influence on
Charles Darwin. Blyth wrote three major articles on variation, discussing the effects of
artificial selection and describing the process of
natural selection as restoring organisms in the wild to their
archetype (rather than forming new
species). These articles were published in 'The Magazine of Natural History' between 1835 and 1837.
[2][3] He was among the first to recognise the significance of
Wallace's paper "On the Law Which has Regulated the Introduction of Species" and brought it to the notice of Darwin in a letter written in
Calcutta on December 8, 1855:
:''What think you of Wallace’s paper in the Ann. N. Hist.? Good! Upon the whole! Wallace has, I think, put the matter well; and according to his theory, the various domestic races of animals have been fairly developed into species. A trump of a fact for friend Wallace to have hit upon!''
[4]
Darwin took little notice of the paper, thinking it typical of ideas which we would now call
progressive creationism, though it can now be seen as a precursor to Wallace's essay of February 1858 ''
On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties'' which finally compelled the much delayed
publication of Darwin's theory. There can be no doubt of Darwin's regard for Edward Blyth: in the first chapter of ''
The Origin of Species'' he writes "...Mr Blyth, whose opinion, from his large and varied stores of knowledge, I should value more than that of almost any one..."
[5]
Loren Eiseley, Professor of Anthropology and the History of Science at the
University of Pennsylvania, spent decades tracing the origins of the ideas attributed to Darwin. In a 1979 book,
[6] he claimed that ‘the leading tenets of Darwin's work–the struggle for existence, variation, natural selection and sexual selection–are all fully expressed in Blyth's paper of 1835’.(Eiseley, 1979:55) He also cites a number of rare words, similarities of phrasing, and the use of similar examples, which he regards as evidence of Darwin's debt to Blyth.(Eiseley, 1979:59–62) Blyth had discussed natural selection, but Eiseley didn't realize that most biologists did so in the generations before Darwin. Natural selection ranked as a standard item in biological discourse – but with a crucial difference from Darwin's version: the usual interpretation invoked natural selection as part of a larger argument for created permanency. Natural selection, in this negative formulation, acted only to preserve the type, constant and inviolate, by eliminating extreme variants and unfit individuals who threatened to degrade the essence of created form. The theologian
William Paley had earlier presented the following variant of this argument, doing so to refute (in later pages) a claim that modern species preserve the good designs winnowed from a much broader range of initial creations after natural selection had eliminated the less viable forms: “The hypothesis teaches, that every possible variety of being hath, at one time or other, found its way into existence (by what cause of in what manner is not said), and that those which were badly formed, perished”
The way in which Blyth himself argued about the modification of species can be illustrated by an extract concerning the adaptations of carnivorous mammals:
:''However reciprocal...may appear the relations of the preyer and the prey, a little reflection on the observed facts suffices to intimate that the relative adaptations of the former only are special, those of latter being comparatively vague and general; indicating that there having ben a superabundance which might serve as nutriment, in the first instance, and which, in many cases, was unattainable by ordinary means, particular species have therefore been so organized (that is to say, modified upon some more or less general ''type'' or plan of structure,) to avail themselves of the supply.''
[7]
Return from India
Blyth returned to London on March 9, 1863 to recover from ill health. He was to get a full year's pay for this sick leave. He however had to borrow money from
John Henry Gurney and continued his animal trade. Around 1865 he began to help
Thomas C. Jerdon in the writing of the ''Birds of India'' but had a ''mental breakdown'' and had to be kept in a private asylum. He was a corresponding member of the Zoological Society and was elected an extraordinary member of the British Ornithological Union, nominated by
Alfred Newton. He however took to drinking and was convicted for assaulting a cab driver. He died of heard disease in December 1973.
Other works
Blyth edited the section on 'Mammalia, Birds, and Reptiles' in the English edition of Cuvier's ''Animal Kingdom'' published in 1840, inserting many observations, corrections, and references of his own.
References
1. Murray, James A. 1888. The avifauna of British India and its dependencies. Truebner. Volume 1
2. Blyth, E., The Magazine of Natural History Volumes 8, 9 and 10, 1835–1837.
3. An Attempt to Classify the "Varieties" of Animals, with Observations on the Marked Seasonal and Other Changes Which Naturally Take Place in Various British Species, and Which Do Not Constitute Varieties" by Edward Blyth (1835) ''Magazine of Natural History'' Volume 8 pages 40-53.
4. Shermer, Michael. 2002 In Darwin’s shadow : the life and science of Alfred Russel Wallace. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-514830-4
5. Darwin, Charles, ''The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection'', Third Edition, 1861
6. Eiseley, L., Darwin and the Mysterious Mr X, E.P. Dutton, New York, 1979, published posthumously by the executors of his will; from Eiseley, L., Charles Darwin, Edward Blyth, and the Theory of Natural selection, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 103(1):94–114, February 1959.
7. Blyth, E., editorial footnote in ''Cuvier's Animal Kingdom'' (London: W. S. Orr & Co., 1840), p. 67.