Cirrhitus Pinnulatus
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Cirrhitus Pinnulatus
''Cirrhitus pinnulatus'', the stocky hawkfish, whitepsotted hawkfish or marbled hawkfish, is a species of marine ray-finned fish, a hawkfish belonging to the family Cirrhitidae. It is found in the Indo-West Pacific region. Taxonomy Cirrhitus pinnulatus was first formally described in 1801 as ''Labrus pinnulatus'' by the German naturalist and explorer Johann Reinhold Forster from Tahiti. Forster's manuscript description was the basis of the description published in 1801 by Johann Gottlob Schneider in his and Marcus Elieser Bloch's ''Systema Ichthyologiae'', although ''Catalog of Fishes'' attributes the name to Forster. When the French naturalist Bernard Germain de Lacépède created the genus ''Cirrhitus'' he placed a single species within it, his own ''Cirrhitus maculatus'' which was later shown to be a synonym of Forster's ''Labrus pinnulatus'', under the name ''C. maculatus'' this species is the type species of its genus. The specific name ''pinnulatus'' means "pinnulated", per ...
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Johann Reinhold Forster
Johann Reinhold Forster (22 October 1729 – 9 December 1798) was a German Continental Reformed church, Reformed (Calvinist) pastor and natural history, naturalist of partially Scottish descent who made contributions to the early ornithology of Europe and North America. He is best known as the naturalist on James Cook's Second voyage of James Cook, second Pacific voyage, where he was accompanied by his son Georg Forster. These expeditions promoted the career of Johann Reinhold Forster and the findings became the bedrock of colonial professionalism and helped set the stage for the future development of anthropology and ethnology. They also laid the framework for general concern about the impact that alteration of the physical environment for European economic expansion would have on exotic societies. Biography Forster's family originated in the Lord Forrester, Lords Forrester in Scotland from where his great-grandfather had emigrated after losing most of his property during the ...
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