Ernst Hartert


Ernst Johann Otto Hartert was a widely published German ornithologist.

Life and career

Hartert was born in Hamburg, Germany. In July 1891, he married the illustrator Claudia Bernadine Elisabeth Hartert in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, with whom he had a son named son Joachim Karl Hartert,, who was killed as an English soldier on the Somme.
Together with his wife, he was the first to describe the blue-tailed Buffon hummingbird subspecies. The article On a collection of Humming Birds from Ecuador and Mexico appears to be their only joint publication.
Hartert was employed by Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild as ornithological curator of Rothshild's private Natural History Museum at Tring, in England from 1892 to 1929.
Hartert published the quarterly museum periodical Novitates Zoologicae with Rothschild, and the Hand-List of British Birds with Francis Charles Robert Jourdain, Norman Frederick Ticehurst and Harry Forbes Witherby. He wrote Die Vögel der paläarktischen Fauna and travelled in India, Africa, and South America on behalf of his employer.
In 1930, Hartert retired to Berlin, where he died in 1933.
Hartert had been a mentor to Erwin Stresemann, whose cremated remains were interred at Hartert's grave in 1972.

Works

Among the written publications of Ernst Hartert are:
A species of lizard, Hemiphyllodactylus harterti, and 12 birds are named in his honor.