-
Keller overtime strike gives USA Olympic women's ice hockey gold
-
NASA delivers harsh assessment of botched Boeing Starliner test flight
-
US Fed Governor Miran scales back call for rate cuts this year
-
Gu qualifies for Olympic halfpipe final marred by horror crash
-
Trump issues Iran with ultimatum as US ramps up military presence
-
Peru's brand-new president under fire for child sex comments
-
UK police hold ex-prince Andrew for hours in unprecedented blow
-
Former Olympic freeski halfpipe champion Sharpe crashes heavily
-
Former Olympic champion Sharpe suffers heavy halfpipe crash
-
Belarus says US failed to issue visas for 'Board of Peace' meeting
-
Forest boss Pereira makes perfect start with Fenerbahce rout in Europa play-offs
-
Alcaraz fights back to book last four berth in Qatar
-
England captain Itoje warns of 'corrosive' social media after abuse of Ireland's Edogbo
-
War-weary Sudanese celebrate as Ramadan returns to Khartoum
-
Townsend expects recalled Scotland duo to shine in Six Nations clash with Wales
-
Peru's new president under fire for child sex comments
-
UK king opens London fashion week despite brother's arrest
-
Belarus frees opposition politician Statkevich
-
Striking Argentine workers slow down Buenos Aires in protest over labor reforms
-
Starlink loss a blow to Russian forces in Ukraine: experts
-
UN's Sudan probe finds 'hallmarks of genocide' in El-Fasher
-
Belarus frees opposition politician Statkevich: wife
-
Rocket re-entry pollution measured in atmosphere for first time
-
Airbus ready to build two new European fighters if countries want
-
Canada makes push to attract skilled migrants, including for defence
-
US threatens to leave IEA if net zero focus remains
-
Walmart outlines big AI ambitions as it reports mixed results
-
Trump kicks off his 'Board of Peace,' as war clouds loom on Iran
-
UK pubs to stay open late if home nations reach World Cup knockouts
-
TotalEnergies in high-stakes French trial over climate change
-
Bosnia probes fascist salutes at Croatian singer's concert
-
US and Israel issue dire warnings to Iran alongside US military buildup
-
British public cheer Andrew's arrest with a smile and relief
-
Argentine workers go on strike to protest Milei's labor reforms
-
Nakai targets Olympic skating upset as 'skimo' makes debut
-
What we know about ex-prince Andrew's friendship with Epstein
-
US trade deficit in goods widens to new record in 2025
-
Oil extends gains on US-Iran tensions, stocks retreat
-
Williams 'on the back foot' after missing Barcelona: Albon
-
Real Madrid submit evidence to UEFA in Vinicius racism probe
-
Olympics rev up Milan's renewal but locals fear price to pay
-
Cardona Coll, Fatton win Olympic-debuting ski mountaineering sprint golds
-
MSF will keep operating in Gaza 'as long as we can': mission head
-
Russian Filippov wins first medal at Milan-Cortina Games for individual neutral athletes
-
Italian Milan takes sprint honours at UAE Tour
-
Dozens killed in jihadist attacks in northwest Nigeria
-
Zimbabwe unbeaten in T20 World Cup after six-wicket Sri Lanka win
-
Postecoglou admits taking Nottingham Forest post a 'bad decision'
-
Switzerland's Fatton wins women's ski mountaineering sprint on Olympic debut
-
Kinghorn, Van der Merwe return for Scotland against Six Nations strugglers Wales
Australian scientists grapple with 'despicable' butterfly heist
Almost eight decades after Colin Wyatt stole and then vandalised thousands of precious Australian butterfly specimens, scientists are still untangling his web of deception.
Between 1946 and 1947, the British ski champion and acclaimed painter charmed his way into museums in Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide and pilfered 3,000 of the insects.
He then painted their wings to make them look like different species and stripped labels to erase vital records about which specimen belonged to which museum.
His motive remains a mystery -- Wyatt later blamed the breakdown of his marriage.
Wyatt died in a plane crash in 1975 and most of his collection was sold to museums -- sending his mislabelled insects to all corners of the globe.
Decades on, lepidopterists are still struggling to repair the damage.
"He created such a taxonomic mess, it will never really be able to be sorted out," Museums Victoria's head of strategic collection management Maryanne McCubbin told AFP.
"I just get so angry. It is a despicable criminal act and it has huge scientific consequences," she said.
"He had no right to steal collections that we hold on behalf of the public."
The numbers are staggering.
In Melbourne, Wyatt smuggled 827 lepidopterans -- winged insects that include butterflies and moths -- out of the museum in tin containers in a single weekend.
He stole another 1,500 butterflies from a museum in Sydney as well as 603 from the Adelaide Museum.
Those butterflies now must be affixed with a label designating them as having "passed through C. W. Wyatt Theft coll. 1946–1947".
- 'A really vindictive theft' -
"It was a really vindictive theft," Victoria Museum collection manager of terrestrial invertebrates Simon Hinkley told AFP.
"Never in my lifetime have I seen something like this."
Wyatt posted the almost 3,000 stolen butterflies back to Britain before fleeing.
The plundered pieces included holotypes -- the original specimen from when the species was first officially described.
There were also samples of rare metallic blue butterflies that often fly at the top of trees -- caught by a net-wielding collector who strapped himself to tree trunks, local media reported at the time.
The empty museum drawers were not discovered until later.
But it did not take long for the museums to narrow down a suspect and contact London authorities.
Police found Wyatt at home with the stolen Australian butterflies, part of a collection nearing 40,000, TIME magazine reported at the time.
A British judge let him off with a 100 pound fine, equivalent to 5,000 pounds ($6,800) today.
The Australian specimens were repatriated, with staff from the three facilities taking more than nine days to sort the colourful fliers and return them home.
- From Munich to Melbourne -
Since the heist, museums have used taxonomists to examine butterfly collections and identify where specimen label data does not match their knowledge of that species -- a never-ending puzzle.
But not all of them made it back and Wyatt's stolen butterflies are still being found.
A precious holotype butterfly was discovered in Munich in 2022, mislabelled for almost eight decades.
It was only after a skilled entomologist spotted the Peacock Jewel and realised that it belonged to the Melbourne facility that the butterfly was returned.
The flying jewel, which has iridescent peacock-green and orange wings, will be hand-delivered to Melbourne.
In another case, a lepidopterist in Canberra found a butterfly had been painted to resemble another species and mislabelled.
Hinkley said he wonders how many more specimens are incorrectly labelled.
"If I could go back and meet him and get him before he did that, I'd be keen to ask him why he did it," he said.
"The damage he did was significant," he said.
"What he did messes with the whole collection... you can't trust anything that has been through his hands."
H.E.Young--AMWN