Animals and Insects

Bug Experts To Replace Derogatory Name Of Invasive Moth

The Entomological Society of America is getting rid of the common names gypsy moth and gypsy ant.

A female Lymantria dispar moth.
Bob Child / AP
SMS

Bug experts are dropping the common name of a destructive insect because it's considered an ethnic slur: the gypsy moth.

The Entomological Society of America, which oversees the common names of bugs, is getting rid of the common name of that critter and the lesser-known gypsy ant.

The group this week announced that for the first time it changed a common name of an insect because it was offensive. In the past they’ve only reassigned names that weren’t scientifically accurate.

“It’s an ethnic slur to begin with that’s been rejected by the Romani people a long time ago,’’ said society president Michelle S. Smith. “Second, nobody wants to be associated with a harmful invasive pest.”

The society is taking a hard look at some of the more than 2,000 common insect names to remove derogatory and geographically inaccurate ones.

About 20 years ago, a committee of fish experts renamed the jewfish into the goliath grouper.

The Entomological Society is now on the hunt for a new common name, a process that will take months, Smith said. 

Until then, even though it’s a mouthful, Smith said the moths should be called by their scientific name, Lymantria dispar or L. dispar.

Additional reporting by the Associated Press.