Theodosius (also Theodor or Theodorus) Gottlieb von Scheven (born 3 January 1751 on Usedom - died 23 March 1810 from typhus)[1] was a pastor and German entomologist who specialised in Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera.
Erstes Stück" in Der Naturforscher volume 10 pages 88–101 Tab.
In that same paper, he described three additional moths that are not currently considered valid taxa: Sphinx caffra (a junior homonym to Sphinx caffra Linnaeus, 1764), Sphinx scabiosae (synonymous to Zygaena purpuralis per Naumann & Tremewan, 1984)[2] and Sphinx schaefferi (Zygaena ephialtes, also per Naumann & Tremewan, 1984)[2] He also described Crabro scutellatus (as Sphex scutellatus) in 1781.
[3] Some of his work on bagworm moths, particularly his observations on the reproductive methods of "Bombyx vestita" (now Paidia rica), was cited in volumes I[a] and IV[b] of William Kirby and William Spence's An Introduction to Entomology, and described by Kirby as an "excellent elucidation of the history of this tribe, whose mode of generation is so singular".
He published several entomological papers, including in Der Naturforscher (twice in 1777, as well as in 1780, 1781 and 1784) and in Johann Kaspar Füssli's Neue Magazin für Liebhaber der Entomologie in 1782.