Harold Frederick Loomis was an American botanist and myriapodologist known for his contributions to agronomy, plant pathology, and millipede taxonomy. He worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture for over four decades, studying diseases of crop plants, and was a colleague of Orator F. Cook. He also made major contributions to the natural history of Central America and the West Indies, naming over 500 species of millipedes in total. He codescribed with Cook the leggiest animal on earth Illacme plenipes, with over 700 legs.
Harold Loomis was born in the Mertensia neighborhood of Farmington, New York in 1896. He worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 1914 until his retirement in 1958, some 44 years, and was director of the U.S. Plant Introduction Station at Chapman Field, from 1931 to 1958. He was primarily involved in the production of natural rubber, and also worked on diseases of corn and cotton. He was a charter member of the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, and served many years on its Board of Directors. He also collected plants and lichen from the American southwest, often contributing specimens along with botanist Robert Hibbs Peebles. in 1939 Loomis described the tropical palm tree Astrocaryum alatum .
Source: Wikipedia