Alphabetically: •
Thomas Borgmeier (1892–1975), German-Brazilian theologian and entomologist •
Murray S. Blum (1929–2015), American chemical ecologist, an expert on pheromones •
Giovanni Cobelli (1849–1937), Italian entomologist, director of the Rovereto museum •
Walter Cecil Crawley, British entomologist •
William Steel Creighton (1902–1973), American entomologist •
Horace Donisthorpe (1870–1951), British myrmecologist, named several new species •
Carlo Emery (1848–1925), Italian entomologist •
Johan Christian Fabricius (1745–1808), Danish entomologist, student of Linnaeus •
Auguste-Henri Forel (1848–1931), Swiss myrmecologist, studied brain structure of humans and ants •
Émil August Goeldi (1859–1917), Swiss-Brazilian naturalist and zoologist •
William Gould (1715–1799), described by Horace Donisthorpe as "the father of British myrmecology" •
Thomas Caverhill Jerdon (1811–1872), British physician, zoologist and botanist •
Walter Wolfgang Kempf (1920–1976), Brazilian myrmecologist •
Pierre André Latreille (1762–1833) French entomologist •
Sir John Lubbock (the 1st Lord and Baron Avebury) (1834–1913), wrote on hymenoptera sense organs •
Gustav Mayr (1830–1908), Austrian entomologist and professor in Pest and Vienna, specialised in Hymenoptera •
William Nylander (1822–1899), Finnish botanist, biologist, mycologist, entomologist and myrmecologist •
Basil Derek Wragge-Morley (1920–1969), research included genetics, social behaviour of animals, and the behaviour of agricultural pests •
Fergus O'Rourke (1923– 2010), Irish zoologist •
Julius Roger (1819–1865), German
physician,
entomologist and
folklorist •
Felix Santschi (1872–1940), Swiss entomologist •
Theodore Christian Schneirla (1902–1968), American animal psychologist •
Frederick Smith (1805–1879), worked in the zoology department of the British Museum from 1849, specialising in the Hymenoptera •
Roy R. Snelling (1934–2008), American entomologist credited with many important finds of rare or new ant species •
Erich Wasmann (1859–1931), Austrian entomologist •
John Obadiah Westwood (1805–1893), English entomologist and archaeologist also noted for his artistic talents •
William Morton Wheeler (1865–1937), curator of invertebrate zoology in the American Museum of Natural History, described many new species •
Edward Osborne Wilson (1929–2021),
Pulitzer Prize winning American myrmecologist, revolutionized the field of sociobiology
Contemporary myrmecologists •
Barry Bolton, English ant taxonomist •
John S. Clark, Scottish myrmecologist •
Deborah Gordon (1955–), studies ant colony behavior and ecology •
Bert Hölldobler (1936–),
Pulitzer Prize winning German myrmecologist •
Laurent Keller (1961–), Swiss evolutionary biologist and myrmecologist •
Mark W. Moffett (1958–), American entomologist and photographer •
Corrie S. Moreau, American evolutionary biologist and entomologist, wrote on evolution and diversification of ants •
Justin Orvel Schmidt, American entomologist, studies the chemical and behavioral defenses of ants, wasps, and arachnids •
Bernhard Seifert, German entomologist •
Walter R. Tschinkel, American myrmecologist ==See also==