Carl Leavitt Hubbs
Carl Leavitt Hubbs | |
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Carl Leavitt Hubbs (October 19, 1894 – June 30, 1979) was an American
Biography
Youth
He was born in Williams, Arizona. He was the son of Charles Leavitt and Elizabeth (née Goss) Hubbs. His father had a wide variety of jobs (farmer, iron mine owner, newspaper owner). The family moved several times before settling in San Diego where he got his first taste of natural history.[1] After his parents divorced in 1907, he lived with his mother, who opened a private school in Redondo Beach, California. His maternal grandmother Jane Goble Goss, one of the first female doctors, showed Hubbs how to harvest shellfish and other sea creatures.
One of his teachers, impressed by Hubbs's abilities in science, recommended that he study chemistry at the
Curator
From 1917 until 1920 Hubbs served as the assistant curator of fish, amphibians, and reptiles at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. He married Laura Cornelia Clark on June 15, 1918, with whom he had three children. His wife, who had also studied at Stanford, having received her BA in 1915 and her master's degree in 1916, taught math.
In 1920, he took the position of curator of fish at the Museum of Zoology at the University of Michigan, a position he held for 24 years. In 1927, while working at the
California
In addition to his position as conservator, Hubbs was the first director of the Institute for Fisheries Research in the Department of Conservation of Michigan (1930–1935). In this role, he conducted research on the diverse inventory of regional fauna, mortality, water pollution, growth and predation. During his stay at the University of Michigan, Hubbs issued more than 300 publications, almost entirely devoted to fish. His studies were not confined to the United States because he also studied a large collection of fish from Japan.
From 1944 to 1969, Hubbs taught biology at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego in La Jolla, where he replaced Francis Bertody Sumner. From 1969 to 1979 he served as professor emeritus. He accepted the post for the new research opportunities it opened. Still, the position offered a lower salary and the rules prevented him from hiring his wife.[3]
The restrictions of World War II forced the Scripps Institution to rent his research boat to the army, significantly restricting his research opportunities. During the summer of 1946,
In the years following the war, Hubbs began doing research in the field of commercial and recreational fishing. He observed changes in population patterns depending on the fluctuation in temperatures in the Pacific Ocean. He began studies of ancient climates through such tools as dating mollusk shells. His research led to the founding of a laboratory in 1957 to provide dating for archaeological and geological samples. He bequeathed his collection to San Diego's Archaeological Museum of Man in 1973.
Family
Hubbs was married to mathematician Laura Cornelia Clark Hubbs, sister of ichthyologist Frances Naomi Clark. They met on a field trip of the Stanford Natural History Club. The couple worked there and had three children who survived to adulthood, Frances (born in 1919), Clark born in 1921 and Earl born in 1922. Frances, who married the ichthyologist Robert Rush Miller, and Clark both became ichthyologists, while Earl became a headteacher.[4]
Death
He died June 30, 1979, in
Scientific research
Hubbs issued 712 publications. At first, he studied the fish of the
Hubbs was a member of several of
Legacy
The Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute is named after Hubbs[8] Hubbs's name was given to a dried-up lake in Nevada, and to a number of organisms:[9]
Taxon named in his honor
- five genera and twenty-two species of fish, including
- Allodontichthys hubbsi,
- Astyanax hubbsi(Mexican cave fish),
- Colpichthys hubbsi,
- Coregonus hubbsi(Ives Lake cisco),
- Cottus hubbsi,
- Gambusia hubbsi,
- Gobiomorphus hubbsi(bluegill bully),
- Gymnothorax hubbsi,
- Lampanyctus hubbsi,
- Lampetra hubbsi (Kern brook lamprey),
- Leucichthys hubbsi,
- Malacoctenus hubbsi (Redside blenny),
- Merluccius-hubbsi (Argentine hake),
- Moxostoma hubbsi(copper redhorse),
- Novumbra hubbsi(olympic mudminnow),
- Oryzias hubbsi,
- The Southern scythemarked butterflyfish Prognathodes carlhubbsi Nalbant, 1995
- Pteronotropis hubbsi(bluehead shiner),
- Rosenblattichthys hubbsi (Hubbs' pearleye),
- Strongylura hubbsi
- a genus and a species of lichen
- a species of bird
- two species of mollusk, including Abyssotrophon hubbsi
- a species of crab
- three species of cave arthropod
- two species of insect
- three species of algae
- Hubbs' beaked whale, Mesoplodon carlhubbsi
Progeny
- a human, Obadiah Carl Miller, a great-grandson
Notes
- ^ Cf. Norris (1974) : 586.
- ^ With a guide, North American Bird Eggs, Chester Albert Reed (1876-1912). Cf Norris (1974) : 587.
- ^ Many institutions have a rule prohibiting the hiring of two members of the same family. Cf Shor et al. (1987) : 226.
- S2CID 198153372.
- ^ Cf. Norris (1974) : 592.
- ^ Cf. Sterling et al. (1997) : 385.
- S2CID 198160356.
- ^ "Marine Life Scientific Research, Ocean Research, Hubbs Sea World Research". hswri.org.
- ^ Cf. Norris (1974) : 581.
Taxon described by him
References
- Norris, Kenneth S. (1974). "To Carl Leavitt Hubbs, a Modern Pioneer Naturalist on the Occasion of His Eightieth Year". Copeia. 1974 (3): 581–594. JSTOR 1442670.
- Shor, Elizabeth A.; Richard H. Rosenblatt; John D. Isaacs (1987). "Carl Leavitt Hubbs, October 18, 1894-June 30, 1979". Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences. 56: 214–226. ISSN 0077-2933.
- Sterling, Keir B.; Richard P. Harmond; George A. Cevasco; Lorne F. Hammond (1997) [1997]. Biographical dictionary of American and Canadian naturalists and environmentalists. Westport: Greenwood Press. pp. xix + 937. ISBN 978-0-313-23047-9.