Daphne Gail Fautin

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Daphne Gail Fautin
Born(1946-05-25)25 May 1946
Died12 March 2021(2021-03-12) (aged 74)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materBeloit College
OccupationProfessor of invertebrate zoology
Known forExtensive work and publications studying and classifying sea anemones and related genera
A sea anemone

Daphne Gail Fautin (25 May 1946 – 12 March 2021) was an American professor of invertebrate zoology at the University of Kansas, specializing in sea anemones and symbiosis. She is world-renowned for her extensive work studying and classifying sea anemones and related species.[1] A large sea anemone-like cnidarian species has been named in her honor, originally called Boloceroides daphneae, but recently renamed to Relicanthus daphneae, after it was discovered (using DNA-based identification techniques) to belong to a previously unknown cnidarian order.[2][3][4] Fautin has published numerous scientific articles and texts—including co-authoring Encyclopædia Britannica's entry on cnidarians—and her publications have been widely cited by other researchers in the field. Among her current positions, she is the curator of the University of Kansas Natural History Museum and serves as vice president and commissioner of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature, overseeing the naming of new species.[5]

Fautin has been called "the world authority on [sea] anemones",[1] by Prof. J. Frederick Grassle of Rutgers University, who led the international Census of Marine Life which was completed in 2010. She has personally identified at least 19 new species and has co-created with her husband, Prof. R. W. Buddemeier of the Kansas Geological Survey, an extensive database of hexacorals and related species as part of the census.[1][6]

Although she lived and worked in landlocked Lawrence, Kansas, she felt that working from dry land was not a serious impediment, stating that "you only need to be near an airport, not the ocean."[1]

Education

She received her

Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics (1992-2001).[8]

She died on March 12, 2021.[9]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Rombeck, Terry (March 22, 2004). "KU marine life expert works from dry land". Lawrence Journal-World.
  2. S2CID 85396602
    .
  3. ^ Howell, Elizabeth (May 18, 2014). "'Sea Anemone' Reclassified as New Kind of Animal". NBC News.
  4. PMID 24806477
    .
  5. ^ Lynch, Brendan M. (December 5, 2013). "Reinventing the high court of organism names". phys.org.
  6. S2CID 33694961
    .
  7. ^ "Dr. Daphne Fautin Curriculum Vitae". University of Kansas Natural History Museum. Archived from the original on July 17, 2014. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  8. .
  9. ^ "Daphne Gail Fautin".

External links