Edna Mosher

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Edna Mosher
Born(1878-07-20)July 20, 1878
Kempt Shore, Hants County, Nova Scotia
DiedMay 7, 1972(1972-05-07) (aged 93)
Windsor, Nova Scotia
OccupationEntomologist
Notable work
  • A classification of the Lepidoptera based on characters of the pupae 1915. Thesis (PhD.) University of Illinois[1]
  • The grasses of Illinois 1918. Bulletin No. 205. University of Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station.[2]

Edna Mosher (July 20, 1878 โ€“ May 7, 1972) was a Canadian

lepidopterist known for her pioneering work on Lepidoptera pupae morphology
.

Early life and education

Edna Mosher was born in July 1878 at Kempt Shore, Hants County, Nova Scotia to John Fulton and Margaret Harvie Mosher. She learned natural history from her father and grandfather, and her mother and grandmother taught her horticulture. From an early age, she expressed a desire to teach. She graduated from Provincial Normal School. Her initial attempts to attend a university were hindered by the fact she was a woman. In 1905, she began a class in gardening at Cornell University. She was then able to obtain permission to pursue a degree in science. At Cornell, she studied botany and zoology; it is where she first took entomology.[3]

After graduating with a

doctoral dissertation.[3] In 1915, she was awarded a doctorate,[4] and her thesis A Classification of the Lepidoptera based on characters of the pupae was published as a major bulletin of the Illinois State Laboratory of Natural History. Her doctoral advisor was Alexander D. MacGillivray [Wikidata]. Mosher's thesis, considered pioneering at the time, remains a definitive work on Lepidoptera.[3][5][6]

Career

Edna Mosher taught school in Nova Scotia from 1902โ€“1905 to earn enough to pay for her own education. After earning her Bachelor's degree, Mosher was a supervisor of nature study and school gardens until 1910. She taught for a time at Gary, Indiana. In 1913 she began work for the Illinois Natural History Survey. In 1915 she worked at the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station for a summer. Following that, she was an instructor at Illinois, Ohio State University,[4] and eventually the University of New Mexico. At the University of New Mexico, she became a Professor of Biology and later Dean of Women.[4][7] In 1923, after her mother fell ill, Mosher moved to Garden City, New York where she taught biology at Adelphi University until retirement in 1942.[3] She died May 7, 1972, in Windsor, Nova Scotia.[5][8]

Awards and honors

Mosher was the first woman fellow of the Entomological Society of America, in 1920.[9]

References

  1. .
  2. ^ "The grasses of Illinois". 1918.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Zimmerman, Elwood C. (1973). "Edna Mosher, 1878-1972 Authority on the pupae of Lepidoptera". Bulletin of the Entomological Society of Canada. 5: 143โ€“145.
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ a b Comstock, John Henry (1924). "An Introduction to Entomology".
  6. JSTOR 25009961
    .
  7. .
  8. ^ "Bulletin - Entomological Society of Canada". 1973.
  9. ISSN 0013-8754
    .