Joseph Richard Slevin
Joseph R. Slevin | |
---|---|
Saint Mary's College, Kansas | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Herpetology |
Institutions | California Academy of Sciences |
Joseph Richard Slevin (September 13, 1881 – February 17, 1957) was an American herpetologist and the second curator of herpetology at the California Academy of Sciences, with which he was affiliated for over 50 years. He collected reptile and amphibian specimens from around the world, notably in the Galápagos Islands in a 17-month expedition, and was largely responsible for re-growing the academy's herpetological collection following its destruction in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. He wrote or co-wrote nearly 60 scientific papers, and is commemorated in the scientific names of over a dozen species or subspecies of animals and plants.
Early life
Slevin was born in
Galápagos expedition
In 1904, Slevin was hired by the Academy of Sciences and trained by
During the expedition, the academy was nearly destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and subsequent fires, and the collection of reptiles and amphibians was reduced from over 8,000 specimens to only 13.[6] After a full year of exploring the islands, the expedition left the archipelago on September 25, 1906, and returned to San Francisco on November 29 of that year. Slevin, King, and others had collected over 4,500 reptiles–nearly 4,000 from the Galápagos alone–which Van Denburgh called "by far the largest and most important collections ever gathered on these islands."[4] In addition to his field observations, Slevin published the ship's logbook, which is of historic value to students of the Galápagos.[1]
Slevin returned to the Galápagos Islands to collect again in 1928–1929.[6]
Other work
Slevin also collected specimens throughout the western United States and Mexico as well as Central America and Australia.[2][6] Biologist Vasco M. Tanner writes Slevin was largely responsible for collecting and preserving the more than 75,000 specimens housed in the academy by the time of his death.[6]
During World War I, Slevin served as a submarine commander in the Navy, and in 1928 succeeded Van Denbourgh as curator of academy herpetology collections. He tried to re-enlist during World War II but was denied due to his age, and instead did contract work for the Navy in the academy's instrument shop.[2] He produced 58 scientific publications, including 12 co-authored with Van Denburgh[2] and was elected an honorary member of the academy in 1954.[6] He is commemorated in the scientific names of 12 species or subspecies of snakes and lizards,[7] as well as Slevin's mouse (Peromyscus slevini)[8] and several species of invertebrates and plants.
Eponymous taxa
The taxa (species and subspecies) named after Slevin are listed chronologically below, followed by author(s) and year of naming, and common name if applicable. Taxa are listed as originally described: subsequent research may have reassigned taxa or rendered some as invalid synonyms of previously named taxa.
- Antillophis slevini Van Denburgh 1912 (= Pseudalsophis slevini) – banded Galápagos snake, Slevin's snake
- Sauromalus slevini Van Denburgh, 1922 – Monserrat chuckwalla
- Bulimulus slevini Hanna, 1923 – a land snail[9]
- Neomammillaria slevinii Britton & Rose (1923) (syn. of Mammillaria albicans) – a cactus[10]
- Chamberlin, 1923 – a pseudoscorpion[11]
- Agave sleviniana I.M.Johnst. (1924) (syn. of Agave sobria) – an agave[12]
- Cockerell, 1924 – a leafcutter bee[13]
- Peromyscus slevini Mailliard, 1924 – Slevin's mouse
- Trachypachus slevini Van Dyke, 1925 – a ground beetle[14]
- Dryadophis melanolomus slevini Stuart, 1933 (= Mastigodryas melanolomus slevini) – Slevin's lizard eater
- Amphisbaena slevini Schmidt, 1936 – Slevin's worm lizard
- Sceloporus slevini H.M. Smith, 1936 – Slevin's bunchgrass lizard
- Trimetopon slevini Dunn, 1940 – Slevin's tropical ground snake
- Lygosoma slevini Loveridge, 1941 (= Nannoscincus slevini) – Slevin's dwarf skink, Slevin's elf skink
- Hypsiglena slevini W. Tanner, 1943 – Baja California night snake
- Coleonyx variegatus slevini Klauber, 1943 – Slevin's banded gecko
- Alastoroides slevini Bohart, 1948 – a potter wasp now in the genus Hypalastoroides[15]
- Masticophis slevini Lowe & Norris, 1955 – San Esteban Island whipsnake
- Stenodactylus slevini G. Haas, 1957 – Slevin's sand gecko, Slevin's short-fingered gecko
- Emoia slevini W.C. Brown & Falanruw, 1972 – Mariana skink, Slevin's brown skink, Slevin's emo skink, Slevin's skink
References
- ^ JSTOR 1466971.
- ^ JSTOR 1440124.
- JSTOR 3636164.
- ^ a b c Van Denburgh, John (1907). "Preliminary descriptions of four new races of gigantic land tortoises from the Galápagos Islands". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 4th series. 1: 1–6.
- ^ Van Denburgh, John (1914). "The gigantic land tortoises of the Galápagos archipelago". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. Series 4. 2 (1): 203–374.
- ^ JSTOR 41710983.
- ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5.
- S2CID 198969179. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-06-24.
- ^ Hanna, G. Dallas [in French] (1923). "Expedition of the California Academy of Sciences to the Gulf of California in 1921. Land and freshwater mollusks". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 4. 12 (17): 483–528.
- ^ Britton, N. L.; Rose, J. N. (1923). The Cactaceae: descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus family. Vol. 4. Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institution of Washington.
- . Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 4. 12 (17): 353–387.
- ^ Johnston, Ivan Murray (1924). "Expedition of the California Academy of Sciences to the Gulf of California in 1921. The botany (the vascular plants)". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 4. 12 (30): 915–1218.
- Cockerell, T. D. A. (1924). "Expedition of the California Academy of Sciences to the Gulf of California in 1921. The Bees (II)". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 4. 12 (27): 529–560.
- )
- ^ Bohart, R. M. (1948). "Contributions toward a knowledge of the insect fauna of lower California. No. 9. Hymenoptera; Eumeninae". Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences. 24 (9): 313–336.
Further reading
- Slevin, Joseph R. (1931). "Log of the Schooner "Academy" on a voyage of scientific research to the Galápagos Islands 1905–1906". Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences. 17.