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Some Biogeographers, Evolutionists and Ecologists:
After taking his M.A. degree from New College, Oxford, as a student of George Rolleston, Beddard accepted a position as a naturalist and editor for the Challenger Expedition Commission, where his new boss was John Murray. Although he had not been an exceptional student, as a professional figure he was a hard worker and turned out several hundred publications on birds, mammals, reptiles, and invertebrates, being especially known for his studies on the anatomy of birds, and on oligochaetes. His wide-ranging interests made him a natural to tackle two subjects of more general interest, animal coloration and zoogeography, on each of which he published a book in the 1890s. Other connections for Beddard: he was awarded the Linnean Society's Gold Medal for his book on oligochaetes, and for various periods served as editor of the Zoological Record, a lecturer at Guy's Hospital Medical School, and an examiner at the University of London, Oxford University, and the University of New Zealand. Life Chronology --born in Dudley, England, on 19 June 1858. For Additional Information, See: --The Auk
43(3) (1926): 413.
Copyright 2007 by Charles H. Smith. All
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