Lawrence Saylor was a preeminent scarab beetle taxonomist during the 1930s and 1940s who produced a large and significant body of taxonomic work in a relatively short period of time. We know very little about him due, in some measure, to the fact that insect taxonomy was a sideline to his many other professional employments. A review of Saylor’s life is provided here based upon new information recently acquired as well as a brief review of his scientific publications
This publication is part of collection of studies and reports from the University of Iowa, Studies i...
Created and maintained by Andrew B. T. Smith, who would like to thank the following contributors wh...
Dead wood is a largely unexplored reservoir of taxonomic diversity and its ecology is poorly known d...
Lawrence Saylor was a preeminent scarab beetle taxonomist during the 1930s and 1940s who produced a ...
Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell, entomologist and systematic biologist, published nearly 4,000 papers,...
Ross Harold Arnett, Jr., who originated and who frequently edited Insecta Mundi, died July 16, 1999 ...
Longtime UNL entomologist names beetles for dragons Gymnetis rhaegali, Gymnetis drogoni, Gymnetis vi...
This and the following set of papers published in Insecta Mundi are dedicated to Robert E. Woodruff,...
(excerpt) John Robert Eyer died at Carlsbad, New Mexico, on January 30, 1976. J. G. Watts and W. A. ...
It’s a great pleasure and privilege to reflect on the life and career of Dr. Willard Hall Whitcomb. ...
On January 30, 1937, at his home at 3033 Deakin Street in Berkeley, California, Lawrence Bruner, pio...
Until the 1970s the carrion beetles were appreciated by only a handful of entomologists who knew whe...
According to the statement of Kellogg in American Insects, man\u27s real competitors are not the lar...
This biography describes the life and professional work of entomologist and industrialist Richard Si...
Biological librarians are often surprised at the interest that latter-day biologists show in the liv...
This publication is part of collection of studies and reports from the University of Iowa, Studies i...
Created and maintained by Andrew B. T. Smith, who would like to thank the following contributors wh...
Dead wood is a largely unexplored reservoir of taxonomic diversity and its ecology is poorly known d...
Lawrence Saylor was a preeminent scarab beetle taxonomist during the 1930s and 1940s who produced a ...
Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell, entomologist and systematic biologist, published nearly 4,000 papers,...
Ross Harold Arnett, Jr., who originated and who frequently edited Insecta Mundi, died July 16, 1999 ...
Longtime UNL entomologist names beetles for dragons Gymnetis rhaegali, Gymnetis drogoni, Gymnetis vi...
This and the following set of papers published in Insecta Mundi are dedicated to Robert E. Woodruff,...
(excerpt) John Robert Eyer died at Carlsbad, New Mexico, on January 30, 1976. J. G. Watts and W. A. ...
It’s a great pleasure and privilege to reflect on the life and career of Dr. Willard Hall Whitcomb. ...
On January 30, 1937, at his home at 3033 Deakin Street in Berkeley, California, Lawrence Bruner, pio...
Until the 1970s the carrion beetles were appreciated by only a handful of entomologists who knew whe...
According to the statement of Kellogg in American Insects, man\u27s real competitors are not the lar...
This biography describes the life and professional work of entomologist and industrialist Richard Si...
Biological librarians are often surprised at the interest that latter-day biologists show in the liv...
This publication is part of collection of studies and reports from the University of Iowa, Studies i...
Created and maintained by Andrew B. T. Smith, who would like to thank the following contributors wh...
Dead wood is a largely unexplored reservoir of taxonomic diversity and its ecology is poorly known d...