Walter E. Meshaka Jr. Explained

Walter E. Meshaka Jr.
Birth Place:Worcester, Massachusetts
Nationality:American
Field:Biology
Work Institutions:State Museum of Pennsylvania

Walter E. Meshaka Jr. is an American herpetologist and natural historian. He was the supervisory curator for the four National Parks in southern Florida from 1995 to 2000.[1] In 2000 he became the Senior Curator of Zoology and Botany at the State Museum of Pennsylvania in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[2] His research has been covered by Lawrence Journal-World,[3] among other news outlets.

Early life and education

Meshaka was born in Worcester to Lebanese-American parents of Melkite Catholic Christian heritage. He earned a B.S. in biology in 1985 from the University of South Florida. Then, he earned a M.S. in Biology in 1988 from Arkansas State University,[4] and completed his Ph.D. in 1994 at the Florida International University[5]

Research

His primary focus is on North American and exotic amphibians and reptiles with a strong connection to the herpetofauna of southern Florida.[2] [6]

J. Whitfield Gibbons noted, "Meshaka’s thoughtful afterword on exotic species introductions to Florida offers some achievable solutions for controlling the influx of more herpetofauna.".[7] He published four pocket field guides with Joseph T. Collins largely "intended to raise public awareness".[8] Their "Pocket Guide to Lizards and Turtles" is said to be "useful for all naturalists to carry with them in eastern Canada. It is especially ideal for junior naturalists as a “starter” guide."[9]

Meshaka has collaborated with the Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Powdermill Nature Reserve on field herpetology research.[10] A long-term mark-recapture study of the ten species of snakes occurring at the preserve has ensued since 2002.[10] He has resurrected and continued a long-term study on Eastern Box Turtles and Wood Turtles that was established by Graham Netting in 1958 and continued until Netting's death in 1996.[10]

Selected bibliography

Books

Monographs

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CNAH: The Center for North American Herpetology. cnah.org.
  2. Meshaka, W.E., Jr. et al. 2006. STATUS AND GEOGRAPHIC EXPANSION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN GECKO, HEMIDACTYLUS TURCICUS, IN LOUISIANA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 1:45-50, Pp. 50
  3. Web site: Gecko migrates north to Kansas. LJWorld.com.
  4. Meshaka, W.E. 1988. Reproductive cycles of the Ozark Zigzag Salamander (Plethodon angusticlavius) from northcentral Arkansas. Arkansas State University Masters Thesis. Jonesboro, Arkansas. (Cover page lists advisor and committee members)
  5. Adler, Kraig, ed. (2012). Contributions to the History of Herpetology. Volume 3. Vancouver, British Columbia: Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles. .
  6. W.E., Jr. et al. 2006. STATUS AND GEOGRAPHIC EXPANSION OF THE MEDITERRANEAN GECKO, HEMIDACTYLUS TURCICUS, IN LOUISIANA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 1:45-50, Pp. 50
  7. Gibbons, J.W. 2004. Book Review: The Exotic Amphibias and Reptiles of Florida. The Quarterly Review of Biology 79:436-437
  8. Web site: New booklet aims at public 'awareness' about snakes in Pennsylvania. PennLive.com. 21 March 2010 .
  9. Cook, F.R. 2013. A Pocket Guide to Lizards and Turtles of Pennsylvania. by Walter E. Meshaka, Jr., and Joseph T. Collins. 2012. [book review]. Canadian Field-Naturalist 126:345-346.
  10. Web site: Herpetology : Carnegie Museum of Natural History. carnegiemnh.org.