- Howard K. Gloyd
Howard Kay Gloyd (1902–1978) was an American herpetologist who is credited with describing several new
species ofreptile , such as the Florida Cottonmouth, "Agkistrodon piscivorus conanti ". He is also honored by having several species named after him, including thegenus ofAsia n pit vipers, "Gloydius ", the Eastern Fox Snake, "Pantherophis gloydi ", and the Dusty Hognose Snake, "Heterodon nasicus gloydi ".Born in
De Soto, Kansas , Gloyd attendedKansas State University for a year, and then attained his bachelor of science fromOttawa University in 1924. He taught biology at Ottawa University until 1927 when he went to teachzoology at the Agricultural College of Kansas State University. In 1928 he wrote "The Amphibians and Reptiles of Franklin County, Kansas". In 1929, he attained his masters degree atKansas State College , and went to Michigan to become a professor of zoology at theUniversity of Michigan . In 1936 he became director of the Chicago Academy of Sciences, a position which he would hold until 1958. In 1939, he became the vice president of theAmerican Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists , and in 1940 he published "The Rattlesnakes, genera Sistrurus and Crotalus". He organized numerous expeditions toArizona to collect specimens for the Chicago Academy of Sciences. From 1940 until 1947, he was a consultant to the State Natural History Survey ofIllinois . In 1942, he attained his doctorate at Ottawa University. In 1958 he moved to Arizona to become a lecturer and research associate in the zoology department of theUniversity of Arizona , in Tucson. In 1974 he retired to become an emeritus professor at the University of Arizona.The Kansas Herpetological Society grants an annual
scholarship named for Howard K. Gloyd andEdward Harrison Taylor .References
* [http://ebeltz.net/herps/biogappx.html Biographies of People Honored in the Herpetological Nomenclature North America]
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