Bernard Master

Bernard F. Master (born May 17, 1941) is an American birder and conservationist after whom the Chocó vireo (Vireo masteri) was named. Master is the first American to have seen a representative of all 229 bird families in the world and has observed more than 7,800 birds in the wild.[1][2] He is the author of No Finish Line: Discovering the World's Secrets One Bird at a Time.

Biography

Master's passion for birding started when he was four years old, at the encouragement of his father Gilbert with whom he'd accompany on bird walks. His family's vacation home in North Wildwood, New Jersey was near Cape May Bird Observatory, a birding mecca and in the path of the largest fall migration in the eastern North America.[2]:ch 1 Master graduated from Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine on June 11, 1966 and began his medical career.

In 1968, Master was drafted into the Vietnam War where he served one year as a battalion surgeon in an Army combat unit and one year as post-surgeon for the U.S. Army's Military Intelligence School.[2]:ch 2 Following discharge, Master spent the next 35 years as a primary care physician in the inner city of Columbus, Ohio.

During his medical years, Master often watched birds at Green Lawn Cemetery, a popular birding spot in Columbus, Ohio,[2]:ch 6 He became a founding board member of the Ohio Ornithological Society in 2004.[3]

In 1994, Bernard Master bid for and won the right to assign the scientific name for a new species of vireo (Passeriformes: Vireonidae) from the Western Andes of Colombia. He named the species Vireo masteri.[4][5]

Master's contributions to world bird conservation were later honored by the late Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (aka Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld), who helped found the World Wide Fund for Nature.[2]:ch 15 [6]

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gollark: Maybe this needs its own component in Rust for something something high performance.
gollark: I could use a bincode-type thing, chunk messages into groups of maybe a thousand each, and run them through zstandard compression, and then have a few uncompressed statistics, but I don't want ABR to store too much state in memory.
gollark: Maybe it should gather data per hour. Or I could try and actually design some extremely densely packed representation.
gollark: Message contents and timestamps would be too big unless I have some ultra-compressed packed form.

References

  1. Dilley, M. "Wing man". Columbus Dispatch. Gatehouse Media. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  2. Master, Bernard F (2015). No Finish Line: Discovering the World's Secrets One Bird at a Time. Little White Dog Press. ISBN 0989158977.
  3. "Officers and Directors of the OOS - Founding Board Members". Ohio Ornithological Society. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  4. Conservation International (2007) Tumbers-Chocó-Magdalena. Accessed 5 January 2010
  5. Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (Aug 28, 2014). The Eponym Dictionary of Birds. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 1472905741.
  6. WWF mourns loss of Founder-President HRH Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands
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