George Masters

George Masters (1837-1912) was a zoologist, active in Australia during the 19th century.

Biography

Born in Maidstone, England, to Matilda, née Terry, he was trained as a gardener by his father, George Masters, before moving to Sydney. Masters began working as a gardener, then collecting insects in Queensland for William John Macleay, with the backing of the zoologist Gerard Krefft, later taking a position with the Australian Museum as an assistant curator.[1]

Works

George Masters was a zoölogical collector, primarily of birds, but also of snakes and other animals. Masters also made a significant contribution to entomology, making large collections of insects available for research. He journeyed to remote regions to obtain specimens, including some that will difficult to obtain and are now listed as rare or endangered. His expeditions across the eastern states were extended to South and Western Australia, Tasmania, and Lord Howe Island. Noted collections include a series of specimens of the Queensland lungfish Neoceratodus forsteri, and in Western Australia, Dasyornis longirostris (western bristlebird) and Atrichornis clamosus (noisy scrub bird).[1]

Masters made two collections from Australia's south west for the museum in Sydney, noted as exceptional in a period when the study the birds of the region was lacking. He arrived by ship at King George Sound in 1866 for his first expedition, collecting a single specimen of the cryptic noisy scrub bird and two of the western bristlebird in a total of 281 bird skins. His second expedition (1868–9) was longer and further, journeying from Albany as far as the head of the Pallinup River, returning to Sydney with six more Atrichornis clamosus skins, 10 of Dasyornis longirostris, and eight of Psophodes nigrogularis (western whipbird).[2] These collections also supplemented those of nests and eggs of that state at the Australian Museum, and allowed A. J. North to publish more complete records of its birds oology and nidification in 1889.[3]

He continued collecting for himself, Krefft, Macleay, and others, despite an agreement with the museum to desist from doing so for personal gain.[1]

Masters is said to have gained extensive knowledge of Australian fauna, but avoided recording this in writing.[1] However, Masters observations of Atrichornis clamosus were published and are important records of a rare and little-known bird. His collections are often cited in North's Nests and eggs of birds found breeding in Australia (publ. 1901–14).[2] He served as curator at the Macleay Museum until 1912.[1]

Legacy

Masters is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of Australian venomous snake, Drysdalia mastersii.[4]

gollark: So it's... 11:11:11:11:7?
gollark: Suuuuure.
gollark: Oh, 11 10 11 7.
gollark: 11 10 10 7 actually.
gollark: Isn't this going to leave out people in a bunch of time zones?

References

  1. Whitley, G. P. "Masters, George (1837–1912)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  2. Serventy, D. L.; Whittell, H. M. (1951). "Sect. 1 Part 3 (c)". A handbook of the birds of Western Australia (with the exception of the Kimberley division) (2 ed.). Perth: Paterson Brokensha. pp. 35–6.
  3. North, Alfred John (1889). Descriptive catalogue of the nests & eggs of birds found breeding in Australia and Tasmania. [Catalogue no. 12]. Sydney: Australian Museum. pp. v–vi. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.56932.
  4. Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Masters", p. 171).
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