Gordon Floyd Ferris

Gordon Floyd Ferris (January 2, 1893 in Bayard, Kansas May 21, 1958) was an American entomologist who served as professor of biology at Stanford University from 1912 to 1958 and earned a reputation for his teaching. He founded and edited the journal Microentomology, preferring to work on insects that could only be examined on microscopic slides. He was a specialist on the systematics of the Coccoidea.[1][2]

Gordon Floyd Ferris
Born(1893-01-02)January 2, 1893
DiedMay 21, 1958(1958-05-21) (aged 65)
Spouse(s)Roxana Judkins Stinchfield Ferris

Ferris was born in Bayard, Kansas where his father was a railroad worker. When he was young the family moved to Monticello, Missouri where they lived in a log cabin. His mother died when he was three and he went to live with his paternal grandparents in La Harpe, Kansas. Leslie, an older brother went to Ottawa and helped Ferris join Ottawa University in 1909. Ferris however was unable to complete studies and planned to join the navy. Leslie found Ferris a job the Telluride power company. The power company was interested in training its people, mostly at Cornell University. Ferris however chose Stanford University in 1912 with a $450 p.a. grant from the power company. While in Ottawa had been influenced by Vernon Kellogg's American Insects. Ferris obtaining an A.B. in 1916 and an M.A. in 1918. He became a teaching assistant in entomology at Stanford University. He inculcated skills in specimen preparation and illustration of details among his students. In his early years, he joined the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology on field trips to collect ectoparasites of mammals. He began systematics studies under Vernon Kellogg on Anoplura and also studied Coccidae with Rennie Wilbur Doane.[3][4]

Ferris was against searches of personal belongings for plant quarantine measures and preferred instead that eradication measures be taken by the government. This led to clashes with other entomologists. Ferris helped found a group of Californian "biosystematists" who influenced each other. As a comparative morphologist he sought rigor in recognizing homology in structures. As a teacher, Ferris was popular. Around the 1940s he insisted that graduate students learned reading technical papers in German. He also taught courses in the philosophy of biology. He guided about 19 students for Ph.D.s and forty-five MA students.[5][6][7]

Ferris was an active Sea Scout and was an avid instructor for scouts who came aboard his ship. Ferris' papers are held at the California Academy of Sciences. He was married to botanist Roxana Judkins Stinchfield Ferris.

Awards

Works

Ferris published numerous papers, many in his journal Microentomology. A bibliography was published in the memorial edition of that journal and some additional ones are documented by Leech (1959). Some of the books he wrote include:

gollark: But using actual relational databases can provide faster access, transactions, fast search, not having to deal with XML, that sort of thing.
gollark: I like SQLite.
gollark: What would be neat is if we used SQLite databases instead of stupid stuff like `.docx`'s weird zipped XML thing.
gollark: So it's a poorly optimised file format?
gollark: All documents should just be HTML always all the time.

References

  1. Wiggins, Ira L.; Spiegelberg, Frederic; Twitty, Victor C. "Memorial Resolution: Gordon Floyd Ferris (1893–1958)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-07-07.
  2. "Gordon F. Ferris Anoplura (Phthiraptera) and Ectoparasitic Diptera Collections". Essig Museum of Entomology. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
  3. Wiggins, I. L. (1958). "Gordon F. Ferris". Microentomology. 23 (2): 65–92.
  4. Usinger, R.L. (1959). "Gordon Floyd Ferris 1893-1958". The Pan-Pacific Entomologist. 35 (1): 1–12.
  5. Wiggins, Ira L. (1959). "Gordon Floyd Ferris, The Teacher". The Pan-Pacific Entomologist. 35 (1): 13–24.
  6. McKenzie, Howard L. (1959). "Gordon Floyd Ferris as the student of scale insects". The Pan-Pacific Entomologist. 35 (1): 25–28.
  7. Leech, H.B. (1959). "Bibliography of Gordon F. Ferris". The Pan-Pacific Entomologist. 35 (1): 29–50.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.