Lincoln Brower

Lincoln Pierson Brower (September 10, 1931 – July 17, 2018) was an American entomologist and ecologist, known for his work on monarch butterflies through six decades, including on their automimicry, chemical ecology and conservation.[1][2][3] G. Pasteur called this Browerian mimicry, after Lincoln and his first wife Jane Van Zandt Brower.[4]

Lincoln Brower
BornSeptember 10, 1931
DiedJuly 17, 2018
Roseland, Virginia
Alma materPrinceton University BA in Biology
Yale University Ph.D.
Known forWork on monarch butterfly
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsAmherst College
University of Florida
Sweet Briar College

Life

Brower studied monarch butterflies for six decades.

Brower was born to Bailey and Helen Pierson Brower in Madison, New Jersey in 1931. He was raised in Chatham, New Jersey, where he showed interest in butterflies. In an oral history, he recalled being punished at school, being made to sit all day for skipping a class to go out and collect a species of moth; asked whether it was worth it, he stated "Absolutely".[5]

At high school he met Jane Van Zandt. He was educated at Princeton University where he gained a BA in biology in 1953. He and Jane married and took their PhDs in zoology together at Yale University in 1957, his on speciation in the Papilio glaucus group of butterflies, hers doing the first ever controlled experiments on Batesian mimicry in butterflies.[6][7][8] They spent two years at Oxford University, the first as Fulbright scholars, in E. B. Ford's ecological genetics laboratory. He then lectured at Amherst College from 1958, rising to the endowed Stone Professorship in 1976. In 1980 he moved to the Zoology Department at the University of Florida. On retiring in 1997, he moved to Sweet Briar College as a research professor.[9][10]

A butterfly and moth collector from an early age, he began studying the biology of the monarch butterfly while a postgraduate at Yale in 1954, and became a world expert on the species over six decades.[11][12] He contributed to over 200 papers and 8 films, combining research, public education about the monarch butterfly, and conservation work. Unlike some popular sources, Brower did not suppose the monarch to be in danger of extinction, though he agreed that its migration across America was threatened.[5]

He led a team of researchers studying the ecology of the overwintering grounds of the monarch in the mountains of Michoacan, Mexico, starting in the winter of 1977, incorporating aspects of thermal biology, predator-prey interactions, and chemical ecology. In the 1980s, he assisted conservation groups in Mexico and the Mexican government to protect fir forests used by the species from logging.[5] In the last decades of his life, he recorded the sharp decline in the monarch population of North America, down by some 80% in the 20 years to 2018, attributed to herbicides, logging, and weather events. He was the only scientist to sign a 2014 petition to the US government to give the monarch legal protection.[13]

He advised the novelist Barbara Kingsolver on butterfly migration for her 2012 book Flight Behavior.[5]

Family

He divorced Jane Van Zandt in 1974. He then married Christine Marie Moffitt; they divorced in 1980. He married his third wife, Linda S. Fink, in 1990. He had a son, Andrew Van Zandt Brower, who is also a biologist, and a daughter, Tamsin Brower Barrett.[5]

He died on July 17, 2018 in Nelson County, Virginia.[13]

Honors and awards

  • Honorary Life Member of the Lepidopterists' Society, 1990[14]
  • The Linnean Medal for zoology, the Linnean Society of London, 1993[14]
  • Distinguished Animal Behaviorist award, the Animal Behavior Society, 1995[14]
  • Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal, Yale University, 2005[14]
  • Marsh Award for Insect Conservation, the Royal Entomological Society, 2007[14]
  • Conservation Action Prize, Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center, 2014[15]
  • The E. O. Wilson Award of the Center for Biological Diversity, 2016[16]
  • Fellow of the Entomological Society of America, 2017[14]
  • Research associate of the Smithsonian Institution [14]
  • Research associate of the McGuire Center for Lepidoptera at the University of Florida[14]
  • Henry Bates Award of the Association for Tropical Lepidoptera[14]
  • Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society[14]
  • Fellow of the Explorers Club[14]
  • Reconocimiento a la Conservacion de la Naturaleza from the Mexican federal government[14]
gollark: *destroys watch with orbital laser strike*
gollark: Offense offloading is excellent technology.
gollark: Unacceptable.
gollark: What was that like? I have been investigating this, but they seem to mostly involve worrying quantities of Java and stuff.
gollark: Did you know? This statement is by "gollark".

References

  1. Brower, Lincoln Pierson; Cook, Laurence M.; Croze, Harvey J. (March 1967). "Predator Responses to Artificial Batesian Mimics Released in a Neotropical Environment". Evolution. 21 (1): 11–23. doi:10.2307/2406736. PMID 28556119.
  2. Brower, L. P. (1970). "Plant poisons in a terrestrial food chain and implications for mimicry theory". In Chambers, K. L. (ed.). Biochemical Coevolution. Corvallis, Oregon, USA: Oregon State Univ. pp. 69–82.
  3. Brower, L. P.; Brower, J. V. Z.; Corvino, J. M. (1967). "Plant poisons in a terrestrial food chain". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 57 (4): 893–98. Bibcode:1967PNAS...57..893B. doi:10.1073/pnas.57.4.893. PMC 224631. PMID 5231352.
  4. Pasteur, G. (1982). "A Classificatory Review of Mimicry Systems". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 13: 169–199. doi:10.1146/annurev.es.13.110182.001125.
  5. Genzlinger, Neil (July 24, 2018). "Lincoln Brower, Champion of the Monarch Butterfly, Dies at 86". The New York Times. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  6. Brower, Jan Van Zandt (1958). "Experimental studies of mimicry in some North American butterflies. Part I. The monarch, Danaus plexippus and the viceroy, Limenitis archippus archippus". Evolution. 12: 32–47. doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.1958.tb02926.x.
  7. Brower, J. V. Z. (1958). "Experimental studies in mimicry in some North American butterflies. Part II. Battus philenor and Papilio troilus, P. polyxenes and P. glaucus". Evolution. 12: 123–136. doi:10.2307/2406023.
  8. Brower, Jane Van Zandt (1958). "Experimental studies of mimicry in some North American butterflies. Part III. Danaus gilippus berenice and Limenitis archippus floridensis". Evolution. 12: 273–285. doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.1958.tb02959.x.
  9. Fink, Linda S.; Vane-Wright, R. I. (2007). "Lincoln Brower's European Tour" (PDF). Antenna. 31 (4): 203–207. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  10. "Lincoln P. Brower". Sweet Briar College. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  11. "Lincoln Brower". Monarch Conservation. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  12. Maeckle, Monica (16 February 2015). "Q & A: Dr. Lincoln Brower talks Ethics, Endangered Species, Milkweed and Monarchs". Texas Butterfly Ranch. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  13. Finley, Ben (20 July 2018). "Expert and advocate for iconic monarch butterfly has died". Miami Herald.
  14. Anon ('Staff' byline) (July 21, 2018). "Renowned monarch butterfly expert Lincoln Brower dies, but his legacy lives on". Make Way for Monarchs.
  15. "Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center". Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center UMSL. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  16. Curry, Tierra (30 November 2016). "Monarch Butterfly Expert Lincoln Brower to Be Honored Friday With E.O. Wilson Award: 4th Annual Award Presented for Lifetime of Monarch Study, Advocacy". Center for Biological Diversity.


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