Maureen A. Donnelly

Maureen Ann Donnelly (born 1954) is an American herpetologist based in Los Angeles, California. She received her undergraduate degree from California State University in 1977 and graduated from the University of Miami with her doctorate degree in 1987.[1] Maureen Ann Donnelly is best known for the book[2], Measuring and Monitoring Biological Diversity: Standard Methods for Amphibians. Edited by Donnelly, the book provides comprehensive coverage of standard methods for biodiversity sampling of amphibians, with information on analyzing and using data that will interest biologists in general.

Taxa described

  • Adercosaurus vixadnexus Myers & Donnelly, 2001
  • Allobates undulatus (Myers & Donnelly, 2001)
  • Anolis bellipeniculus (Myers & Donnelly, 1996)
  • Anomaloglossus tamacuarensis (Myers & Donnelly, 1997)
  • Arthrosaura montigena Myers & Donnelly, 2008
  • Arthrosaura synaptolepis Donnelly, McDiarmid & Myers, 1992[1]
  • Atractus guerreroi Myers & Donnelly, 2008
  • Bungarus slowinskii Kuch, Kizirian, Nguyen, Lawson, Donnelly & Mebs 2005
  • Caecilita Wake & Donnelly, 2009
  • Caecilita iwokramae Wake & Donnelly, 2009
  • Ceuthomantis cavernibardus (Myers and Donnelly, 1997)
  • Echinosaura sulcarostrum Donnelly, MacCulloch, Ugarte & Kizirian 2006
  • Erythrolamprus torrenicola Donnelly & Myers, 1991
  • Hypsiboas angelicus Myers & Donnelly, 2008
  • Incilius majordomus Savage, Ugarte & Donnelly, 2013
  • Microcaecilia savagei Donnelly & Wake, 2013
  • Petracola waka Kizirian, Bayefsky-Anand, Eriksson, Minh & Donnelly, 2008
  • Philodryas cordata Donnelly & Myers, 1991
  • Plica lumaria Donnelly & Myers, 2001
  • Plica pansticta (Myers & Donnelly, 2001)
  • Pristimantis auricarens Myers & Donnelly, 2008
  • Pristimantis avius (Myers & Donnelly, 1997)
  • Pristimantis cantitans (Myers & Donnelly, 1996)
  • Pristimantis memorans (Myers & Donnelly, 1997)
  • Pristimantis pruinatus (Myers & Donnelly, 1996)
  • Pristimantis yaviensis (Myers & Donnelly, 1996)
  • Sphenomorphus rarus Myers & Donnelly, 1991
  • Stefania tamacuarina Myers & Donnelly, 1997
  • Thamnodynastes duida Myers & Donnelly, 1996
  • Thamnodynastes yavi Myers & Donnelly, 1996
gollark: Particles actually gain mass through extremely small sub-femtoscale bees.
gollark: This is basically just word association games.
gollark: They actually build models, look at how it could work, see how it interacts with things, and if possible find ways to test it against what actually happens.
gollark: Physicists do not sit around armchairishly going "hmm, what if stuff gets mass because of a 'field'?" and then getting it named after them.
gollark: If you are to actually make bold claims about theoretical physics instead of just paraphrasing random quantum things it would be beneficial to learn the relevant maths so you can understand the models.

References

  1. Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 247. ISBN 978-1-4214-0227-7. Retrieved May 26, 2016.
  2. www.amazon.com https://www.amazon.com/Measuring-Monitoring-Biological-Diversity-Amphibians-ebook/dp/B00OEW5S7U/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1547584512&sr=1-1. Retrieved 2019-01-15. Missing or empty |title= (help)


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