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Frank Chapman (ornithologist)

Frank Michler Chapman (June 12, 1864 – November 15, 1945) was an American ornithologist and pioneering writer of field guides.[1]

Frank Chapman
Born
Frank Michler Chapman

(1864-06-12)June 12, 1864
DiedNovember 15, 1945(1945-11-15) (aged 81)
Known forAudubon Christmas Bird Count
AwardsDaniel Giraud Elliot Medal (1917)
John Burroughs Medal (1929)
Scientific career
FieldsOrnithology
InstitutionsAmerican Museum of Natural History
Author abbrev. (zoology)Chapman

Biography edit

Chapman was born in the West Englewood section of present-day Teaneck, New Jersey, and attended Englewood Academy.[2][3] He joined the staff of the American Museum of Natural History in 1888 as assistant to Joel Asaph Allen. In 1901 he was made associate Curator of Mammals and Birds and in 1908 Curator of Birds.

Chapman came up with the original idea for the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. He also wrote many ornithological books such as, Bird Life, Birds of Eastern North America, and Life in an Air Castle. Chapman promoted the integration of photography into ornithology, especially in his book Bird Studies With a Camera,[4] in which he discussed the practicability of the photographic blind and in 1901 invented his own more portable version of a blind using an umbrella with a large 'skirt' to conceal the photographer that could be bundled into a small pack for transport along with the other, at the time very bulky, paraphernalia of the camera gear.[5] For his work, Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia, he was awarded the Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the National Academy of Sciences in 1917.[6] He was elected to both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society in 1921.[7][8]

In the winter seasons, starting from his mother's home in Gainesville, Florida, he made numerous field trips to collect small mammals and birds; thus he went to various localities in Florida, Texas, Cuba, Trinidad, B. W. I., Yucatan and Vera Cruz, Mexico, and later to many countries in South America. The story of his local expeditions in the United States and of his one visit to England is told in his Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist (1908) and much later his many expeditions to Mexico, Central and South America are dealt with in his all too brief, authentic Autobiography of a Bird Lover (1933).[9]

Chapman fathered one child, Frank Chapman, Jr., who first married playwright Elizabeth Cobb and had a daughter, actress and TV personality Buff Cobb,[10] and after divorcing married mezzo-soprano opera singer Gladys Swarthout.

Chapman was interred at Brookside Cemetery.

The Legacy of Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia edit

Published in 1917, Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia collated data and records from Chapman and the American Museum of Natural History’s eight ornithological expeditions into Colombia.[11][12] These expeditions, like others in the 1910s, emphasized the collection of avian specimens as the predominant form of data collection.[11][12] Chapman and his team from the American Museum of Natural History collected 15, 775 avian specimens from their expeditions, along with 1,600 mammal specimens.[12]

Later ornithological expeditions in the 1950s would expand their methods of data collection to include observational data, in addition to specimen collection.[11] A resurgence of interest in Colombian aviary biodiversity, fueled by concerns of deforestation and changes in climates, led to more surveys in the 1990s and 2010s.[11] These resurveys of the San Antonio mountain ranges further changed their methodology to favor observational data, citizen observational data, and mist netting.[11]

The Colombia Resurvey Project is a collective of researchers who began reproducing Frank Chapman’s original expeditions in 2020.[13] The goals of this project according to its website is “to document the current status and past changes of bird assemblages and their habitats throughout the country, and to establish a quantitative, publicly-available database for future assessments and monitoring”.[13]  The surveys carried out in this project have expanded upon the methodology of studies from the 2010s, incorporating citizen training and citizen-led data collection.[14] Additional modifications to the project’s resurveys included decolonial practices such as emphasizing and crediting local contributors and sharing information gained from the studies to support long term conservation efforts in the study’s vicinity.[14] Another all-women expedition led by members of the Resurvey project occurred in 2020.[15] This project was reportedly inspired by the team member's rediscovery of Elizabeth Kerr's contributions to Chapman's and the American Museum of Natural History’s collections.[15] Letters between Kerr and Chapman owned by the American Museum of Natural History suggest that Elizabeth Kerr was the first women to partake in ornithological expeditions in Colombia, and made significant specimen contributions to the museum's collections.[15] These specimen were often identified by Chapman himself, and in some instances included newly identified species.[15] One such species, the Choco tinamou (Crypturellus kerriae), was named in her honor by Chapman.[15]

Publications edit

As well as numerous papers in scientific journals and magazines such as the National Geographic Magazine, books and major reports authored by Chapman include:

  • (1894). Visitors' Guide to the Local Collection of Birds in the American Museum of Natural History.
  • (1895). Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America.
  • (1897). Bird-Life: A Guide to the Study of Our Common Birds.
  • (1898). Four-Footed Americans and Their Kin. (by Mabel Osgood Wright, with Frank Chapman as editor and Ernest Seton Thompson as illustrator)
  • (1899). Descriptions of five apparently new birds from Venezuela. Bull. of the American Museum of Natural History 12 ( 9): 153-156
  • (1900). Bird Studies with a Camera.
  • (1901). The Revision of the Genus Capromys.
  • (1903). Color Key to North American Birds; (1912) revised edition
  • (1903). The Economic Value of Birds to the State.
  • (1907). Warblers of North America.
  • (1908). Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist.
  • (1910). The Birds of the Vicinity of New York City: A guide to the Local Collection.
  • (1915). The Travels of Birds.
  • (1917). The Distribution of Bird-life in Colombia.
  • (1919). Our Winter Birds.
  • (1920). What Bird is That?.
  • (1921). The Habit Groups of North American Birds.
  • (1921). The Distribution of Bird Life in the Urubamba Valley of Peru. A report of the birds collected by the Yale University - National Geographic Society's expedition.
  • (1926). The Distribution of Bird-life in Ecuador.
  • (1929). My Tropical Air Castle.
  • (1931). The Upper Zonal Bird-Life of Mts Roraima and Duida.
  • (1933). The Autobiography of a Bird-Lover.[16]
  • (1938). Life in an Air Castle: Nature Studies in the Tropics.

References edit

  1. ^ Vuilleumier, François (2005). "Dean of American Ornithologists: The Multiple Legacies of Frank M. Chapman of the American Museum of Natural History," The Auk, Vol. 122, No. 2, pp. 389-402.
  2. ^ Zimmer, David M. "A Bird’s-Eye View: Frank Chapman was a pioneer in bird conservation", The Record, April 25, 2024. Accessed April 25, 2024. "Born in June 1864 in West Englewood (now Teaneck), Chapman grew up next to an orchard on then-rural Teaneck Road. After he graduated from Englewood High School at 16, he followed his father to Wall Street and entered the banking industry."
  3. ^ Chapman, Frank Michler (United States 1864-1945), Western Kentucky University. Accessed March 12, 2008. "born in West Englewood, New Jersey, on 12 June 1864."
  4. ^ Frank M. Chapman (1900), Bird studies with a camera with introductory chapters on the outfit and methods of the bird photographer, New York D. Appleton and company
  5. ^ Brower, Matthew (2011), Developing animals : wildlife and early American photography, University of Minnesota Press (published 2010), p. 124, ISBN 978-0-8166-5478-9
  6. ^ . National Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 29 December 2010. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  7. ^ "Frank M. Chapman". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
  8. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
  9. ^ Gregory, William King (1947). "Frank Michler Chapman 1864–1945". Biographical Memoirs V.25—Fifth Memoir (PDF). National Academy of Sciences (NAS). pp. 111–143.
  10. ^ Hevesi, Dennis. "Buff Cobb, Actress and TV Host, Dies at 82", The New York Times, July 21, 2010
  11. ^ a b c d e Gómez, Camila; Tenorio, Elkin A.; Cadena, Carlos Daniel (October 2021). "Change in avian functional fingerprints of a Neotropical montane forest over 100 years as an indicator of ecosystem integrity". Conservation Biology. 35 (5): 1552–1563. doi:10.1111/cobi.13714. ISSN 0888-8892. PMID 33565119. S2CID 231873777.
  12. ^ a b c Chapman, Frank M.; Fuertes, Louis Agassiz (1917). The distribution of bird-life in Colombia; a contribution to a biological survey of South America. New York: Pub. by order of the trustees. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.56497.
  13. ^ a b "Colombia Resurvey Project". Colombia Resurvey Project. Retrieved 2023-02-24.
  14. ^ a b Gomez, Camila; Cadena, Carlos Daniel; Cuervo, Andrés M.; Díaz-Cárdenas, Jessica; García-Cardona, Felipe; Niño-Rodríguez, Nelsy; Ocampo-Peñuela, Natalia; Ocampo, David; Seeholzer, Glenn; Sierra-Ricaurte, Andrés; Soto-Patiño, Juliana (2022-01-01). "Reexpedición Colombia: Entender el pasado para empoderar acciones que fortalezcan el conocimiento y conservación de las aves". Biota Colombiana (in Spanish). 23 (1): e984. doi:10.21068/2539200X.984. ISSN 2539-200X. S2CID 244600597.
  15. ^ a b c d e Velandia, Omar. "Las mujeres que hicieron historia con la primera expedición femenina sobre aves en Colombia". www.humboldt.org.co (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  16. ^ Stone, Witmer (1934). "Review of Autobiography of a Bird-Lover by Frank M. Chapman". The Auk. 51 (1): 106–107. doi:10.2307/4077481. ISSN 0004-8038. JSTOR 4077481.

Further reading edit

  • Sterling, Keir B., ed. (1997). "Chapman, Frank Michler". Biographical Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Environmentalists. Greenwood Press.
  • Vuilleumier, François (2005). "Dean of American Ornithologists: The Multiple Legacies of Frank M. Chapman of the American Museum of Natural History". The Auk. 122 (2): 389–402. doi:10.1093/auk/122.2.389.
  • "Frank M. Chapman," in Tom Taylor and Michael Taylor, Aves: A Survey of the Literature of Neotropical Ornithology, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Libraries, 2011.
  • THE MAN WHO LOVED BIRDS: Pioneer Ornithologist Dr. Frank M. Chapman, 1864-1945," by James T. Huffstodt. Tallahassee: Self-published. (2022)

External links edit

frank, chapman, ornithologist, frank, michler, chapman, june, 1864, november, 1945, american, ornithologist, pioneering, writer, field, guides, frank, chapmanbornfrank, michler, chapman, 1864, june, 1864west, englewood, jerseydiednovember, 1945, 1945, aged, yo. Frank Michler Chapman June 12 1864 November 15 1945 was an American ornithologist and pioneering writer of field guides 1 Frank ChapmanBornFrank Michler Chapman 1864 06 12 June 12 1864West Englewood New JerseyDiedNovember 15 1945 1945 11 15 aged 81 New York CityKnown forAudubon Christmas Bird CountAwardsDaniel Giraud Elliot Medal 1917 John Burroughs Medal 1929 Scientific careerFieldsOrnithologyInstitutionsAmerican Museum of Natural HistoryAuthor abbrev zoology Chapman Contents 1 Biography 2 The Legacy of Distribution of Bird life in Colombia 3 Publications 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography editChapman was born in the West Englewood section of present day Teaneck New Jersey and attended Englewood Academy 2 3 He joined the staff of the American Museum of Natural History in 1888 as assistant to Joel Asaph Allen In 1901 he was made associate Curator of Mammals and Birds and in 1908 Curator of Birds Chapman came up with the original idea for the Audubon Christmas Bird Count He also wrote many ornithological books such as Bird Life Birds of Eastern North America and Life in an Air Castle Chapman promoted the integration of photography into ornithology especially in his book Bird Studies With a Camera 4 in which he discussed the practicability of the photographic blind and in 1901 invented his own more portable version of a blind using an umbrella with a large skirt to conceal the photographer that could be bundled into a small pack for transport along with the other at the time very bulky paraphernalia of the camera gear 5 For his work Distribution of Bird life in Colombia he was awarded the Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the National Academy of Sciences in 1917 6 He was elected to both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society in 1921 7 8 In the winter seasons starting from his mother s home in Gainesville Florida he made numerous field trips to collect small mammals and birds thus he went to various localities in Florida Texas Cuba Trinidad B W I Yucatan and Vera Cruz Mexico and later to many countries in South America The story of his local expeditions in the United States and of his one visit to England is told in his Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist 1908 and much later his many expeditions to Mexico Central and South America are dealt with in his all too brief authentic Autobiography of a Bird Lover 1933 9 Chapman fathered one child Frank Chapman Jr who first married playwright Elizabeth Cobb and had a daughter actress and TV personality Buff Cobb 10 and after divorcing married mezzo soprano opera singer Gladys Swarthout Chapman was interred at Brookside Cemetery The Legacy of Distribution of Bird life in Colombia editPublished in 1917 Distribution of Bird life in Colombia collated data and records from Chapman and the American Museum of Natural History s eight ornithological expeditions into Colombia 11 12 These expeditions like others in the 1910s emphasized the collection of avian specimens as the predominant form of data collection 11 12 Chapman and his team from the American Museum of Natural History collected 15 775 avian specimens from their expeditions along with 1 600 mammal specimens 12 Later ornithological expeditions in the 1950s would expand their methods of data collection to include observational data in addition to specimen collection 11 A resurgence of interest in Colombian aviary biodiversity fueled by concerns of deforestation and changes in climates led to more surveys in the 1990s and 2010s 11 These resurveys of the San Antonio mountain ranges further changed their methodology to favor observational data citizen observational data and mist netting 11 The Colombia Resurvey Project is a collective of researchers who began reproducing Frank Chapman s original expeditions in 2020 13 The goals of this project according to its website is to document the current status and past changes of bird assemblages and their habitats throughout the country and to establish a quantitative publicly available database for future assessments and monitoring 13 The surveys carried out in this project have expanded upon the methodology of studies from the 2010s incorporating citizen training and citizen led data collection 14 Additional modifications to the project s resurveys included decolonial practices such as emphasizing and crediting local contributors and sharing information gained from the studies to support long term conservation efforts in the study s vicinity 14 Another all women expedition led by members of the Resurvey project occurred in 2020 15 This project was reportedly inspired by the team member s rediscovery of Elizabeth Kerr s contributions to Chapman s and the American Museum of Natural History s collections 15 Letters between Kerr and Chapman owned by the American Museum of Natural History suggest that Elizabeth Kerr was the first women to partake in ornithological expeditions in Colombia and made significant specimen contributions to the museum s collections 15 These specimen were often identified by Chapman himself and in some instances included newly identified species 15 One such species the Choco tinamou Crypturellus kerriae was named in her honor by Chapman 15 Publications editAs well as numerous papers in scientific journals and magazines such as the National Geographic Magazine books and major reports authored by Chapman include 1894 Visitors Guide to the Local Collection of Birds in the American Museum of Natural History 1895 Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America 1897 Bird Life A Guide to the Study of Our Common Birds 1898 Four Footed Americans and Their Kin by Mabel Osgood Wright with Frank Chapman as editor and Ernest Seton Thompson as illustrator 1899 Descriptions of five apparently new birds from Venezuela Bull of the American Museum of Natural History 12 9 153 156 1900 Bird Studies with a Camera 1901 The Revision of the Genus Capromys 1903 Color Key to North American Birds 1912 revised edition 1903 The Economic Value of Birds to the State 1907 Warblers of North America 1908 Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist 1910 The Birds of the Vicinity of New York City A guide to the Local Collection 1915 The Travels of Birds 1917 The Distribution of Bird life in Colombia 1919 Our Winter Birds 1920 What Bird is That 1921 The Habit Groups of North American Birds 1921 The Distribution of Bird Life in the Urubamba Valley of Peru A report of the birds collected by the Yale University National Geographic Society s expedition 1926 The Distribution of Bird life in Ecuador 1929 My Tropical Air Castle 1931 The Upper Zonal Bird Life of Mts Roraima and Duida 1933 The Autobiography of a Bird Lover 16 1938 Life in an Air Castle Nature Studies in the Tropics References edit Vuilleumier Francois 2005 Dean of American Ornithologists The Multiple Legacies of Frank M Chapman of the American Museum of Natural History The Auk Vol 122 No 2 pp 389 402 Zimmer David M A Bird s Eye View Frank Chapman was a pioneer in bird conservation The Record April 25 2024 Accessed April 25 2024 Born in June 1864 in West Englewood now Teaneck Chapman grew up next to an orchard on then rural Teaneck Road After he graduated from Englewood High School at 16 he followed his father to Wall Street and entered the banking industry Chapman Frank Michler United States 1864 1945 Western Kentucky University Accessed March 12 2008 born in West Englewood New Jersey on 12 June 1864 Frank M Chapman 1900 Bird studies with a camera with introductory chapters on the outfit and methods of the bird photographer New York D Appleton and company Brower Matthew 2011 Developing animals wildlife and early American photography University of Minnesota Press published 2010 p 124 ISBN 978 0 8166 5478 9 Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal National Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 29 December 2010 Retrieved 16 February 2011 Frank M Chapman www nasonline org Retrieved 2023 09 11 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2023 09 11 Gregory William King 1947 Frank Michler Chapman 1864 1945 Biographical Memoirs V 25 Fifth Memoir PDF National Academy of Sciences NAS pp 111 143 Hevesi Dennis Buff Cobb Actress and TV Host Dies at 82 The New York Times July 21 2010 a b c d e Gomez Camila Tenorio Elkin A Cadena Carlos Daniel October 2021 Change in avian functional fingerprints of a Neotropical montane forest over 100 years as an indicator of ecosystem integrity Conservation Biology 35 5 1552 1563 doi 10 1111 cobi 13714 ISSN 0888 8892 PMID 33565119 S2CID 231873777 a b c Chapman Frank M Fuertes Louis Agassiz 1917 The distribution of bird life in Colombia a contribution to a biological survey of South America New York Pub by order of the trustees doi 10 5962 bhl title 56497 a b Colombia Resurvey Project Colombia Resurvey Project Retrieved 2023 02 24 a b Gomez Camila Cadena Carlos Daniel Cuervo Andres M Diaz Cardenas Jessica Garcia Cardona Felipe Nino Rodriguez Nelsy Ocampo Penuela Natalia Ocampo David Seeholzer Glenn Sierra Ricaurte Andres Soto Patino Juliana 2022 01 01 Reexpedicion Colombia Entender el pasado para empoderar acciones que fortalezcan el conocimiento y conservacion de las aves Biota Colombiana in Spanish 23 1 e984 doi 10 21068 2539200X 984 ISSN 2539 200X S2CID 244600597 a b c d e Velandia Omar Las mujeres que hicieron historia con la primera expedicion femenina sobre aves en Colombia www humboldt org co in European Spanish Retrieved 2023 03 17 Stone Witmer 1934 Review of Autobiography of a Bird Lover by Frank M Chapman The Auk 51 1 106 107 doi 10 2307 4077481 ISSN 0004 8038 JSTOR 4077481 Further reading editSterling Keir B ed 1997 Chapman Frank Michler Biographical Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Environmentalists Greenwood Press Vuilleumier Francois 2005 Dean of American Ornithologists The Multiple Legacies of Frank M Chapman of the American Museum of Natural History The Auk 122 2 389 402 doi 10 1093 auk 122 2 389 Frank M Chapman in Tom Taylor and Michael Taylor Aves A Survey of the Literature of Neotropical Ornithology Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Libraries 2011 THE MAN WHO LOVED BIRDS Pioneer Ornithologist Dr Frank M Chapman 1864 1945 by James T Huffstodt Tallahassee Self published 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frank Chapman ornithologist Obituary Works by Frank Michler Chapman at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Frank Chapman at Internet Archive Chapman Frank Michler United States 1864 1945 Western Kentucky University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank Chapman ornithologist amp oldid 1220732439, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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