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Mason Hale

Mason Ellsworth Hale, Jr. (September 23, 1929 – April 23, 1990) was one of the most prolific American lichenologists of the 20th century.[1] Many of his scholarly articles focused on the taxonomy of the family Parmeliaceae. Hale was one of the first lichen experts to incorporate secondary chemistry and technology such as computers and scanning electron microscopy into taxonomic work.[1] Mason Hale published approximately two hundred articles and books on various aspects of lichen biology including taxonomy, anatomy, chemistry, and ecology. Hale also wrote several books aimed at education and increasing accessibility to lichens.

Mason Ellsworth Hale, Jr.
Born(1928-09-23)September 23, 1928
DiedApril 23, 1990(1990-04-23) (aged 61)
Known forTaxonomy of lichens
Scientific career
InstitutionsSmithsonian Institution
Doctoral studentsSyo Kurokawa
Author abbrev. (botany)Hale

Early life and education edit

Mason Hale Jr. grew up on a farm outside of Winsted, Connecticut.[1] He had an affinity towards biology from experiences from living on his family's farm.[2] As an undergraduate, Hale wanted to be a linguist, but was not able to take specialized classes.[2] Instead, he earned an undergraduate degree studying biology at Yale University, where he studied lichens under Alexander W. Evans, a bryophyte and lichen expert.[1][2]

Hale earned his Master's and Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin–Madison under the supervision of prominent lichenologist John W. Thomson, an arctic lichen expert.[1] For his master's degree, Hale studied the lichen flora of the Baffin Islands, located in northeastern Canada.[1][2] He collected lichens on the island working with Pierre Dansereau, a prominent Canadian ecologist. The resulting publications from the Baffin Islands contained both a checklist of all species collected, and dichotomous keys.[3] Baffin Island was the first of many expeditions around the world that Hale made to collect lichens.

For his Ph.D. Hale studied the lichens of southern Wisconsin.[4] The paper, which was published in the journal Ecology, exemplifies Hale's ability to use technology to innovate new ideas. He studied how cryptogam communities (lichens and bryophytes) change with differing forest composition. He also examined host specificity of species. Hale found that there are different communities at the base of the tree compared to 1.3 meters high on the tree trunk. Another significant finding was that the cryptogamic community differed between habitats due to light and other stand level variables. This was an important study because it was one of the first lichen experiments that utilized statistics for ecological conclusions as opposed to observations. Also Hale placed the data for each tree on IBM punch cards to better analyze the data.

Hale met his wife Beatrice Wilde, an ecologist, while at the University of Wisconsin. They married in 1952 and had three children, Janet, Sandra and Robert.[1] Hale also befriended William Culberson, a fellow graduate student, and later a lichen expert at Duke University.[1] Hale and Culberson collaborated on many chemistry and taxonomic endeavors including the first lichen checklist of North America.[5]

After earning his Ph.D., Hale worked for two years each at University of Wichita and University of West Virginia.[1] Then he became an Associate Curator at the Smithsonian Institution, where he worked from 1957 until his death. In 33 years at the Smithsonian, Hale collected close to 80,000 specimens and made the Smithsonian Institution one of the largest lichen herbariums in the world. Hale made numerous expeditions to tropical regions including the Caribbean, Central and South America, Asia, and Africa. One of his favorite expeditions was to collect endolithic lichens in Antarctica.[2] Hale was later appointed a Senior Botanist at the Smithsonian.[1]

Advances in chemistry and technology edit

Mason Hale was primarily a taxonomist, but his taxonomic framework and methodology for describing new species was dependent on modern technology. Hale was one of the first lichen experts to use chemical tests to study species delineations.[1][2] He learned the techniques from his professor at Yale University, Alexander W. Evans. The techniques that he utilized included spot tests, early thin layer chromatography, and fluorescence (turning of color with UV light).[6] Hale both cataloged the presence of chemicals from numerous North American species and described new chemicals. One example, is Hale's study on fluorescence in which he linked fluoresced colors to specific chemicals using paper chromatography.[7]

In addition to chemistry, Hale also incorporated scanning electron microscopy characteristics such as cortical structure into his species concepts.[6] Another technical advance Hale utilized was punch card computers to keep track of morphological and ecological data. The use of computers was especially important to keep track of the many traits and taxonomic revisions in the Parmeliaceae.[6]

Taxonomic works edit

Mason Hale was an expert of the Parmeliaceae, a large family of foliose lichens.[1][2][6] Hale wrote numerous monographs and articles describing new genera and species. Before Hale, Parmelia was a large genus containing a wide range of morphological traits. Hale became interested in the Parmeliaceae because there was a number of undescribed species in the southeastern United States. Hale revised the family three times.[6] The first time required reviewing type specimens and collected material to examine subgeneric concepts and synonyms. The second and third revisions broke the subgenera into more specific genera based on differences in chemistry and morphological characteristics using scanning electron microscopy. While initially met with resistance, most of the taxonomic changes are now widely accepted. Hale's taxonomic divisions are considered to be one of his most important contribution to lichenology.[1][8]

Hale also widely collected and described crustose lichens in the Graphidaceae and Thelotremataceae (now synonymized with Graphidaceae).[9][10]

Ecology edit

Hale pioneered numerous ecological measurements with lichens. In 1959 he marked out plots for long-term study of the lichens on Plummers Island and used photographs to assess growth rates.[11] In addition to his work on community ecology of lichens, Hale examined the yearly growth rate of lichens in Aton Forest.[12] Hale also examined use of lichens as an indicator of floods and high water.[13] Lastly in the 1980s Hale and James D. Lawrey published articles examining how car exhaust (specifically the lead in the exhaust) negatively affects lichen growth. The long-term datasets from Plummers Island facilitated these studies.[14][15]

Education and outreach edit

Hale also wrote or co-authored books that helped to introduce lichens to the general public and keep scientists abreast of current theory. These books contained keys to genera and species such as How to know the Lichens[16][17] and Lichens of California.[18] An important symposia on current topics was The Lichens.[19] Introductory texts to lichen study include Biology of Lichens.[20] Hale and Culberson also compiled the first checklist to North American lichens and lichenicolous fungi in 1956. Lastly, Hale and his son printed the newsletters for the International Association for Lichenology on old printing presses and made the typesetting by hand.[21]

Statistics and awards edit

According to Google Scholar, Mason Hale wrote approximately 200 peer-reviewed journal articles and has been cited over 4,800 times. Notable scientists who studied under Hale were: Paula DePriest, Theodore L. Esslinger, and Syo Kurokawa.[6] Many additional scientists were mentored by Hale including, Bruce McCune and Roger Rosentreter. Hale served as president of the International Association of Lichenologists (IAL) from 1981 to 1987.[22] In his memory, the IAL created the Mason Hale Award for best doctoral study. The Bryologist, a peer-reviewed journal, dedicated the entire Autumn 1993 issue as a memoriam.[23]

Eponymous taxa and other legacy edit

The following are a partial list of species named after Mason Hale. The list focuses primarily on North American taxa:

  • Abrothallus halei
  • Cladonia halei
  • Graphis haleana
  • Hypotrachyna mason-halei
  • Melanohalea halei
  • Phyllopsora halei
  • Physcia halei
  • Pseudocyphellaria halei
  • Thelotrema halei
  • Usnea halei
  • Xanthoparmelia halei

The following are a partial list of genera named after Mason Hale. The list focuses primarily on North American taxa:

The Hale Valley in Antarctica is named after him.

In 1993, the International Association for Lichenology instituted the Mason E. Hale Award to recognise research excellence in lichenologists based on their recently-awarded doctoral thesis or similar publication.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Culberson WL. (1991). "A Tribute to Mason Ellsworth Hale, Jr". Bryologist. 94 (1): 90–93. JSTOR 3243731.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Lawrey J. (1990). "Mason Ellsworth Hale, Jr". The Lichenologist. 22 (4): 405–407. doi:10.1017/S0024282990000445.
  3. ^ Hale ME Jr. (1954). "Lichens from Baffin Island". American Midland Naturalist. 51 (1): 232–264. doi:10.2307/2422220. JSTOR 2422220.
  4. ^ Hale ME Jr. (1955). "Phytosociology of corticolous cryptogams in the upland forests of southern Wisconsin". Ecology. 36 (1): 45–63. doi:10.2307/1931430. JSTOR 1931430.
  5. ^ Hale ME Jr, Culberson WL. (1956). "A checklist of the lichens of the United States, Canada, and Alaska". Castanea. 21 (2): 73–105. JSTOR 4031788.
  6. ^ a b c d e f DePriest PT. (1999). "Development of Mason E. Hale's list of epithets in the Parmelioid genera (lichen-forming Ascomycotina): A bibliographic review". Bryologist. 102 (3): 442–461. doi:10.2307/3244233. JSTOR 3244233.
  7. ^ Hale ME Jr. (1956). "Fluorescence of lichen depsides and depsidones as a taxonomic criterion". Castanea. 21 (1): 30–32. JSTOR 4031709.
  8. ^ Bruce McCune,personal communication, November 2014
  9. ^ Hale ME Jr. (1978). A revision of the lichen family Thelotremataceae in Panama. Smithsonian Contributions to Botany. Vol. 38.
  10. ^ Wirth M, Hale ME. (1978). Morden-Smithsonian expedition to Dominica—the lichens (Graphidaceae). Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.
  11. ^ Hale, M E (1970). "Single-lobe growth-rate patterns in the lichen Parmelia caperata". The Bryologist. 73: 72–81. doi:10.2307/3241588. JSTOR 3241588.
  12. ^ Hale ME Jr. (1954). "First report on lichen growth rate and succession at Aton forest, Connecticut". Bryologist. 57 (3): 244–247. doi:10.2307/3240092. JSTOR 3240092.
  13. ^ Hale ME Jr ME. (1984). "The lichen line and high water levels in a freshwater stream in Florida". Bryologist. 87 (3): 261–265. doi:10.2307/3242807. JSTOR 3242807.
  14. ^ Lawrey, J D; Hale, M E (1979). "Lichen growth response to stress induced by automobile exhaust pollution". Science. 204 (4391): 423–424. Bibcode:1979Sci...204..423L. doi:10.1126/science.204.4391.423. PMID 17758017. S2CID 3104159.
  15. ^ Lawrey JD, Hale ME Jr. (1979). "Lichen growth responses to stress induced by automobile exhaust pollution". Science. 204 (4391): 423–424. Bibcode:1979Sci...204..423L. doi:10.1126/science.204.4391.423. PMID 17758017. S2CID 3104159.
  16. ^ Hale, ME. 1979. How to know the lichens. WC Brown Co.
  17. ^ Hale, ME. 1969. How to know the lichens. WC Brown Co.
  18. ^ Hale ME. 1988. Lichens of California. Univ of California Press.
  19. ^ Ahmadjian V, Hale ME. 1973. The lichens. Academic Press.
  20. ^ Hale, ME. 1967 Biology of lichens.
  21. ^ Sipman, H., Seaward, M. 1990. Mason E. Hale Jr. (1928-1990). International Association of Lichenologists. http://www.lichenology.org/Publications/ILN/ILN_23_2.pdf
  22. ^ Sipman, H., Seaward, M. 1990. Mason E. Hale Jr. (1928–1990). International Association of Lichenologists. http://www.lichenology.org/Publications/ILN/ILN_23_2.pdf
  23. ^ Lawrey J., Pittam S. 1993. Hale, Mason, E. -dedication issue. Bryologist 96(3): 285–286.
  24. ^ "Mason E. Hale Award" (PDF). International Lichenology Newsletter. 25 (2): 27–28. 1992. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  25. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Hale.

External links edit

mason, hale, mason, ellsworth, hale, september, 1929, april, 1990, most, prolific, american, lichenologists, 20th, century, many, scholarly, articles, focused, taxonomy, family, parmeliaceae, hale, first, lichen, experts, incorporate, secondary, chemistry, tec. Mason Ellsworth Hale Jr September 23 1929 April 23 1990 was one of the most prolific American lichenologists of the 20th century 1 Many of his scholarly articles focused on the taxonomy of the family Parmeliaceae Hale was one of the first lichen experts to incorporate secondary chemistry and technology such as computers and scanning electron microscopy into taxonomic work 1 Mason Hale published approximately two hundred articles and books on various aspects of lichen biology including taxonomy anatomy chemistry and ecology Hale also wrote several books aimed at education and increasing accessibility to lichens Mason Ellsworth Hale Jr Born 1928 09 23 September 23 1928DiedApril 23 1990 1990 04 23 aged 61 Known forTaxonomy of lichensScientific careerInstitutionsSmithsonian InstitutionDoctoral studentsSyo KurokawaAuthor abbrev botany HaleScholia has a profile for Mason Ellsworth Hale Q18633472 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Advances in chemistry and technology 3 Taxonomic works 4 Ecology 5 Education and outreach 6 Statistics and awards 7 Eponymous taxa and other legacy 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editMason Hale Jr grew up on a farm outside of Winsted Connecticut 1 He had an affinity towards biology from experiences from living on his family s farm 2 As an undergraduate Hale wanted to be a linguist but was not able to take specialized classes 2 Instead he earned an undergraduate degree studying biology at Yale University where he studied lichens under Alexander W Evans a bryophyte and lichen expert 1 2 Hale earned his Master s and Ph D at the University of Wisconsin Madison under the supervision of prominent lichenologist John W Thomson an arctic lichen expert 1 For his master s degree Hale studied the lichen flora of the Baffin Islands located in northeastern Canada 1 2 He collected lichens on the island working with Pierre Dansereau a prominent Canadian ecologist The resulting publications from the Baffin Islands contained both a checklist of all species collected and dichotomous keys 3 Baffin Island was the first of many expeditions around the world that Hale made to collect lichens For his Ph D Hale studied the lichens of southern Wisconsin 4 The paper which was published in the journal Ecology exemplifies Hale s ability to use technology to innovate new ideas He studied how cryptogam communities lichens and bryophytes change with differing forest composition He also examined host specificity of species Hale found that there are different communities at the base of the tree compared to 1 3 meters high on the tree trunk Another significant finding was that the cryptogamic community differed between habitats due to light and other stand level variables This was an important study because it was one of the first lichen experiments that utilized statistics for ecological conclusions as opposed to observations Also Hale placed the data for each tree on IBM punch cards to better analyze the data Hale met his wife Beatrice Wilde an ecologist while at the University of Wisconsin They married in 1952 and had three children Janet Sandra and Robert 1 Hale also befriended William Culberson a fellow graduate student and later a lichen expert at Duke University 1 Hale and Culberson collaborated on many chemistry and taxonomic endeavors including the first lichen checklist of North America 5 After earning his Ph D Hale worked for two years each at University of Wichita and University of West Virginia 1 Then he became an Associate Curator at the Smithsonian Institution where he worked from 1957 until his death In 33 years at the Smithsonian Hale collected close to 80 000 specimens and made the Smithsonian Institution one of the largest lichen herbariums in the world Hale made numerous expeditions to tropical regions including the Caribbean Central and South America Asia and Africa One of his favorite expeditions was to collect endolithic lichens in Antarctica 2 Hale was later appointed a Senior Botanist at the Smithsonian 1 Advances in chemistry and technology editMason Hale was primarily a taxonomist but his taxonomic framework and methodology for describing new species was dependent on modern technology Hale was one of the first lichen experts to use chemical tests to study species delineations 1 2 He learned the techniques from his professor at Yale University Alexander W Evans The techniques that he utilized included spot tests early thin layer chromatography and fluorescence turning of color with UV light 6 Hale both cataloged the presence of chemicals from numerous North American species and described new chemicals One example is Hale s study on fluorescence in which he linked fluoresced colors to specific chemicals using paper chromatography 7 In addition to chemistry Hale also incorporated scanning electron microscopy characteristics such as cortical structure into his species concepts 6 Another technical advance Hale utilized was punch card computers to keep track of morphological and ecological data The use of computers was especially important to keep track of the many traits and taxonomic revisions in the Parmeliaceae 6 Taxonomic works editMason Hale was an expert of the Parmeliaceae a large family of foliose lichens 1 2 6 Hale wrote numerous monographs and articles describing new genera and species Before Hale Parmelia was a large genus containing a wide range of morphological traits Hale became interested in the Parmeliaceae because there was a number of undescribed species in the southeastern United States Hale revised the family three times 6 The first time required reviewing type specimens and collected material to examine subgeneric concepts and synonyms The second and third revisions broke the subgenera into more specific genera based on differences in chemistry and morphological characteristics using scanning electron microscopy While initially met with resistance most of the taxonomic changes are now widely accepted Hale s taxonomic divisions are considered to be one of his most important contribution to lichenology 1 8 Hale also widely collected and described crustose lichens in the Graphidaceae and Thelotremataceae now synonymized with Graphidaceae 9 10 Ecology editHale pioneered numerous ecological measurements with lichens In 1959 he marked out plots for long term study of the lichens on Plummers Island and used photographs to assess growth rates 11 In addition to his work on community ecology of lichens Hale examined the yearly growth rate of lichens in Aton Forest 12 Hale also examined use of lichens as an indicator of floods and high water 13 Lastly in the 1980s Hale and James D Lawrey published articles examining how car exhaust specifically the lead in the exhaust negatively affects lichen growth The long term datasets from Plummers Island facilitated these studies 14 15 Education and outreach editHale also wrote or co authored books that helped to introduce lichens to the general public and keep scientists abreast of current theory These books contained keys to genera and species such as How to know the Lichens 16 17 and Lichens of California 18 An important symposia on current topics was The Lichens 19 Introductory texts to lichen study include Biology of Lichens 20 Hale and Culberson also compiled the first checklist to North American lichens and lichenicolous fungi in 1956 Lastly Hale and his son printed the newsletters for the International Association for Lichenology on old printing presses and made the typesetting by hand 21 Statistics and awards editAccording to Google Scholar Mason Hale wrote approximately 200 peer reviewed journal articles and has been cited over 4 800 times Notable scientists who studied under Hale were Paula DePriest Theodore L Esslinger and Syo Kurokawa 6 Many additional scientists were mentored by Hale including Bruce McCune and Roger Rosentreter Hale served as president of the International Association of Lichenologists IAL from 1981 to 1987 22 In his memory the IAL created the Mason Hale Award for best doctoral study The Bryologist a peer reviewed journal dedicated the entire Autumn 1993 issue as a memoriam 23 Eponymous taxa and other legacy editThe following are a partial list of species named after Mason Hale The list focuses primarily on North American taxa Abrothallus halei Cladonia halei Graphis haleana Hypotrachyna mason halei Melanohalea halei Phyllopsora halei Physcia halei Pseudocyphellaria halei Thelotrema halei Usnea halei Xanthoparmelia haleiThe following are a partial list of genera named after Mason Hale The list focuses primarily on North American taxa Halecania Halegrapha Haleomyces Masonhalea Melanohalea MelanohaleaThe Hale Valley in Antarctica is named after him In 1993 the International Association for Lichenology instituted the Mason E Hale Award to recognise research excellence in lichenologists based on their recently awarded doctoral thesis or similar publication 24 The standard author abbreviation Hale is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 25 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Culberson WL 1991 A Tribute to Mason Ellsworth Hale Jr Bryologist 94 1 90 93 JSTOR 3243731 a b c d e f g Lawrey J 1990 Mason Ellsworth Hale Jr The Lichenologist 22 4 405 407 doi 10 1017 S0024282990000445 Hale ME Jr 1954 Lichens from Baffin Island American Midland Naturalist 51 1 232 264 doi 10 2307 2422220 JSTOR 2422220 Hale ME Jr 1955 Phytosociology of corticolous cryptogams in the upland forests of southern Wisconsin Ecology 36 1 45 63 doi 10 2307 1931430 JSTOR 1931430 Hale ME Jr Culberson WL 1956 A checklist of the lichens of the United States Canada and Alaska Castanea 21 2 73 105 JSTOR 4031788 a b c d e f DePriest PT 1999 Development of Mason E Hale s list of epithets in the Parmelioid genera lichen forming Ascomycotina A bibliographic review Bryologist 102 3 442 461 doi 10 2307 3244233 JSTOR 3244233 Hale ME Jr 1956 Fluorescence of lichen depsides and depsidones as a taxonomic criterion Castanea 21 1 30 32 JSTOR 4031709 Bruce McCune personal communication November 2014 Hale ME Jr 1978 A revision of the lichen family Thelotremataceae in Panama Smithsonian Contributions to Botany Vol 38 Wirth M Hale ME 1978 Morden Smithsonian expedition to Dominica the lichens Graphidaceae Washington Smithsonian Institution Press Hale M E 1970 Single lobe growth rate patterns in the lichen Parmelia caperata The Bryologist 73 72 81 doi 10 2307 3241588 JSTOR 3241588 Hale ME Jr 1954 First report on lichen growth rate and succession at Aton forest Connecticut Bryologist 57 3 244 247 doi 10 2307 3240092 JSTOR 3240092 Hale ME Jr ME 1984 The lichen line and high water levels in a freshwater stream in Florida Bryologist 87 3 261 265 doi 10 2307 3242807 JSTOR 3242807 Lawrey J D Hale M E 1979 Lichen growth response to stress induced by automobile exhaust pollution Science 204 4391 423 424 Bibcode 1979Sci 204 423L doi 10 1126 science 204 4391 423 PMID 17758017 S2CID 3104159 Lawrey JD Hale ME Jr 1979 Lichen growth responses to stress induced by automobile exhaust pollution Science 204 4391 423 424 Bibcode 1979Sci 204 423L doi 10 1126 science 204 4391 423 PMID 17758017 S2CID 3104159 Hale ME 1979 How to know the lichens WC Brown Co Hale ME 1969 How to know the lichens WC Brown Co Hale ME 1988 Lichens of California Univ of California Press Ahmadjian V Hale ME 1973 The lichens Academic Press Hale ME 1967 Biology of lichens Sipman H Seaward M 1990 Mason E Hale Jr 1928 1990 International Association of Lichenologists http www lichenology org Publications ILN ILN 23 2 pdf Sipman H Seaward M 1990 Mason E Hale Jr 1928 1990 International Association of Lichenologists http www lichenology org Publications ILN ILN 23 2 pdf Lawrey J Pittam S 1993 Hale Mason E dedication issue Bryologist 96 3 285 286 Mason E Hale Award PDF International Lichenology Newsletter 25 2 27 28 1992 Retrieved 3 November 2022 International Plant Names Index Hale External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Mason Ellsworth Hale Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mason Hale amp oldid 1183066898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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