Tim M. Berra | |
---|---|
Born | |
Education | Saint Louis University BS biology, Tulane University PhD biology |
Years active | 1969 to current |
Employer | Ohio State University |
Known for | Author, illustrator, photographer, biologist, ichthyologist, Charles Darwin biographer |
Title | Professor Emeritus of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology |
Tim M. Berra is academy professor and professor emeritus of evolution, ecology and organismal biology at Ohio State University. He received his MS (1967) and PhD in biology from Tulane University in 1969. He is a three-time recipient of Fulbright Fellowships to Australia in 1969, 1979, and 2009. He taught at the University of Papua New Guinea before joining the faculty of OSU in 1972. He has spent over 11 years doing fieldwork in Australia. He is known for his ichthyological research and biographies of Charles Darwin, Darwin's children and naturalist William Beebe. Berra has researched and written about the Murray cod, trout cod, Australian grayling, salamanderfish, galaxiids, megamouth shark and the nurseryfish. In 2009 the Smithsonian Institution received his collection of 260 species of rare fishes. In 2022 the National Center for Science Education (NCSE) presented Berra the "Friend of Darwin" award.
Born August 31, 1943, in St. Louis, Missouri, [1] Berra credits his mother helping him with his career in science, by allowing him to read at the dinner table despite his father thinking it wasn't a good idea. He dedicated his book Evolution and the Myth of Creationism to his mother saying "For my mother for allowing me to read during meals". He acquired a love of fish because he kept tropical fish in his bedroom as a child, which led him to read about how to take care of them to keep them healthy. He said his, "hobby education led to a career down the road". [2] Berra received his BS in biology at Saint Louis University and his MS and PhD in biology at Tulane University in Louisiana. [3] He has received three Fulbright scholarships [4] which allowed him to study abroad in Australia. He is a professorial fellow at Charles Darwin University in Darwin, Australia. [4]
Berra has been called "an international expert in freshwater fish, with a reputation for solving long-standing mysteries". His notable work includes the taxonomic separation of two species of Australian cod (the trout cod from Murray cod) in the Murray River, and solving the disappearance and reappearance of the salamanderfish in Southwestern Australia, discovering that they burrow when the pools dry only to reappear later when the water returns. [5]
In 1988, Berra contributed to the preservation of a megamouth shark, a species witnessed rarely before that, described as "one of the most important zoological finds of the decade". [5]
Berra's 1996 research on Galaxias maculatus proved that its freshwater distribution around the Southern Hemisphere was due to dispersal through the sea of salt-tolerant juveniles. He has also worked on other Chilean galaxiids. [6]
Berra is a university professorial fellow at Charles Darwin University, a research associate at the Northern Territory Museum, and emeritus professor of evolution, ecology, and organismal biology at Ohio State University. [5] [7]
Fascinated as a child by the adventures of the HMS Beagle and the naturalist William Beebe, Berra has written several books on Charles Darwin, Darwin's family and in 1977, Beebe. Charles Darwin: The Concise Story of an Extraordinary Man was published in 2009, timed for the 200th anniversary of Darwin's birth in 1809. Berra became interested in the children of Darwin and his wife Emma Wedgwood. The children had often been mentioned in other books, but little had been written about their lives, Berra researched the ten children and published Darwin and His Children: His Other Legacy in 2013. Darwin and his wife were first cousins, which interested Berra on how this might have affected the family genetics. Their consanguine marriage possibly affected the children with "reduced fertility" compared with similar families of their class during that time. Seven children lived to adulthood, only three of those had children. [10] Darwin himself suffered from ill-health, "severe digestive problems and a skin disease that made shaving so painful that he grew his distinctive beard". Berra asked researchers in Spain who had used computer modeling to understand the genetics of the Habsburg family tree to look into the genetics of the Darwin family. The result was that there was an increased risk of low-fertility and bacterial infections, which at least two of Darwin's children died of. [11]
In 2016 The Washington Post contacted Berra to weigh in on the importance of finding a letter from Darwin that had been stolen 30-years prior by an intern at the Smithsonian. Berra explained that while Darwin was trained as a geologist and would have been "interested in what was going on in America", this letter would be one of over 7,000 letters written by Darwin and anything by Darwin "is of historical significance and scientific significance". [12] Berra has pushed for the city of Darwin to fully embrace the man and legacy that they are named for. In 2014 Berra said that when he started coming to Darwin in 2001 he was "struck by the fact that there was nothing visible about him [Darwin] to the public." Today, the Beagle ship bell chimes and bust of Darwin reside in Darwin's Civic Center, and the former Northern Territory University is renamed Charles Darwin University. [13] Berra gave the keynote address on Darwin in 2009 at the 200th anniversary of the birth of Darwin held at the Darwin Convention Center in Darwin. [1]
In 1995, Berra retired from teaching full time. In 2009 he won his third Fulbright Fellowship, and continued to publish books and scientific papers. In 2016 as a professorial fellow stationed at Charles Darwin University in Darwin, Australia, Berra continued his work on nurseryfish. [14] His research on the nurseryfish was to investigate the male's unique adaptation, carrying thousands of fertilized eggs on a hook "like a bunch of grapes". Berra wanted to know how the embryos attached to the hook, and if the male was the genetic father of the embryos. [15] [5]
During one of the research trips in 2011 with Wedd on the Adelaide River they encountered a 5-metre crocodile locals call Agro eating the fish that Berra and Wedd had trapped in a net they were using in their research. Argo got his teeth into the net and before Berra and Wedd could attempt releasing it, Argo tore a "humungous hole" in the net. The rest of the day Argo followed them around the river. [16] In 2009 the Smithsonian Institution received Berra's collection of 260 species of rare fishes. [8] Berra and his wife Rita M. Berra endowed the first chair established at Ohio State's regional campus. Berra hopes that the chair will be filled by a scientist that will do field work and return to teach at the Mansfield campus, also Berra made the bequest to honor his wife Rita, of whom he said "She has made my life easier for all these years and has provided unselfish support, freeing me to pursue my research". The chair is called the Tim M. and Rita M. Berra Endowed Chair in Evolutionary Biology, in the Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology. [9]
Berra decided to apply his professional curiosity towards one of his other passions, bourbon. He attended Bourbon Academy and Moonshine University, read many books and in 2019 authored his own, Bourbon: What the Educated Drinker Should Know. Berra states that his "scientific training and methods helped him find and organize information". [17] Until 2022, Berra was spending winters as a resident of Anna Maria Island in Florida. [10] Married to Rita M. Berra. [8]
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I just love my life.
I am very pleased to be included among so many prominent scientists, writers, and educators. It is an honor to have my life's work recognized by my peers as having an impact on scientific literacy, said Dr. Berra.
His latest book ... will join a library of 16,000 volumes he hopes to eventually donate to Darwin University. 'The university there would benefit so much more than Ohio State'.
The three diagnoses of Darwin's malady, The first ascribes it to Chagas disease, a parasitic ailment spread by the vinchuca bug. Darwin recorded being bitten by one in Argentina in March 1835. A second theory holds that he suffered from Crohn's disease, although that leaves his skin symptoms largely unexplained. A third theory is that Darwin suffered from the psychosomatic stress of knowing that his theory of evolution would distress his dear wife and the God-fearing Victorian public.
... it was likely that the egg-carrying was an adaptation to protect the eggs from tidal flow and siltation, and enabled the male to move the eggs to a safe location
The closer we got to the net we saw this log. All of a sudden this log raises its gigantic head and its got bits of net in its mouth.
Contemplating a project outside your own career specialty? Berra advises choosing a topic you find truly interesting before applying academic research skills to track, consume and analyze as much relevant material as possible. 'I do recommend it as a diversion of new stimulation for your brain, but you don't do this overnight. This took me five years. You don't want to jump into it willy-nilly.'