Professor Lincoln P Brower Sweet Briar College interview– Monarch Butterflies Biography USFWS
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=S_UuXE89cOU
Buy Dr. Brower's books on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Gb8T5w (sponsored) • Lincoln Pierson Brower (born September 10, 1931–July 17, 2018) was a zoologist and biologist. Brower, who graduated Yale University with a degree in zoology in 1957 and Princeton University with a degree in biology in 1953, authored, with his wife, Jane Van Zandt Brower, a February 1969 article in Scientific American, based on studies at Amherst College, that found digitoxin levels of monarch butterflies enough to repel birds from consumption thereof. As of 2015, Brower worked as a Research Biology Professor at Sweet Briar College and as a Distinguished Service Professor of Zoology Emeritus at the University of Florida. • In this 2013 interview, entitled “Life Among the Monarchs,” with Mark Madison of the National Conservation Training Center, Linda Fink, the former wife of Brower, discusses Brower’s connection with butterfly mentor Charles Rummel, his punishment for collection of a moth while he “cut” class, and his Yale graduate work on swallowtail butterfly speciation. • Video in the public domain in the United States as a work created by a government agency without any other copyright restrictions. • Works cited: • Klopfer, Peter H. Politics and People in Ethology: Personal Reflections on the Study of Animal Behavior. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press, 1999. • “Lincoln P. Brower.” Sweet Briar College. Accessed April 25, 2017. • Madison, Mark, Fink, Linda and Lincoln Brower. “Life Among the Monarchs: A Biographical Interview with Linda Finks.” U.S. Fish and Wildlife video, 13:18. June 3, 2015. • Madison, Mark, and Robert Pyle. “The Monarch of the Americas: Chasing, Saving and Understanding our Most Iconic Insect.” U.S. Fish and Wildlife video, 59:49. May 6, 2015. • Maeckle, Monika. “Q A: Dr. Lincoln Brower talks Ethics, Endangered Species, Milkweed and Monarchs.” Texas Butterfly Ranch. February 16, 2015. Accessed April 25, 2017.
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