Edmund C. Jaeger | |
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Born | |
Died | August 2, 1983 | (aged 96)
Resting place | Edmund Jaeger Nature Sanctuary Chuckwalla Mountains (ashes scattered) 33°41′13″N 115°26′39″W / 33.68696°N 115.44415°W |
Alma mater | Occidental College |
Known for | Hibernation of common poorwill |
Awards | Honorary Doctor of Science, Occidental College (1953) Phi Beta Kappa, Occidental College Chapter (1962) Professor Emeritus, Riverside City College (1965) Honorary Doctor of Laws, University of California, Riverside (1967) Member, University of California Chapter of Sigma Xi (1966) [1]: 216, 378, 397, 404, 406 |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biology |
Institutions | Riverside City College Riverside Municipal Museum |
Author abbrev. (botany) | E.Jaeger[2] |
Edmund Carroll Jaeger, D.Sc.,[1] (January 28, 1887 – August 2, 1983) was an American biologist known for his works on desert ecology. He was born in Loup City, Nebraska to Katherine (née Gunther) and John Philip Jaeger,[3]: V.I, p.159 and moved to Riverside, California in 1906 with his family.[4] He was the first to document, in The Condor,[5] a state of extended torpor, approaching hibernation, in a bird, the common poorwill.[6] He also described this in the National Geographic Magazine.[7]
Wild2007
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Earlier I gave an account (Condor, 50, 1948:45) of the behavior of a Poor-will (Phalaenoptilus nuttallinii) which I found in a state of profound torpidity in the winter of 1946–47 in the Chuckawalla Mountains of the Colorado Desert, California.(photographs by Kenneth Middleham)