PROFESSIONAL AWARDS

JOSEPH GRINNELL AWARD for excellence in education in mammalogy 1997—B. Elizabeth Horner, Smith College 1998—James L. Patton, Museum of Vertebrate , University of California, Berkeley 1999—Philip Myers, Museum of Zoology, 2000—Robert J. Baker, Texas Tech University 2001—Timothy E. Lawlor, Humboldt State University 2002—John B. Bowles, Central College, Pella, Iowa 2003—David J. Schmidly, Oklahoma State University, Texas Tech University, and Texas A&M University 2004—Norman A. Slade, University of 2005—Mark S. Hafner, Museum of Natural Science, Lousiana State University 2006—Jerry R. Choate, Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University 2007—Peter D. Weigl, Wake Forest University 2008—R. Mark Brigham, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada 2009—David M. Armstrong, University of Colorado 2010—Enrique P. Lessa, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay

HARTLEY H. T. JACKSON AWARD for long and outstanding service to ASM 1978—William B. Davis, Texas A&M University 1979—William H. Burt, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, and California Institute of Technology 1980—Bryan P. Glass, Oklahoma State University 1983—J. Knox Jones, Jr., Texas Tech University and 1984—Oliver P. Pearson, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley 1985—Sydney Anderson, Department of Mammalogy, American Museum of Natural History 1986—Murray L. Johnson, Burke Memorial Washington State Museum and Puget Sound Museum of Natural History 1987—Donald F. Hoffmeister, University of Illinois and University of Kansas 1988—Karl F. Koopman, American Museum of Natural History, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, and Chicago Museum of Natural History 1990—Marie A. Lawrence, Department of Mammalogy, American Museum of Natural History 1991—John O. Whitaker, Jr., Indiana State University 1992—B. J. Verts, Oregon State University and Illinois Natural History Survey 1993—J. Mary Taylor, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, University of British Columbia, and Wellesley College 1994—Robert J. Baker, Texas Tech University 1995—James A. Lackey, State University of New York—Oswego 1996—Don E. Wilson, National Museum of Natural History, and U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1997—Clyde Jones, Texas Tech University, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Tulane University 1998—Gordon L. Kirkland, Jr., Shippensberg University of Pennsylvania 1999—Elmer C. Birney, Bell Museum of Natural History, University of Minnesota 2000—Richard W. Thorington, Jr., Division of Mammals, National Museum of Natural History 2001—Suzanne B. McLaren, Section of Mammals, Carnegie Museum of Natural History 2002—H. Duane Smith & Dahnelle Smith, Brigham Young University 2004—Hugh H. Genoways, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Carnegie Museum of Natural History; Museum of Texas Tech University 2005—Alfred L. Gardner, USGS, Patuxent Wildlife Research Center 2006—David M. “Chip” Leslie, Oklahoma State University 2007—Barbara H. Blake, University of North Carolina at Greensboro 2008—Michael A. Mares, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, University of Oklahoma 2009—Glennis Kaufman, Kansas State University 2010—Thomas J. “Mac” McIntyre, National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA)

C. HART MERRIAM AWARD for outstanding research contributions to the science of mammalogy 1976—James N. Layne, Archbold Biological Station, University of Florida, and Cornell University 1977—J. Knox Jones, Jr., Texas Tech University and University of Kansas 1978—James S. Findley, University of New Mexico 1979—Terry A. Vaughan, Northern Arizona University and Colorado State University 1980—Robert J. Baker, Texas Tech University 1981—John F. Eisenberg, University of Florida, National Zoological Park, University of , and University of British Columbia 1983—James L. Patton, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley 1985—Michael H. Smith, Savannah River Ecology Laboratory and University of Georgia 1986—William Z. Lidicker, Jr., Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley 1987—Hugh H. Genoways, University of Nebraska State Museum, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, and Texas Tech University 1988—Jerry R. Choate, Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University 1989—James H. Brown, University of New Mexico, University Arizona, University of Utah, and UCLA 1991—Timothy H. Clutton-Brock, Cambridge University, Cambridge, England 1992—Guy G. Musser, Department of Mammalogy, American Museum of Natural History1993—Charles J. Krebs, University of British Columbia 1994—Gail R. Michener, University of Lethbridge 1995—M. Brock Fenton, York University 1996—Katherine Ralls, National Zoological Park 1997—Kenneth Armitage, University of Kansas 1998—Thomas H. Kunz, Boston University 1999—Carleton J. Phillips, Texas Tech University, Illinois State University, and Hofstra University 2000—Michael A. Mares, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, University of Oklahoma, and 2001—Theodore H. Fleming, University of Miami 2002—George O. Batzli, University of Illinois 2003—R. Terry Bowyer, University of Alaska, Fairbanks 2004—O. J. Reichman, National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, University of California, Santa Barbara 2005—Kay E. Holekamp, Michigan State University 2006—David W. Macdonald, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom 2007—Robert S. Hoffmann, National Museum of Natural History, SmithsonianInstitution 2008—Christopher R. Dickman, University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 2009—Richard S. Ostfeld, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, NY 2010—Gerardo Ceballos, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Coyoacán, Ciudad de México, México

ALDO LEOPOLD CONSERVATION AWARD for outstanding contributions to the conservation of mammals and mammalian biodiversity 2003—Edward O. Wilson, Harvard University 2004—Russell A. Mittermeier, Conservation International, Washington, DC 2005—George B. Schaller, Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, NY 2007—Rodrigo A. Medellín, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Coyoacán, Ciudad de México, México 2008—Virgilio G. Roig, Jardín Zoológico de Mendoza, Mendoza, Argentina 2009—Helene Marsh, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia 2010—Herbert Prins, Chair of Resource Ecology, Wageningen University, The Netherlands

HONORARY MEMBERS conferred in recognition of a distinguished career in service to mammalogy 1919—Joel Asaph Allen, American Museum of Natural History 1921—Edouard-Louis Trouessart, Museum of Natural History of Angers and Museum National d’Historie Naturelle, Paris, France 1928—M. R. Oldfield Thomas, British Museum (Natural History), London, England Max Weber, University of Amsterdam and University of Utrecht, The Netherlands 1929—Henry Fairfield Osborn, American Museum of Natural History; Columbia University; and Princeton University 1930—C. Hart Merriam, U. S. Biological Survey Edward W. Nelson, U. S. Biological Survey 1936—Alfred W. Anthony, San Diego Museum of Natural History William Berryman Scott, Princeton University 1937—Leonhard Stejneger, U. S. National Museum 1941—Gerrit S. Miller, Jr., U. S. National Museum Ernest E. Thompson Seton, independent writer and artist 1942—Marcus Ward Lyon, Jr., U. S. National Museum; Howard University; George Washington University; and South Bend Clinic in Indiana 1947—Rudolph M. Anderson, National Museum of Canada Angel Cabrera Latorre, National Museum of Natural History, Madrid, Spain; National University of La Plata and La Plata Museum, La Plata, Argentina; and University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina 1951—A. Brazier Howell, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Johns Hopkins Medical School Theodore S. Palmer, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1952—Hartley H. T. Jackson, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service Edward A. Preble, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Nature Magazine 1954—William K. Gregory, American Museum of Natural History and Columbia University Walter P. Taylor, University of California, Berkeley; U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service; University of Arizona; Texas A&M University; Oklahoma State University; and Claremont Graduate School of the Claremont Colleges 1955—Harold E. Anthony, American Museum of Natural History 1956—Lee R. Dice, University of Michigan Albert R. Shadle, Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Buffalo and Cornell University 1959—Francis Harper, Boston Society of Natural History; independent scholar, researcher, and writer Nagmaichi Kuroda, Ministry of Internal Affairs; Department of the Imperial Household; and Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Tokyo, Japan 1962—Magnus A. Degerbøl, Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark 1963—Vladimir G. Heptner, Zoological Museum of Moscow State University, Moscow, U.S.S.R. Remington Kellogg, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service and U. S. National Museum Tracy I. Storer, University of California, Davis, and University of California, Berkeley 1964—E. Raymond Hall, University of Kansas and University of California, Berkeley Stanley P. Young, U. S. Biological Survey and U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1965—William J. Hamilton, Jr., Cornell University 1966—Erna Mohr, Zoologisches Museum and Institut, Hamburg, Germany Klaus Zimmerman, Natural History Museum of the Humboldt Institut, Berlin, Germany 1968—William H. Burt, University of Michigan and California Institute of Technology William B. Davis, Texas A&M University 1969—George Gaylord Simpson, Harvard University; American Museum of Natural History; and Columbia University 1970—Robert T. Orr, California Academy of Sciences 1971—Stephen D. Durrant, University of Utah 1972—Kazimierz Petrusewicz, Institute of Ecology, Polish Academy of Sciences; University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland 1973—Charles S. Elton, University of Oxford, Oxford, Englan 1976—Emmet T. Hooper, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan Vladimir E. Sokolov, Moscow State University; Department of General Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences; A. N. Severtzov Institute of Animal Evolutionary Morphology and Ecology, Moscow, U. S. S. R. 1979—Oliver P. Pearson, University of California, Berkeley 1981—Victor B. Scheffer, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1982—Donald F. Hoffmeister, University of Illinois and University of Kansas Z. Kazimierz Pucek, Mammal Research Institute, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland 1983—Björn O. L. Kurtén, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland 1985—John Edwards Hill, British Museum (Natural History), London, England 1986—Randolph L. Peterson, Royal Ontario Museum and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada Bernardo Villa-Ramirez, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México, D.F., México, México 1987—Francis Petter, Museum National d’Historie Naturelle, Paris, France 1988—XIA Wuping, Northwest Plateau Institute of Biology, Academia Sinica, China 1990—Karl F. Koopman, American Museum of Natural History; Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia; Chicago Museum of Natural History 1991—Philip Hershkovitz, Field Museum of Natural History 1992—Sydney Anderson, American Museum of Natural History J. Knox Jones, Jr., Texas Tech University and University of Kansas 1993—John N. Calaby, CSIRO, Canberra, ACT, Australia James N. Layne, Archbold Biological Station; University of Florida; Cornell University 1994—James S. Findley, University of New Mexico 1995—William Z. Lidicker, Jr., Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley 1996—Robert S. Hoffmann, Smithsonian Institution; National Museum of Natural History; University of Kansas; University of Montana 1997—J. Ticul Álvarez-Solózano, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, México, D.F., México 1998—Wang Sung, Academia Sinica, Beijing, China 1999—Paul S. Martin, University of Arizona 2000—Franklin H. Bronson, University of Texas, Austin 2001—James L. Patton, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley J. Mary Taylor, Cleveland Museum of Natural History; Oregon Regional Primate Research Center; University of British Columbia; and Wellesley College Patricia A. Woolley, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 2002—Hugh H. Genoways, University of Nebraska State Museum; Carnegie Museum of Natural History; and Texas Tech University Eviatar Nevo, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel Don E. Wilson, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, and U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2003—Jennifer U. M. Jarvis, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, Republic of South Africa Clyde Jones, Texas Tech University; U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and Tulane University LIM Boo Liat, Institute for Medical Research and University of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2004—Guy G. Musser, American Museum of Natural History David C. D. Happold, Division of Botany and Zoology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia 2005—Robert J. Baker, Texas Tech University José Ramírez Pulido, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Iztapalapa, México, D. F., México 2006—James H. Brown, University of New Mexico 2007—Jerry R. Choate, Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University Richard W. Thorington, Jr., National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution 2008—Thomas H. Kunz, Boston University Alfredo Langguth, Laboratorio de Evolución, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay Terry L. Yates, University of New Mexico 2009—Kenneth B. Armitage, University of Kansas Timothy H. Clutton-Brock, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom 2010—Alfred L. Gardner, Biological Survey Unit, USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, National Museum of Natural History

STUDENT AND YOUNG PROFESSIONAL AWARDS

ALBERT R. AND ALMA SHADLE FELLOWSHIP presented by the Buffalo Foundation to a student enrolled in a university/college in the United States to promote a professional career in mammalogy by allowing the recipient greater freedom to pursue research 1972—James Joule, University of Houston William J. Bleier, Texas Tech University 1973—Philip D. Gingerich, Yale University 1974—Patricia W. Freeman, University of New Mexico 1975—Thomas J. O’Shea, Northern Arizona University 1976—John L. Hoogland, University of Michigan 1977—Ira F. Greenbaum, Texas Tech University 1978—Kenneth D. Rose, University of Michigan 1979—Peter V. August, Boston University 1980—Michael A. Bowers, University of Arizona 1981—Gary G. Kwiecinski, Cornell University 1982—W. Christopher Wozencraft, University of Kansas 1983—Duke S. Rogers, University of California, Berkeley 1984—Craig S. Hood, Texas Tech University 1985—Robert M. Sullivan, University of New Mexico 1986—Cynthia E. Rebar, Kansas State University 1987—Kimberlyn Nelson, Harvard University 1988—Ronald A. Van Den Bussche, Texas Tech University 1989—Brett R. Riddle, University of New Mexico 1990—Robert D. Bradley, Texas Tech University 1991—Craig L. Frank, University of California, Irvine 1992—Jennifer K. Frey, University of New Mexico 1993—James W. Demastes, Louisiana State University 1994—Douglas A. Kelt, University of New Mexico 1995—Theresa A. Spradling, Louisiana State University 1996—Dawn M. Kaufman, University of New Mexico 1997—Link Olson, University of Chicago 1998—Thomas Risch, Auburn University 1999—Jay F. Storz, Boston University 2000—Sara Kathleen Lyons, University of Chicago 2001—Steven R. Hoofer, Oklahoma State University 2002—Christine L. Hice, Texas Tech University 2003—Antoinette J. Piaggio, University of Colorado, Boulder 2004—Jacob R. Goheen, University of New Mexico 2005—Sergio Solari, Texas Tech University

AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MAMMALOGISTS FELLOWSHIP presented to a student in recognition of current accomplishments in mammalogy, service to ASM, and the potential for a productive, future role in professional mammalogy. 2001—Richard D. Stevens, Texas Tech University 2002—Andrew McAdam, University of Alberta 2003—Debra M. Shier, University of California, Davis 2004—Kristofer M. Helgen, South Australia Museum, Adelaide 2005—Jacob R. Goheen, University of New Mexico

WILLIAM T. HORNADAY CONSERVATION AWARD presented to a student/young professional who has made a significant contribution as a student to the conservation of mammals and their habitats. 2004—Brent Sewall, University of California-Davis 2005—Isabel Beasley, James Cook University, Queensland, Austrailia 2008—Angelia S. M. Vanderlaan, Oceanography Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada 2009—Gerrit Jan Schipper III, Director of IUCN-SSC/CI-CABS Global Mammal Assessment

OLIVER P. PEARSON AWARD to support a young professional who holds an academic position in a Latin American institution within 5 years of receiving a Ph.D. or equivalent degree 2004—Ulyses Pardiñas, Centro Nacional Patagónico, Puerto Madryn, Chubut, Argentina 2005—Yuri Leite, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Vitória, Brazil 2006—Luis Fernando Aquirre, Universidad Mayor de San Simón, Cochabamba, Bolivia 2007—Eduardo Secchi, Departamento de Oceanografia, Fundação Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Rio Grande, Brazil. 2008—Juan Opazo, Instituto de Ecología y Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Austral de Chile.