Douglas A. Rossman
Douglas Athon "Dag" Rossman (July 4, 1936 โ July 23, 2015)[1] was a U.S. herpetologist specializing in garter snakes. He studied at the University of Florida, where he was awarded a Ph.D. in 1961.[2] He was a professor of zoology at the Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He co-authored The Amphibians and Reptiles of Louisiana (ISBN 0-8071-2077-4), and also The Garter Snakes: Evolution and Ecology (ISBN 0-8061-2820-8). His wife, Nita Jane Rossman[3] (born 1936), also has an interest in herpetology and even had a subspecies named after her: Thamnophis saurita nitae, a subspecies of the eastern ribbon snake. She had collected the holotype for this subspecies on a field trip with her husband for his dissertation research, and he named it in her honor.[4] Rossman also wrote The Nine Worlds: A Dictionary of Norse Mythology (1983), Where Legends Live: A Pictorial Guide to Cherokee Mythic Places (1988), and several other works related to Norse mythology. Douglas Rossman is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of Mexican garter snake, Thamnophis rossmani.[5] References
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