American entomologist and ichthyologist
Marion Durbin Ellis (October 25, 1887 – December 16, 1972) was an American ichthyologist and entomologist .[ 1] She is credited with conducting the most comprehensive study to date of the Hemigrammus genus of fish[ 2] of which she named nineteen taxa . The taxon Corydoras ellisae and Hyphessobrycon ellisae (a.k.a. Hyphessobrycon sergipanus ) are named for her as are the species Bryconops durbinae [ 3] and Bryconacidnus ellisi .[ 4]
Early life
Marion Lee Durbin was born in Los Angeles to David Henry and Cornelia (Fitch) Durbin. She graduated high school from Anderson High School in Indiana . She attended Earlham College from 1905 to 1906 and then earned her A.B. degree in 1909 from Indiana University where she was a member of Delta Gamma sorority, and Sigma Xi honorary society. She married Max Mapes Ellis in September of that year. She earned her A.M. degree from Indiana University in 1910.[ 1] [ 5] During her time at IU she studied under Carl H. Eigenmann [ 6] and Charles Zeleny .[ 7]
Career
In 1908, Dr. Eigenmann turned over some fish samples he had taken from British Guyana that he found very perplexing. The then-named Ms. Durbin was able to identify a new genus and twelve new species of Tetragonopterid Characins .[ 6] [ 8]
After graduating from IU, the family moved to Boulder, Colorado where she worked with Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell . They made the first scientific observations of Claytonia rosea in 1913.[ 9]
By 1914, she was the Dean of Women at the University of Michigan Biological Station where her husband was also on staff.[ 10] [ 11]
In 1925, she moved with her husband to Fairport, Iowa where they worked at the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries lab and studied mussel reproduction.[ 12]
In 1930, Cockerell used her as one of two examples in an article in Nature about how the scientific community needed to fix citations for women who publish work before and after a name change.[ 6]
Personal
Ellis had her only child, Cornelia Grace, in October 1914.[ 13] She was a member of the Indiana Academy of Science , the Society of Friends , and was in favor of women's suffrage .[ 1] She died in Los Angeles in 1972.
Publications
Durbin, M.L. 1909. A New Genus and Twelve New Species of Tetragonopterid Characins. Annals of the Carnegie Museum ; vol. 6: 148–183.
Durbin, M.L. 1909. An Analysys of the Rate of Regeneration Throughout the Regenerative Process . The Journal of Experimental Zoology ; vol. 7; no. 3
Ellis, M.D. 1911. On the species of Hasemania , Hyphessobrycon , and Hemigrammus collected by J.D. Haseman for the Carnegie Museum. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 8(1): 148–183, pls. 1–3.
Ellis, M.D. 1911. The Plated Nematognaths. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 8(1): 384–413, pls. 1–3.
Durbin, M.L. 1914. New bees of the genus Halictus (Hym.) from United States, Guatemala and Ecuador. In: Journal of The New York Entomological Society 22: 218–223.
Ellis, M.M., and M.D. Ellis. "Growth and Transformation of Parasitic Glochidia in Physiological Nutrient Solutions." Science 64 No. 1667 (1926): 579–80.
Ellis, M. M., Amanda D. Merrick, and Marion D. Ellis. "The Blood of North American Fresh Water Mussels Under Normal and Adverse Conditions." Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries 46 (1930): 509–542. [also identified as Bureau of Fisheries Doc. No. 1097].
Ellis, M.M., B.A. Westfall, and M.D. Ellis. "Determination of Water Quality." Fish and Wildlife Service Research Report No. 9, pp. 1–122, 1946.
References
^ a b c Woman's Who's Who of America . The American Commonwealth Company. 1914. pp. 274 & 275. Retrieved July 20, 2023 .
^ Ota, Rafaela P.; Lima, Flavio C.T.; Pavanelli, Carla (April 21, 2015). "A new species of Hemigrammus Gill, 1858 (Characiformes: Characidae) from the central and western Amazon and rio Paraná-Paraguai basins" . Zootaxa . pp. 218– 230. Retrieved July 20, 2023 .
^ Scharpf, Christopher; Lazara, Kenneth J. (February 1, 2023). "Order CHARACIFORMES: Families IGUANODECTIDAE, TRIPORTHEIDAE, BRYCONIDAE, CHALCEIDAE and GASTEROPELECIDAE" . The ETYFish Project. Retrieved July 21, 2023 .
^ "Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes" . California Academy of Sciences. July 6, 2023.
^ "Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi in Delta Gamma" . The Anchora of the Delta Gamma Fraternity . January 1, 1915. p. 231. Retrieved July 20, 2023 .
^ a b c Cockerell, T.D.A. (December 1, 1930). "The Designation of Women Biologists" . Nature . Vol. 126, no. 3190. p. 957. doi :10.1038/126957b0 . Retrieved July 20, 2023 .
^ Durbin, Marion L. (October 1909). "An Analysis of the Rate of Regeneration Throughout the Regenerative Process" . The Journal of Experimental Zoology . 7 (3): 397– 420. Bibcode :1909JEZ.....7..397D . doi :10.1002/jez.1400070302 . Retrieved July 21, 2023 .
^ "II. Reports on the Expedition to British Guiana on the Indiana University and the Carnegie Museum, 1908" . Annals of the Carnegie Museum . Vol. VI, no. 1. August 1909. pp. 55– 72. Retrieved July 20, 2023 .
^ Ellis, Marion Durbin (1913). "Seven New North American Bees of the Genus Halictus (Hym.)" . Entomological News, and Proceedings of the Entomological Section of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia . 24 (5). Philadelphia, PA: Entomological Rooms of the Academy of Natural Sciences: 205– 211. Retrieved July 21, 2023 .
^ Ellis, Marion. "Marion Ellis to A.G. Vestal, 1915" . Ecological Society of America.
^ Calendar of the University of Michigan . University of Michigan. 1914. p. 39. Retrieved July 20, 2023 .
^ Pritchard, James (December 2001). "An Historical Analysis of Mussel Propagation and Culture: Research Performed at the Fairport Biological Station" . U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. p. 47.
^ "Alumni Notes" . The Emerald of Sigma Pi . Vol. 2, no. 3. May 1915. p. 189.