Paul SludPaul Slud (31 March 1918, New York City – 20 February 2006, Catlett, Virginia) was an American ornithologist and tropical ecologist, known for his 1960 monograph The Birds of Finca "La Selva," Costa Rica[1] and his 1964 book The Birds of Costa Rica: Distribution and Ecology.[2][3][4] Slud graduated with a bachelor's degree in geography from the City College of New York and then in 1948 took an ornithology course from Arthur A. Allen at Cornell University. Slud became a graduate student in zoology at the University of Michigan,[2] where he graduated with M.S. in 1958 and Ph.D. in 1960.[5] His dissertation The Birds of Finca "La Selva," Costa Rica was published in 1960 by the Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History.[5]
Slud did extensive field work (totaling over eight years) in Costa Rica. In the early 1960s, he did field work supported by a one-year appointment at the University of Florida, a salaried Research Fellowship at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNB), and a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant.[2] For the academic year 1961–1962 he held a Guggenheim Fellowship,[6] which he used for his research on the birds of Cocos Island[2] (which is now a Costa Rican national park). He also did field work: in Honduras and on Panama's Barro Colorado Island.[5] Slud's 1964 book The Birds of Costa Rica: Distribution and Ecology and Burt L. Monroe's A Distributional Survey of the Birds of Honduras have been important for studies of the avian fauna of Central America.[7] From 1964 until his retirement in 1983, Paul Slud was an associate curator in the bird division of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History.[8] He was an expert on bird vocalizations.[9]
The American Ornithologists' Union elected him a member in 1962.[8] Slud married Barbara Finkenthal in 1964 in Manhattan. Upon his death he was survived by his widow, two children, and four grandchildren.[2] References
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