Maurice Kottelat

Dr. Maurice Kottelat (born 1957 in Delémont,[1] Switzerland) is a Swiss ichthyologist.

In 1976 he entered the University of Neuchâtel where he obtained his diploma in 1987.[2] In 1980 he went to Thailand where he began his field research on Southeast Asiatic and Indonesian fresh water fish species.[2] In 1997 he wrote an important revision on the genus Coregonus, which include the fish species from Lake Geneva, Lake Constance and other lakes in Switzerland.[3] Together with Dr. Tan Heok Hui, curator of the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research in Singapore, he worked in Sumatra, where they discovered Paedocypris progenetica, which is considered the smallest vertebrate in the world.[4] In general he described more than 440 fish species.[5]

On November 4, 2006 he obtained the Honorary degree during a Dies academicus celebration at the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerland.[6]

Kottelat is the former president of the European Ichthyological Society.[1]

Contents

Works (selected)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Commissioners Dr Maurice Kottelat
  2. ^ a b Maurice Kottelat: des centaines d’espèces de poissons dans ses filets. Universite de Neuchatel. No. 33 Juillet 2006 (French)
  3. ^ Maurice Kottelat: "European Freshwater fishes. An heuristic checklist of the freshwater fishes of Europe (exclusive of former USSR), with an introduction for non-systematists and comments on nomenclature and conservation". Biologia (Bratislava) Sect. Zool., 52 (Supplement):271 pp
  4. ^ Maurice Kottelat, Ralf Britz, Tan Heok Hui, Kai-Erik Witte, 2005. "Paedocypris, a new genus of Southeast Asian cyprinid fish with a remarkable sexual dimorphism, comprises the world's smallest vertebrate." Proceedings of the Royal Society B 10.1098/rspb.2005.3419.
  5. ^ Raffles Museum news - "2400 years of Ichthyology, but an inventory still far from complete."
  6. ^ Dies academicus 4 novembre 2006 (French)
  7. ^ a b c d e Zoobank
  8. ^ a b Library Catalog Smithsonian Institution Libraries
  9. ^ Announcement for the book

External links