Norman I. Platnick

Norman I. Platnick

Norman Platnick at the 15th International Congress of Arachnology, Badplaas, South Africa
Born 1951
Bluefield, West Virginia
Nationality American
Fields Arachnology
Institutions American Museum of Natural History
Alma mater Harvard University (Ph.D)
Michigan State University (M.S.)
Known for Spider taxonomy

Norman I. Platnick (born 1951 in Bluefield, West Virginia) is an American arachnologist.[1] He is a Professor Emeritus of the Richard Gilder Graduate School and Peter J. Solomon Family Curator Emeritus of the invertebrate zoology department of the American Museum of Natural History. A 1973 Ph.D. recipient at Harvard University, Platnick has described over 1,800 species of spiders from around the world, making him the second most prolific arachnologist in history, behind only Eugène Simon.[2] Until 2014 he was also the maintainer of the World Spider Catalog, a website formerly hosted by the AMNH which tracks the arachnology literature, and attempts to maintain a comprehensive list, sorted taxonomically, of every species of spider which has been formally described. In 2007 he received the International Society of Arachnology's Bonnet award, named for Pierre Bonnet, in recognition for his work on the catalog.[3]

Platnick is recognized as a world leader in spider taxonomy. Dr. Quentin D. Wheeler stated "He is the best arachnologist of his generation, has published more monographs and nomenclatural contributions than anyone, period."[1]

Notable publications

Current research

Platnick's most recent undertaking involves the goblin spiders of Oonopidae as a part of the Planetary Biodiversity Inventory, a project which includes scientific institutions from across the world.[4] There are currently about 1,600 recorded species in 114 genera,[5] but estimates have been placed as high as 2,500;[6] the project aims to flesh out the recorded species list and gain a more exact picture of the family's Phylogeny through DNA analysis.

References

  1. 1 2 Kumar, Mohi (October 25, 2005). "The exciting adventures of spider man". The New York Times.
  2. Platnick, Norman I.; Raven, Robert J. (2013). "Spider Systematics: Past and Future". Zootaxa. 3683 (5): 595. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3683.5.8.
  3. "International Society of Arachnology". arachnology.org. Retrieved 2016-01-05.
  4. "Planetary Biodiversity Inventory: The Spider Family Oonopidae". research.amnh.org. Retrieved 2016-01-08.
  5. "NMBE - World Spider Catalog". www.wsc.nmbe.ch. Retrieved 2016-01-08.
  6. de Busschere, Charlotte; Fannes, Wouter; Henrard, Arnaud; Gaublomme, Eva; Jocqué, Rudy; Baert, Léon (2014). "Unravelling the goblin spiders puzzle: rDNA phylogeny of the family Oonopidae (Araneae)" (PDF). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.