Ernst Mayr was a renowned biologist who authored the pioneering book on evolutionary biology titled ‘Systematics and the Origin of Species’
@Ornithologists, Career and Childhood
Ernst Mayr was a renowned biologist who authored the pioneering book on evolutionary biology titled ‘Systematics and the Origin of Species’
Ernst Mayr born at
In 1931, Mayr moved from Germany to the United States, to join the American Museum of Natural History; while he was in America, the Nazis took over Germany. Ernst, who was grateful to be safe in New York, settled permanently in the United States.
In 1935, Mayr exchanged nuptial vows with Margarete Simon. They had two daughters and their marriage lasted more than 55 years until his wife passed away.
The erudite scientist breathed his last on February 3, 2005, at the age of 100, in Bedford, Massachusetts. He was diagnosed with cancer few weeks prior to his last days.
On July 5, 1904, Ernst Mayr was born in Kempten, Germany, to parents Dr. Otto Mayr and Helen Pusinelli.
Dr. Otto Mayr, by profession, was a law practitioner but he was a keen-naturalist and took his kids on visits to inculcate in them a love and understanding of their natural surroundings.
From an early age, Mayr showed interest in ornithology. The family moved to Dresden, after his father passed away when Ernst was in his early teens, where he studied at the ‘Staatsgymnasium’ (‘Royal Gymnasium’).
At high school, he was a member of the ‘Saxony Ornithologists’ Association’. At the association, he made acquaintance with Rudolf Zimmermann, the renowned ornithologist who decided to take Mayr under his tutelage.
Ernst pursued medicine at the ‘University of Greifswald’ beginning in 1923. He stated his reason for choosing Greifswald over other famed universities just because it was an interesting and rich ornithological area.
In 1925, Erwin Stresemann, an ornithologist who came across Mayr’s work, suggested the latter to take up biology full-time to pursue his natural talents for ornithology.
He acquired his PhD in ornithology from the ‘University of Berlin’ in 1926, a feat he achieved when he was only 21 years old. After completing his doctorate Ernst then joined the ‘Berlin Museum’.
While at a zoological conference in 1927, he was introduced by Stresemann to Walter Rothschild. A banker by profession with a love for nature Rothschild appointed him at the helm of an expedition organised for the ‘American Museum of Natural History’.
At New Guinea, Mayr studied and catalogued bird skins, and in the process also named 38 previously unknown species of orchids. While in New Guinea, Mayr pointed out the mismatch in the facts offered by Hermann Detzner in his book, ‘Four Years among the Cannibals in German Guinea from 1914 to the Truce’.
The year 1930 marked the end of the expedition upon which he was appointed curator of ‘American Museum of Natural History’. It was here that he penned some of his most comprehensive compilations on taxonomy of birds.
Mayr presented his ideas on evolution and species in his most significant book ‘Systematics and the Origin of Species’ in 1942. His theory was an integration and progression on the works of Gregor Mendel (genetics) and Charles Darwin (natural selection).
In his lifetime, Mayr named around 25 new bird species, 410 sub-species, and over 38 new orchid species in New Guinea itself.