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James L. Patton

James L. Patton
JL Patton portrait.jpg
Patton in 2001
Born James Lloyd Patton
(1941-06-21) June 21, 1941 (age 75)
Saint Louis, Missouri
Citizenship American
Fields Mammalogy, Evolutionary Biology
Institutions Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, UC Berkeley
Alma mater University of Arizona
Thesis Chromosome evolution in the pocket mouse, Perognathus goldmani Osgood (1968)
Doctoral advisor William B. Heed
Influences Alfred Russel Wallace, Joseph Grinnell, Oliver Pearson, David B. Wake
Notable awards C. Hart Merriam Award (1983), Distinguished Teaching Award (1991), Joseph Grinnell Award (1998), American Society of Mammalogists Honorary Membership (2001), Berkeley Citation (2001)
Author abbrev. (zoology) Patton
Spouse Carol Porter Patton
(m. 1966–present)

James Lloyd “Jim” Patton (June 21, 1941, Saint Louis, Missouri), is an American evolutionary biologist and mammalogist. He is emeritus professor of integrative biology and curator of mammals at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, UC Berkeley and has made extensive contributions to the systematics and biogeography of several vertebrate taxa, especially small mammals (rodents, marsupials, and bats).

Patton is best known for his pioneering works on the evolutionary cytogenetics and systematics of rodents, especially pocket mice (Perognathus/Chaetodipus) and pocket gophers (Thomomys), the diversification of rainforest faunas, and the impact of climate change on North American mammals. He has authored nearly 200 scientific publications, many of them in collaboration with 36 graduate students and 13 post-doctoral scholars he mentored over four decades. He is one of the most experienced field mammalogists today, having collected extensively in the western United States and in 14 other countries around the world, including Mexico, Ecuador (Galapagos Islands), Peru, Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Taiwan, Vietnam, Iran, and Cameroon. As of 2005, he had deposited nearly 20,000 specimens in the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, making him the most prolific collector of mammal specimens in that institution’s nearly 100-year history.

Patton has one genus of neotropical tree rat (Pattonomys), three species of neotropical rodents (Proechimys pattoni,Phyllomys pattoni, and the fossil Ullumys pattoni), one species of fossil porcupine (Neosteiromys pattoni), one species of neotropical bat (Lonchophylla pattoni), one species of pocket gopher louse (Geomydoecus pattoni), and one species of Madagascar snake (Liophidium pattoni) named in his honor.

The American Society of Mammalogists established the "James L. Patton Award" in 2015 to promote and support museum-based research by graduate students.


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