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Allan A. Schoenherr (February 6, 1937 – May 31, 2021) was a Californian author, [1] ecologist, [2] and naturalist. [1] He is the author of the widely used reference book, A Natural History of California. [1]

He received his PhD in zoology at Arizona State University and taught a long-running course on natural history of California University of California, Irvine. [1] He is emeritus professor of ecology in Fullerton College. [2] [3] He taught classes for the Desert Institute of the Joshua Tree National Park Association.

An accomplished nature photographer, he has provided the photographs to illustrate his books and he has received two awards for his images of California Gray Whales. A lover of the outdoors, he traveled, hiked, and photographed all over the world. He was the naturalist on many shipboard excursions including trips to Iceland, Greenland, Russia, Alaska, the Arctic and the Antarctic, the lagoons of Baja California, the South Pacific, and the Caribbean. As a biology professor on the Semester at Sea program traveled four times around the world teaching marine biology and ecology. He was the coordinator of Global Studies on the Spring ‘09 voyage of the Semester at Sea program. [4]

He was a professor of biology at Fullerton College for over 30 years. He died at 84 at his cabin in the Sierra Nevada outside Bishop 31 May 2021.[ citation needed]

Bibliography

Books

  • The herpetofauna of the San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County, California (1976)
  • A Natural History of California (1995)
  • Natural History of the Islands of California (2003)
  • Terrestrial Vegetation of California (2007), editor with Michael Barbour and Todd Keeler-Wolf
  • Wild and Beautiful: A Natural History of the Open Spaces in Orange County (2013)
  • A Natural history of California Second Edition (2017)

Academic publications

  • "A Review of the Life History and Status of the Desert Pupfish, Cyprinodon macularius". Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences. 87 (3). 1988.

References

  1. ^ a b c d "California Naturalist Logs Life in the Other Lanes". Los Angeles Times. 16 December 1992.
  2. ^ a b "The oldest living thing is a quiet survivor". High Country News. 15 April 2002.
  3. ^ "Wild, beautiful and very O.C." Orange County Register. 17 February 2011.
  4. ^ "Faculty and Staff". Semester At Sea. Institute for Shipboard Education. Retrieved 20 July 2015.