James E. Lloyd
e-mail in c/o pjhowell@.ufl.edu
About Fireflyers Midterm
(50% research, 50% teaching)
Education
- B.S., SUNY Fredonia (Elem. and Early Secondary Ed.), 1960
- M.A., Univ. of Michigan (Biology), 1962
- Ph.D., Cornell Univ. (Entomology), 1966
- Post. Doc., Univ. of Michigan (Evol. Biol.)
Employment
- Electronics Tech. (1951-1955), U.S. Navy
- Biol. Assistant (1958-1959), SUNY Fredonia
- Teaching Asst. (1960), Univ. Mich.
- Research Asst. (1961), Univ. Michigan
- Asst. Prof. (1966-1970), U. of FL.,(Prof. 1970-1973, U. of
Mich. Biology Sta.)
- Assoc. Prof. (1970-1974), Univ. Florida
- Prof. (1974-Present), Univ. Florida
Research Responsibilities
Conduct basic research on the biosystematics (historical ecology)
of Lampyridae, with special focus ecological aspects and influences
of sexual signals and the significance of sexual signal information
for understanding species and the species problem, in this taxonomic
group and as a theoretical consideration.
Teaching Responsibilities
Teach courses in areas of expertise, including insect behavioral
ecology, systematics, insect behavior, and photography.
Accomplishments
- In research,
During the past 5 years have begun final assembly of data and
production of manuscripts and illustrations for the monograph
Lampyridae of North America, which on computer disks is
about 30 megabytes of text and spreadsheets with to date about
1000 pages of hard copy. The assembled data, electronic recordings,
notes, and voucher specimens are all indexed and cross-referenced,
and will be deposited at the FSCA Gainesville and the MCZ at Harvard.
The number of species for American north of Mexico will be raised
from about 120 to about 170. Publication arrangements with the
probable publisher, Indiana University Press, have been in process
for about two years. (Research files of field data to be archived
include 3000 notebook pages, 35 hours of electronic recordings
all charted on hard copy, more than 6000 flash-voucher specimens,
from populations throughout the U.S. west to Nebraska.)
- In teaching,
Have initiated a Biology and Natural History with Fireflies course
in the University Honors Program, which has been very well-received
and this year will be offered during both semesters. It takes
up behavior, adaptation, taxonomy, evolution, conservation, museum
and field practice, and selected elements of biological history
and literature.
Career Publications
- Chapters in books, monographs: 9 (+2 in prep)
- Refereed papers: 47
- Invited papers, seminars and lectures: 58+
- Miscellaneous papers: 50
- Miscellaneous graphics: 54+
- Symposia Organized and Edited: 7
- Specimens Determined for Museums and other Collections: >14,000
from 55 archives.
Selected Publications
- Model for the mating protocol of synchronously flashing fireflies.
Nature 1973, 254: 268-270.
- Aggressive mimicry in Photuris fireflies: signal repertoires
in femmes fatales. Science, 1975. 187:452-453.
- Ecology of colors of firefly bioluminescence (with others)
Science, 1980. 210: 560-562.
- Male Photuris fireflies mimic sexual signals of their females'
prey. Science, 1980. 210: 669-671.
- Firefly mate rivals mimic their predators and vice versa.
Nature, 1981. 290:498-500.
- Nocturnal aerial predation of fireflies by light-seeking fireflies.
Science, 1983. 222: 634-635.
- Deception, a way of all flesh, and firefly signals and systematics.
1984. Oxford Univ. Press. Oxford Surv in Evol. Biol. 1:48-84.
- Firefly communication and deception: Oh what a tangled web.
1986. in Deception - perspectives on human and nonhuman
deceit, [ed] R.W. Mitchell and N.S. Thompson. SUNY Press, Albany.
- Firefly Signals, Selection, and Systematics; and The search
for patterns in firefly communication. (rev. and book mss in prep).
Revised February 1997