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Malcolm L. McCallum | |
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Born | (1968-12-26) December 26, 1968 (age 55) Maywood, Illinois |
Nationality | United States |
Alma mater | Illinois State University Eastern Illinois University Arkansas State University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biology |
Institutions | Green Mountain College |
Malcolm L. McCallum (born December 26, 1968 in Joliet, Illinois) is an American environmental scientist, conservationist, herpetologist, and natural historian. He is best known as the first to identify that amphibians were going extinct faster than they had during the Great Extinction at the end of the Cretaceous Period. He is also known for alerting the herpetology community that studies on the life history and ecology of amphibians and reptiles were largely getting ignored by the mainstream herpetology journals, and as a co-founder of the largest herpetology journal, Herpetological Conservation and Biology.
Early life
Malcolm McCallum was born in Maywood, Illinois in 1968, the son of Donald B. McCallum, a businessman, and Mary S. McCallum, a homemaker. McCallum lived his early years in New Lenox, Illinois, where he developed his interests in herpetology and biodiversity. Later, his family moved to Maryville, Illinois. He has a son, Max, and a daughter, Alice.
Education, research and teaching
In 1992 McCallum graduated from Illinois State University with a B.S. degree and a double major in biology and agriculture. He names Lauren Brown, Scott Sakaluk, and Dale Birkenholz as key figures who helped and encouraged him through his undergraduate studies. He briefly attended the graduate program in agribusiness at Illinois State, but discovered pretty quick that he was much more interested in the sciences and he transferred to Eastern Illinois University, where he earned the M.S. in environmental biology under Mike Goodrich. Initially, he focused his efforts on behavioral ecology, but the influence of Edward O. Moll shifted his interests to ecology and conservation. During his masters study, one of Moll's masters students turned down the opportunity to do his thesis on a large wildlife inventory project at the Savanna Army Depot in Jo Daviess County, Illinois. Upon hearing this, McCallum asked Moll if he could do the project. This study introduced him to field biology. McCallum was officially admitted as a MS student in Fall 1993 and finished his MS by the end of the summer in 1994.
Although offered the opportunity to attend the Ph.D. program at Texas Tech, he returned home to assist with a family illness from 1994 - 1999. In 1995 his discovery of deformed frogs in Madison County was covered by every major media outlet in St. Louis and later appeared on 20/20. He was hired at the St. Louis Children's Aquarium as an education specialist, but after only a few months the director asked him to assist in grantsmanship, and soon gave him the title of Director of Research and Grants. He was the institution's grantwriter, designed a multitude of educational programs, and conducted research on the use of Bovine Somatotropin applications in aquaculture. He also organized the First International Symposium on the Rio Negro River, and later edited the proceedings. Through this position, McCallum met Stanley E. Trauth, whom later became his doctoral mentor.
McCallum demonstrated a high degree of productivity as a doctoral student, submitting dozens of manuscripts prior to graduation. Many of these were focused on natural history, but they also targeted mass mortality of amphibians, spatial studies of endangered amphibians, ecological immunology, and functional biology. He is the foremost expert on Blanchard's Cricket Frog (''Acris blanchardi'') and his studies on this frog included systematics, immunology, behavior, life history, and conservation needs. He earned the Ph.D. degree in Environmental Science from Arkansas State University, specializing in ecotoxicology and conservation ecology. He continued this research as an Assistant Professor at Louisiana State University at Shreveport from 2003–2005. After four years in the state, he was the fourth most published herpetologist on Arkansas herpetology behind Trauth, Chistopher T. McAllister, and Mike Plummer.
He moved to Texas A&M University Texarkana in 2005 in response to exigency prepartions by Louisiana State University at Shreveport. From 2005 to 2009, he was the only fulltime biology professor on staff at the Texarkana campus. When he arrived in 2005, the program was largely in disarray. The fallout from release of the previous professor had created much student, faculty, and administrative unrest. He assessed student performance, redesigned the curriculum, organized a paid intern program, and increased the program's rigor. Student success under McCallum's leadership was the highest in the history of Texas A&M University Texarkana's biology program. It remains unmatched in percent admission to medical, dental and veterinary school, percent admission to graduate school, post-graduate employment in the life sciences, and average test scores on the Educational Testing Service's Major Field Exam in Biology.
McCallum was introduced to Fuzzy Logic during a faculty candidate's presentation. He studied fuzzy computational techniques over the next year and submitted his first manuscript using the methods, Amphibian decline or extinction? Current losses dwarf background extinction rates. At the time, no one spoke of extinction in relation to amphibian declines. His calculations demonstrated that the losses in amphibian biodiversity in recent times represented one of the most rapid losses in biodiversity ever observed. This study immediately changed the discussion of amphibian declines to a discussion of amphibian extinction. The manuscript received widespread notoriety and Discover Magazine listed it among its list of ten most important papers on the amphibian extinction issue. His use of fuzzy approaches was extended to two studies addressing climate change impacts on herpetofauna. These three articles received international attention as important subjects of the United Nations Environmental Program's Panel on the Role of Ecosystem Management in Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Eduction in 2009. He is currently among the foremost experts on applications of fuzzy approaches to life history ecology and conservation biology.
During the 2008 - 2009 academic year, the campus was informed of multiple cuts to state funding that would accumulate to over 22% by the end of the 2009-2010 academic year. He was the only untenured professors among five full-time and part-time faculty in the program after the administration misplaced his tenure portfolio prior to evaluation, and was released due to an excess of biology faculty compared to student enrollment.
McCallum's portfolio of over 100 publications and citation rating places him among the most productive herpetologists in this generation.
References
External links
- faculty web site for David Hillis at University of Texas
- laboratory web site for David Hillis and James Bull
- web site for Double Helix Ranch
- web site for Life: The Science of Biology
- Orphaned articles from January 2015
- 1968 births
- Living people
- People from New Lenox, Illinois
- People from Collinsville, Illinois
- People from Jonesboro, Arkansas
- People from Holden, Missouri
- Texas A&M University Texarkana faculty
- Illinois State University alumni
- Eastern Illinois University alumni
- Arkansas State University alumni
- Herpetologists
- Environmental scientists
- Ecologists
- Conservation biologists
- American zoologists
- American people of Scottish descent