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SerpentResearch.Com

Amphibians, Reptiles, & Natural History

Blogs

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Tiny, new Malagasy Frogs

Mar 31, 20191293 views3 min read

An adult male Miniscule resting on a fingertip. Photo credit by Sam Hyde Roberts. Scientists at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet…

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A strong male-biased sex ratio in the Aesculapian Snake

Mar 31, 20191474 views2 min read

 Aesculapian snake, Zamenis longissimus. Photo credit:  Felix Reimann. The adult sex ratio in all isolated populations of…

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Bd and Frog Biodiversity

Apr 1, 20191240 views4 min read

An international study led by The Australian National University (ANU) has found a fungal disease has caused…

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Tiger Geckos in Viet Nam

Apr 2, 20191467 views5 min read

Cat Ba Tiger Gecko (Goniurosaurus catbaensis)  in its natural habitat. Photo Credit: Mona van  Schingen. While proper information…

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An extinct monitor lizard that had pineal and parapineal organs

Apr 9, 20181186 views4 min read

This image depicts a reconstruction of what the extinct monitor lizard might have looked like. The parietal…

About Me

John C Murphy

John C Murphy

Naturalist, Photographer ,
zoologist

After retiring from a career teaching biology and anatomy & physiology and science administration, I study reptiles and amphibians (but focus mostly on squamates). My current interest are in snake phylogeny and diversity, highly aquatic snakes (that are non-sea snakes), the herpetofauna of Trinidad and Tobago, and giant snakes. I have been on the Board of Directors of the Chicago Herpetological Society (positions held include president and publication secretary 1975-1987), the Board of Directors of the Tucson Herpetological Society (2018 -2020). From 1987 to 2021 I was a research associate at the Field Museum in Chicago. Currently I am a member of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Snake Specialists Group and I am on the board of directors of Friends of Madera Canyon and the International Society for the History and Bibliography of Herpetology (ISHBH).

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