Charles Duncan Michener
1918
-
2015
photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
country of citizenship: United States of America
languages spoken, written or signed: English
educated at: University of California, Berkeley
occupation: zoologist, entomologist, university teacher
award received: Guggenheim Fellowship
official website: biodiversity.ku.edu/people/charles-michener/profile
Charles Duncan Michener (September 22, 1918 – November 1, 2015) was an American entomologist born in Pasadena, California. He was a leading expert on bees, his magnum opus being The Bees of the World published in 2000. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Articles 168
- 2010-05-07Peter H. Gleick, Robert McCormick Adams, Jr., Richard Amasino, Edward Anders, David J. Anderson, Wyatt Anderson, Luc Anselin, Mary Therese Kalin Arroyo, Berhane Asfaw, Francisco J. Ayala, Ad Bax, Anthony Bebbington, Gordon Bell, Michael V. L. Bennett, Jeffrey L. Bennetzen, May R. Berenbaum, Brent Berlin, Pamela J. Bjorkman, Elizabeth Blackburn, Jacques Blamont, Michael Botchan, John S. Boyer, Edward A. Boyle, Daniel Branton, Steven P. Briggs, Winslow Russell Briggs, James C. Carrington, Caroline Dean, Theodor Otto Diener, Thomas Dunne, David J. Meltzer, Detlef Weigel, James W. Valentine, Thomas C. Südhof, Paul Josef Crutzen, Brent Dalrymple, Howard Ronald Kaback, Michael Rossmann, Randy Schekman, Paul Greengard, Gregory Petsko, Harold Mooney, H. Jay Melosh, Tomas Hökfelt, Michael Levitt, Solomon Halbert Snyder, Rodolfo Dirzo, Kerry Sieh, Robert R. Sokal, Daniel H. Janzen, Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, Charles Duncan Michener, Syukuro Manabe, Edward L. Miles, Margaret G. Kivelson, Wallace Broecker, Lonnie Thompson, Gretchen C. Daily, John E. Kutzbach, Charles H. Langmuir, Roald Sagdeev, Raymond Jeanloz, Anny Cazenave, Owen Lovejoy, F. Stuart Chapin III, Donald Crothers, Carl Frieden, Perry A. Frey
Date
Title
Authors
Human - wd:Q2958972