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| Above are select examples of the book's many drawings by Joseph
Tomelleri. |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A pair of former University of Alabama colleagues who discovered
approximately 18 new species of fish during research for their recently published
book “Fishes of Alabama” will join with the book’s illustrator in
a signing at Harrison Galleries, July 30 from 4 to 6 p.m.
Dr. Herbert Boschung, professor emeritus of biological sciences at UA, and Dr. Richard
Mayden, former UA professor of biological sciences and current chairman of the department
of biology at Saint Louis University, will join with widely recognized fish artist
Joseph Tomelleri in the signing at the gallery, located at 2315 University Boulevard
in downtown Tuscaloosa.
Published by Smithsonian Books, with a foreword by two-time Pulitzer Prize winner
and UA alumnus E.O. Wilson, “Fishes of Alabama” details, in reader friendly
format with stunning illustrations, each of the state’s known freshwater fish
species. The 960-page book documents the diets, growth rates, reproduction, sizes,
distribution and status of Alabama’s fishes.
The idea for the book originated with Boschung, who has spent more than 50 years
studying fishes and who taught in UA’s College of Arts and Sciences from 1950
until his retirement in 1987.
“You work all your life at something, and you want to leave a little bit of
something here,” said Boschung of the book.
Boschung said he remains fascinated by fish, their life history, their biology,
their courtship process, the tenacity to which they cling to life, and their diversity.
“If you take the most primitive fish to the most advanced, some of them are
probably genetically more removed from one another than the more recent ones are from
mammals. Fishes cover a humongous range,” Boschung said.
And in that humongous range, no geographical area has as high a degree of fish diversity
as does Alabama, Mayden said.
“The state of Alabama is, by far, without any doubt, the most species rich
state in the United States when it comes to fishes,” Mayden said. Combining
the state’s freshwater and marine species gives the state nearly 1,000 fish
species, he said.
The book focuses on the state’s 341 freshwater species and, during the course
of producing the book, the researchers located every one of those species, except
two that are documented as extinct.
Mayden said he hopes Alabamians and others enjoy the book, but he hopes the state’s
residents enjoy more what’s all around them.
“Alabama is blessed,” Mayden said. “That state is blessed with
the beauty of the natural world in many ways. Our younger generation and older generations
need to go out and experience it and enjoy it. They need to snorkel; they need to
enjoy the flowing waters of Alabama more.”
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