Dominic Serventy

Australian ornithologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian ornithologist
A.K.A.Dominic Louis Serventy
A.K.A.Dominic Louis Serventy
PlacesAustralia
wasZoologist Scientist
Work fieldBiology Science
Gender
Male
Birth28 March 1904
Death8 August 1988 (aged 84 years)
The details

Biography

Dominic Louis Serventy (28 March 1904 – 8 August 1988) was an eminent Perth based Australian ornithologist. He was born at Brown Hill, Western Australia to parents of Croatian origin. He was educated at the University of Western Australia and Cambridge University. He was president of the Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union (RAOU) 1947–1949. He assisted with the initial organisation of the British Museum's series of Harold Hall Australian ornithological collecting expeditions during the 1960s, also participating in the third (1965) expedition.
He was co-author (with H. M. Whittell) of Birds of Western Australia, (published in five editions between 1948 and 1976), and (with John Warham and his brother Vincent Serventy, a popular naturalist) of The Handbook of Australian Sea-birds (1971). He is commemorated by the RAOU's D.L. Serventy Medal which is awarded annually for outstanding published work on birds in the Australasian region.
Dominic Serventy is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of Australian lizard, Ctenotus serventyi.
Dominic and Vincent Serventy are commemorated in the species' epithet of the extinct cormorant Microcarbo serventyorum, described by Gerard Frederick van Tets in 1994.

Honours

  • 1952 - elected a Fellow of the RAOU
  • 1956 - awarded the Australian Natural History Medallion
  • 1970 - awarded the Tasmanian Royal Society Medal
  • 1972 - appointed Ridder (Knight) in the Most Excellent Order of the Golden Ark by Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands

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