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© Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at Bonnerzoologische Beiträge Band 52 (2003) Heft 3/4 Seiten 245-273 Bonn, November 2004 The Horn Expedition (1894) to Central Australia: New Directions in Australian Herpetology Glenn M. Shea Faculty ofVeterinary Science, University ofSydney, NSW, Australia Abstract. The 1894 Horn Expedition to Central Australia was pivotal to the development ofAustralian herpetology, both in turning interests to the central Australian fauna, and in emphasisingthe importance offield observations ofhabi- tat, behaviour, life colouration, reproduction, and tadpole morphology. Brief biographies of the biological collector. Walter Baldwin SPENCER, the two authors ofthe reptile account in the expedition report, Arthur LUCAS and Charles Frost, and of Joseph FLETCHER, who was closely associated with all three, are provided. All had herpetological re- search interests (although the subsequent careers ofthree diverged from this path), and the interactions between the four were vital to the development oftheirherpetological careers, and to the success ofthe HORN Expedition itself. The cur- rent status ofthe herpetological collections made by the HORN Expedition is summarised, and modern reidentifications ofthe species covered in the expedition report are provided. Keywords. Herpetology. history. Australia. Joseph FLETCHER. Baldwin SPENCER. Arthur LUCAS. Charles FROST. 1. INTRODUCTION continent as fast as possible and on personal survival. As a result, collections of preserved reptiles and am- Herpetology as a biological science has usually been seen phibians were mostly restricted to sea-based European to be the poor cousin ofother branches dealing with ver- expeditions and the limits ofsettlement. tebrates (Strahan 1985). Although knowledge of the Australian bird and mammal fauna was well advanced by The second half of the nineteenth century saw the first the middle of the nineteenth century, herpetological Australian-based herpetological systematists, with pub- knowledge was severely limited by access to much ofthe lications by Gerard Krefft and William John MaC- continent, the availability of material, and vast differ- leay in Sydney, Frederick McCoy in Melbourne, and ences in relative interest in obtaining different groups of Charles Walter DE VIS in Brisbane. However, despite all organisms. An understanding ofthe history ofAustralian four being locally-based, and in the case of KREFFT, herpetology has similarly lagged. While there have been with some field experience (Krefft 1863, 1866a,b), whole volumes devoted to the history and bibliography of there was still a bias towards collections from settled or Australian ornithology (Whittell 1954) and entomology sea-accessible areas (Fig. 2). (MUSGRAVE 1932), and great attention has been paid to manuscript fragments offield notes regarding Australian The last decade ofthe nineteenth century, with Krefft, mammals (e.g., Calaby 1966; WHITTELL & Calaby Macleay and McCoy gone or having ceased heipeto- 1954) (some ofthis due to the sorry history ofextinction logical publication, and DE Vis' output in decline, fi- ofthe Australian bird and mammal fauna), the history of nally saw the first herpetological studies of the deserts Australian herpetology has largely been limited to more of central Australia, initially by the Elder Expedition of 1891-92, and then by the HORN Expedition of 1894, comprehensive, though less detailed, studies (e.g., Whitley 1970, 1975; Finney 1984). together with a new generation ofherpetologists in Aus- tralia. Although the multi-volume Report of the HORN In the fifty-six years between the first published descrip- Expedition is well-known, its importance in Australian tions of Australian reptiles and amphibians (in WHITE science the subject of a recent volume (Morton & 1790) and the publication of GRAY's (1845) catalogue Mulvaney 1996), and extensive biographical details of British Museum lizards, some 209 names currently are available on its biologist and editor, Walter Baldwin representing about 136 species had been proposed for Spencer (Mulvaney & Calaby 1985), the pivotal herpetological specimens from Australia (COGGER et al. role of this Expedition and its Report on the develop- 1983). All were described by systematists based in Eu- ment of Australian herpetology have not previously rope from material sent from Australia, and most were been explored. Further and conversely, the vital role known only from coastal localities (Fig. 1). Exploration of herpetology in the development of the careers ofthe interior ofthe continent was constrained by long of Spencer and the authors of the chapter on reptile distances, limitations of animal transport and the dry, collections from the expedition, Arthur LUCAS and hot climate, with an emphasis on traversing the conti- Charles Frost, with which a fourth herpetological fig- © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at 246 Bonner zoologische Beiträge 52 (2004) 115° 120° 125° 130° 135° 140° 145° 150° 110° 115° 120° 125° 130° 135° 140° 145° 150° 155' Fig. 1: Type localities ofAustralian reptiles and amphibians describedbetween 1790 and 1845. ure, Joseph Fletcher, is inextricably linked, has not Much ofthe detail of Fletcher's life is provided in o- been previously identified. bituaries by SPENCER (1927, including a photograph) and Ferguson (1927), a list of his publications This paper attempts to document these aspects of Aus- (Anonymous 1929), and a subsequent memoir by Lu- tralian herpetological history, and also provides docu- cas (1930) (see also Walsh 1981 for a summary and mentation of the extant herpetological collections made additional shorter obituaries). on the Horn Expedition, updating the identifications provided in the HORN Expedition Report. Fletcher was born in Auckland, the son ofa Methodist minister, Joseph Homer Fletcher, and arrived in 2. FOUR HERPETOLOGISTS Australia in 1860. His father was initially sent to Bris- bane and Ipswich, then in 1865 became President of 2.1. Joseph James Fletcher (1850-15.v.1926) Newington College, a recently-established Methodist Although Fletcher was not directly associated in print school in Sydney (Macmillan 1963). Joseph Horner with the Horn Expedition, he was an important cata- had some experience in this area, having previously es- lyst, involved in turning LUCAS' thoughts to amphibians tablished a Methodist college at Auckland. His son, Jo- and reptiles and to field observations, and Spencer's seph James, was educated at Ipswich Grammar, New- thoughts to amphibian systematics and biogeography. ington, then at the University of Sydney, obtaining a © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at GlennM. Shea: The Horn Expedition (1894) to Central Australia 247 110° 115° 120° 125° 130° 135° 140° 145° 150° 155° Fig. 2: Type localities ofAustralian reptiles and amphibians describedbetween 1846 and 1890. B.A. in 1870. On graduation, he taught at Wesley Col- to compile a bibliography on Australian marsupials and lege in Melbourne, simultaneously reading for an M.A., monotremes. before departing for London in 1876 on receipt of his On returning to Australia, he taught at Newington (still second degree. under his father's presidency) from 1881-1885, during In London, he worked in Thomas Huxley's laboratory, which period he was acting headmaster for a short pe- and gained a second Bachelor's degree, a B.Sc. from the riod in 1883/84. While teaching, he continued his re- University ofLondon, as Australian universities did not search on marsupial anatomy (Fletcher 1882, 1883a, offer Science degrees at the time. During this period, he 1883b), and completed his bibliography (Fletcher was invited to spend three months at Cambridge, work- 1884). In 1885, he was offered an administrative posi- ing on embryology with Francis Maitland Balfour, tion as Director and Librarian ofthe Linnean Society of where he met the biologist Arthur Milnes Marshall. New South Wales by the Society's founder and benefac- tor, William John Macleay, and left teaching, begin- While in England, he published a single paper, co- ning his new career in 1886. He remained with the Lin- authored with Joseph Jackson Lister, on marsupial nean Society ofNew South Wales until 1919, although genital anatomy (Lister & Fletcher 1882), and began his title later changed to Secretary. During this period. © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at 248 Bonnerzoologische Beiträge 52 (2004) he also edited the Society's publications. Even after re- particularly on Acacia, Grevillea and eucalypts, after tirement, he was unable to leave the service ofthe Soci- 1909. ety, being elected President in 1919-20 and 1920-21, and Vice-President after that. 2.2. Arthur Henry Shakespeare LUCAS (7.V.1853- 10.vi.1936) Although Fletcher's early work (1881-1885) was on marsupials, he published a single herpetological paper at Knowledge ofArthur LuCAS' life is extensive. He wrote this time, reporting viviparity in a lizard (FLETCHER an autobiography (LuCAS 1937) and was the subject of 1883c; the species involved, identified as Hiniilia ele- two extended obituaries (Carter 1937a,b), as well as gans in the paper (presumably H. elegans Gray, 1838), several shorter accounts (Donovan 1938; Ducker & is probably Eulampnis heatwolei (Wells Wellington, 1986, 1998). The autobiography and the longer of 1984), based on reported size of the female and the Carter's obituaries carry the same photograph of Lu- fauna present at Burrawang, the locality cited). Between CAS in old age. A line drawing of a younger Lucas is 1886 and 1898, he changed research direction. Exten- presented by ANONYMOUS (1899b) and a photograph of sive fieldwork experience in the Sydney area and sur- unknown age by DuCKER (1998). rounding ranges led him to work on earthworm, ten'es- Arthur Lucas was bom at Stratford-on-Avon in Eng- trial planarian and onychophoran systematics, and land, son ofa Methodist minister. After a succession of amphibian biology. His first paper in amphibian biology schools for his early education (a legacy of his father's (Fletcher 1889) dealt with reproductive ecology and profession), he entered the New Kingswood School at habitat preferences of the local Sydney frog fauna, and Bath in 1862, run by the Methodists. His early life, with was a major improvement on the only previous paper on an ever-changing background, instilled in him an inter- this topic (Krefft 1863'). However, he soon developed est in natural history, particularly in geology and palae- an interest in determining the distribution of Australian ontology. Similar interests developed in his older frogs. Previous European workers describing Australian brother Thomas, who became interested in entomology species had been content with broad locality descrip- and ornithology. LUCAS was awarded a Conference tions, such as New South Wales, or even Australia. Scholarship (given to the head boy ofthe previous year) Fletcher, his interest kindled by his local experiences and spent an extra year at Kingswood, followed by six ofdiscrete habitat preferences, began to accumulate frog months as a pupil teacher, and won an exhibition to Bal- collections from around Australia, developing an exten- liol College, Oxford. sive network of informants and collectors. This led to a series of five papers (Fletcher 1891a,c, 1892, 1894a, Lucas went to Balliol in October 1870, and read for fi- 1898) on the distribution ofAustralian frogs, and in turn nal Honours in Mathematics and Natural Sciences, with to some thoughts on distribution patterns and broad fau- a view to studying medicine like his older brother. Stri- nal elements. Inevitably, some specimens obtained rep- cken by a severe bout of pneumonia and pericarditis resented new species. At first uncertain of the status of immediately prior to the examinations, he was given a these taxa, he sent material to George Boulenger at special examination which allowed him to graduate with the British Museum, who described them (BOULENGER fourth class Honours in Mathematics. His Oxford period 1888, 1890, 1893, including the patronyms Limnody- ended with winning the Burdett-Coutts Prize, an open nastes ßetcheri Boulenger, 1888 and Lechriodiis University prize. fletcheri (Boulenger, 1890)), but later began to de- After beginning a medical apprenticeship with Thomas scribe new species and varieties himself (FLETCHER in London, Arthur began to study medicine at London 1891b, 1894b, 1894c, 1898). Fletcher later shifted di- Hospital, to which he gained an Entrance Science Scho- rection again, working almost exclusively on botany. larship. In his first year of study, he won the Gold Me- dal of the Apothecaries' Society in Botany, but was soon forced to give up his studies to support his bro- 1 It is possibly Krefft's (1863) comment, dealing with the disap- ther's family when Thomas became ill. Thomas emigra- pearance of Litoria citropa (DUMERIL & BlBRON, 1841) in sum- ted to Australia, leaving Arthur to support the children mer ("I believe [it] frequents the high branches ofthe Eucalypti (Lucas 1937: 103, 127, contra DuCKER 1998). In order during the summer"), that led to a subsequent statement by Mc- Coy (1867) ("The Batrachia, .... are rarely seen orheard, -the true to earn a living, Arthur began a teaching career, initially tree-frogs (Hyla) inhabitingthe lofty gum-trees...") that in turn par- teaching mathematics and science at the Leys School, ticularly aroused Fletcher's ire, as he is twice attributed (Spen- Cambridge. His interests in science education became cceerp,en19n2e7d;asnede aplusboliLsUhCeAdSi,n 1a9n30u)nlauscrkeypemaotmedelnytquboytiangwe"lalskenntoewnn- apparent at this time, when he formed a school natural Professor ofNatural Science who had never worked in the field, history society, an activity repeated later (see below). 'In Australia the Hylas inhabit the tops ofthe lofty gum trees'". If Among his students at The Leys was William S. tfhaimsiliisartrwuei,ththtihsejluodcgaelmfeanutnaisutnodoerhafrieslhd-coKndRiEtFioFnTs,weavsenceritfaMincl-y Day (Lucas 1937: 1 1 1-1 12), later to become a signifi- COY misinterpreted Krefft's surmiseas fact. cant collector of tropical Australian fauna (including © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at Glenn M. Shea: The Horn Expedition (1894) to Central Australia 249 type material of the frog Nyctimystes dayi (Günther. "leaving home at eight in the morning and returning at 1897) and the gecko Phyllunis lichenosus Günther. eleven at night", and that he rejected the additional offer 1897, a synonym of Saltuarhis cornutus (Ogilby, from Spencer ofa lectureship in biology at the Univer- 1892)). While in Cambridge, he worked at various uni- sity. versity' laboratories and museums, becoming associated In December 1892 Lucas left Melbourne to become with the biologist Arthur Milnes MARSHALL. Field re- headmaster ofNewington College, where he also taught search on the Isle of Wight and in the Channel Islands English, mathematics and science (chemistry and geol- led to a Fellowship ofthe Geological Society. ogy), and initiated yet another Science Club, together In 1883, Lucas followed his brother to Australia, where with a zoo (Macmillan 1963). Almost immediately, he he became mathematics and science master at Wesley joined the Linnean Society of New South Wales, be- College in Melbourne, establishing another school natu- coming a member of council in 1895 (he was president ral history society. His interest in fieldwork continued, from 1907 to 1909, and vice-president from 1909 to and within 12 months ofarriving in Melbourne, he was 1916). In 1899. he left Newington to become senior ma- collecting in southern Tasmania. In 1885, hejoined J.B. thematics and science master at Sydney Grammar Gregory on an overland trek to Wilson's Promontory, School, where he stayed for 25 years, eventually becom- collected giant earthworms with Spencer in September ing headmaster. He also presented geology lectures at 1887, and in 1890 joined an expedition to east Gipp- the University ofSydney. sland with Arthur Dendy and William HOWITT During the school vacations, he continued with field- r(aHoFawlilsTTanedt aMl.t1B8a91w).RHaewa(lLsouccaolsle1c9t3e7d:a1r5o2u)n.dWtihtehYtahri-s work, both in the Sydney region (with FLETCHER and the geologist T.W. Edgeworth David), as well as com- interest in field studies, he soon became a member of mencing some botanical research at the University of the Field Naturalists" Club of Victoria (his brother had Sydney on a genus ofconifers. In the hiatus between his been one ofthe founders three years earlier) and was in- two Sydney schools, he participated in a botanical ex- strumental in initiating the Club's publication, the Vic- pedition to Mt Kosciusko (with FLETCHER), during torian Naturalist, of which he was editor from the first which he became temporarily separated from the main issue (1884) to 1892. He was also elected to mem- party, leading to illustrated headline stories in the Syd- bership of the Royal Society of Victoria in 1885 (later neypress (Anonymous 1899a, 1899b). issues ofthe Proceedings ofthe Royal Society ofVicto- ria give his year ofmembership as 1895, in error). Lucas finally retired from Sydney Grammar in 1923, at the age of 70, but accepted the offer of the Chair of Continuing his interest in science education, Luc.^S Mathematics at the University ofTasmania, finally retir- took an ad eundem degree, which entitled him to sit on ing from teaching at the end of 1925, to return to Syd- the Melbourne University Senate, from where he lob- ney. bied to improve science teaching facilities, to include science subjects in the matriculation requirements, and In his later years at Sydney Grammar, Lucas developed to establish a Chair in Biology. This latter was success- an interest in marine algae (DuCKER 1998), and this in- ful, leading to the appointment ofBaldwin SPENCER (al- terest flowered following his retirement, with over 20 though Lucas had also been one of the applicants for papers on the group published between 1909 and 1935. the chair; MULVANEY & Calaby 1985: 96). This interest led to collecting expeditions to South Aus- tralia, Victoria, Tasmania, Queensland and Western Lucas had a heavy workload during his years in Mel- Australia, including a month on the Low Islands in bourne. In addition to his teaching duties at Wesley Col- Queensland in 1931 (aged 78) and, two years later, lege, his administrative duties with the Field Naturalists' fieldwork on Lord Howe Island. His final scientific pub- Club and the Royal Society, and his efforts on the Uni- lications were the two volumes on the Seaweeds of versity Senate, he also began tutoring at Ormond and South Australia (LUCAS 1936; LUCAS & Perrin 1947) Trinity Colleges of Melbourne University in 1885, and the second volume of which was incomplete on his pushed for the establishment of the Methodist Queen's death, and completed by Florence PERRIN many years College. He later become one of its Senior Fellows, as afterwards. well as tutoring in science there. His promotion of sci- ence also extended to lobbying the Government for the In addition to his skills in mathematics and biology, creation of a nature reserve on Wilson's Promontory Lucas was also muhilingual. On top of the traditional (DUCKER 1998), and a Port Phillip Biological Survey. In formal schooling in Latin and classical Greek of the both of these activities, he was successful in prodding time, Lucas was also fiuent in French, German, Italian, the government to establish committees to look further Russian and Spanish. CARTER (1937b) suggested that he at the proposals. Little wonder that Lucas (1937; 151- used to spend his summer vacations learning new lan- 152) described his daily activities during this period as: guages in addition to fieldwork, and there are reports © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at 250 Bonnerzoologische Beiträge 52 (2004) (Carter 1937a; Macmillan 1963) that he leamt Rus- Station to Mt King George, reaching the summit at 0600 sian to read a paper on mating behaviour in lizards (al- hrs. though the identity ofthe paper has not been identified, and Donovan (1938) and Ducker (1986) more gener- Fletcher's interest in aspects ofthe natural history of frogs, rather than the siinple description ofnew taxa, al- ally stated that the relevant material was a book on "liz- so transferred to LuCAS, who included natural history ards"). data in species accounts in his second herpetological In keeping with his active life, Lucas died while travel- paper, "The Lizards Indigenous to Victoria" (Lucas & ling from Melbourne to Sydney, due to pneumonia con- Frost 1894), which was essentially an amalgamaron of tracted while collecting seaweeds at Warmambool. morphological descriptions from BOULENGER (1885-7) with new distributional data and natural history observa- Lucas' narne is perpetuated in herpetology by the ge- tions. This trend towards the documentation offield ob- neric name Lucasiitm Wermuth, 1965, and by the spe- servations also continued to the Horn Expedition Re- jcuinesiornasmyenoDniypmlo(dAacPtLyIlNus&lAucDaAsMiSFry1,99819)1o4,fDtihpeloldaatctte}r'-a port, and was a major factor in the effect ofthat Report on Australian herpetology. ¡IISpulcher (Steindachner, 1870). At the time of his arrival in Australia, LuCAS had pub- 2.3. Charles Frost (?1853-18.ix.l915) lished only a single paper, on geology. Although he Frost's contributions to herpetology are almost exclu- soon published several minor notes on a variety oftop- sively linked to Arthur LUCAS, and he remains the least- ics in the Victorian Naturalist, his publications did not known ofthe major contributors to Australian herpetol- follow any one theme until he began to write on herpe- ogy of the period, probably due to his non-institutional tological subjects. This research direction dominated his background. publications for the next decade and a half (FROST & Lucas 1894; Lucas 1890, 1892, 1897, 1898; Lucas & Apart from his publications. Frost's life is known only Frost 1894, 1895a, 1895b, 1896a, 1896b, 1896c, 1897, from a single obituary (Anonymous 1915), several 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903), either singly or in collabora- comments published in the Victorian Naturalist and in tion with Charles Frost, although this phase ended papers by others, and oral history at the Museum of abruptly, with only two subsequent non-technical publi- Victoria. His obituary states that he died at the age of cations dealing with herpetology (LuCAS 1914; LuCAS 62, giving a year ofbirth of 1853. & Le Souef 1909). Lucas' first specifically herpeto- Frost first caine to notice at the Field Naturalists' Club logical work, on the distribufion ofVictorian frogs (Lu- of Victoria in the late 1880s, when he occasionally ex- cas 1892) was clearly influenced by FLETCHER'S work on the distribution and biology of frogs in New South hibited specimens at meetings, including two snakes at a meeting in July 1888 (at the age of 35, making him a Wales (Lucas 1930: 744). The relationship between the relafively late starter in science). He became a member two also extends to parallels in their careers. Both of the Club's Committee in the 1889-90 year, was a Fletcher and Lucas taught at Wesley College and Vice-President from 1891 to 1894, and Treasurer from Newington College", although Fletcher preceded Lu- 1894 to 1898. He was an enthusiastic attendee at Soci- cas. The similarity surely relates to religion, with both ety field trips, participating in excursions to Fern Tree being the sons of Methodist ministers, and both schools Gully in 1892 and 1893, Nar-Nar-Goon in 1893, and run by the Methodist Church. Undoubtedly, this com- leading excursions to Sassafras Gully and Warrandyte mon background facilitated their friendship. On LuCAS' in 1894. He was also a participant in three ofthe Club's transfer to Sydney in January 1893, he rapidly became a inajor expeditions, to King Island (xi.l887), Croajin- close friend of Fletcher, who introduced him to the Linnean Society ofNew South Wales. Lucas became a golong (xii.1888-i.1889) and Yarra Falls (xi.l890), the member in May 1893, reading his first paper only two latter as leader. months later (Frost & LuCAS 1894). Their friendship pi^.OST also made independent collecting trips. SPENCER extended to shared fieldvv'ork, including the Snowy { 1901 ) noted that the first five specimens ofthe frog he Mountains expedition. LuCAS (1937: 159) recalled how described as Philoria frosti were obtained by Frost he and Fletcher, for Lucas' introducfion to the Blue while camped at Mt Baw Baw in 1898 (regurgitated by Mountains, walked 16 km overnight from Bell railway a tiger snake, Notechis scutatus (Peters, 1861)), and that Frost also collected the other two types on a later occa- sion. 2 It is also worthy ofnote that at least two other publishing herpeto- Apart from reptiles, Frost's early interests included logists were educated atNewington: the present author, and the la- spiders and birds. He contributed three papers on spi- twehoStpeupbhleinshJe.dCeOxPteLnAsNivDel{y19o0n7f-r1o9g.vainiid.ls9k8in1k) s(yAsntoemnaytmiocsusbe1t9w8e1e)n, ders to the Victorian Naturalist (FROST 1888, 1890, 1946 and 1963. 1891), and read at least two others at meetings, and con- © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at Glenn M. Shea: The Horn Expedition (1894) to Central Australia 251 tributed the bird list for the Croajingolong expedition their joint research activities. LUCAS (1892) wrote that report (FROST 1889). McCoy had "afforded (him) all facilities for examining the specimens which are preserved in the National Mu- During this period, Frederick McCOY, Director of the seum", prior to his departure for Sydney, and his later National Museum of Victoria, was seen as the leading autobiography (Lucas 1937: 140) reported similar ac- herpetologist in Victoria, primarily due to the continu- cess to the lizard collections. After his departure, Lucas ing publication ofhis Prodromus ofthe Zoology ofVic- returned regularly to Melbourne for holidays (LUCAS toria series. However, with the cessation of this series 1937; Carter 1937a), and was present in Melbourne in and the publication ofLucas and Frost's (1894) cata- July 1894 and July 1895, when he attended meetings of logue of the lizards of Victoria (read at the meeting of the Royal Society ofVictoria on 13.iv.l893), McCoy's the Field Naturalists' Club. It was presumably during the latter period that he and FROST worked together on influence waned and FROST became the primary source the Horn Expedition report, although he also examined of reptile identifications to members of the Field Natu- material while in Sydney, including the collections of rfalleilstdsw'orCklubby,otchoenrtsri(bFuRtOinSgT r1e8p9t4ial,eb;liFstrsentochre&porFtrsosotf the Macleay Museum (Lucas & Frost 1896a: 116), which were unavailable to FROST. 1894). Charles Frost's activities after ceasing writing in 1903 Frost's interests in herpetology were undoubtedly nur- are poorly-known, although he continued to live in tured by Lucas and Spencer, who possessed the aca- Kew, a Melbourne suburb, maintaining a collection of demic training and scientific writing skills lacked by preserved reptiles which were donated to the Museum Frost. All were members ofthe Field Naturalists' Club of Victoria after his death from heart attack, by his and members ofthe Club's Committee, LUCAS also ed- brother Jack. Unfortunately, locality data were not pro- iting the Victorian Naturalist. Curiously, however, al- though collaborative work between Lucas and Frost vided for much of this material (J. Coventry, Mel- bourne, pers. comm.). began as early as 1892 (LuCAS 1892), their 12 joint pa- pers (Frost & Lucas 1894; Lucas & Frost 1894, Frost is honoured herpetologically by the patronyms 1895a, 1895b, 1896a, 1896b, 1896c, 1897, 1900, 1901, Leristafrosti (Zietz, 1920) and Philoriafrosti Spencer, 1902, 1903), together with Frost's other solo herpeto- 1901. logical paper (Frost 1895), were published (mostly in Curiously, despite the close association between FROST Victoria) after LUCAS left Melbourne for Sydney. De- and Lucas, which extended in later years to Frost's spite being the major Melbourne-based herpetologist of provision of photographs of live snakes and lizards for this period, Frost was not a member ofthe Royal Soci- Lucas' popular book on Australian fauna (Lucas & Le ety ofVictoria, but did become a Fellow ofthe Linnean SOUEF 1909), Lucas makes almost no mention of him Society on 3.xii.l891 (although he never used the Lin- in his autobiography (Lucas 1937), referring only to nean Society's publications as an outlet for his own work). Why he became a member ofa British scientific "my dear friend Charles Frost" on one occasion (p. 152). society and not the local equivalents is not known, al- though the British Fellowship did allow him to append 2.4. Walter Baldwin Spencer (23.vi.1860- the letters F.L.S. to his name in publications, and may 14.vii.1929) have been encouraged by LuCAS and Spencer in lieu of Spencer's life has been thoroughly documented by formal academic qualifications. MULVANEY & Calaby (1985), from which much ofthe Oral history at the Museum of Victoria (J. Coventry, following account is derived. MMeulsbeouurmneo,fVpiecrts.oricaomhmer.p)etiosltohgaytcFoRllOeScTtiownosrokneda ovonlutnh-e Walter Baldwin SPENCER was bom in Manchester, the son of a textile manufacturer and merchant. He was e- tary basis, which is in agreement with most of the type ducated at Old Trafford School (1872-1878). Although material ofspecies that LuCAS and Frost described be- passing both Oxford an.d Cambridge Local Examina- ing in that institution, and the lack of any other person tion, and fulfilling the University of London matricula- experienced with herpetology on staffduring the period. tion requirements, he initially studied briefly at the It was presumably because of Frost's presence that a Manchester School of Art, then at Owen College (later collection ofreptiles was sent from the Western Austra- lian Museum to the Museum of Victoria for identifica- Manchester University) in medicine (a subject which, tion in 1901 (Lucas & Frost 1902; J. Coventry, Mel- though studied at Manchester, was examined in Lon- don), beginning in 1879. Here he came under the influ- bourne, pers. comm.). ence ofArthur Milnes MARSHALL, the newly-appointed Despite the geographic separation of Frost's activities Professor ofZoology, who also worked with Fletcher at the Museum ofVictoria and LuCAS' life as a teacher and later Lucas at Cambridge. Marshall, known her- in Sydney, it is clear that both actively participated in petologically for his frequently reprinted monograph © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at 252 Bonnerzoologische Beiträge 52 (2004) (Marshall 1882) on the frog, proved inspirational to pedifion (Spencer et al. 1888), which collected six spe- the young Spencer. By the end of his second under- cies of snakes and lizards (Le Souef 1888; one addi- graduate year. Spencer had collaborated with Mar- tional species of snake recorded, Pseudonaja textilis shall on a paper (MARSHALL & SPENCER 1881) on the (Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1854), does not occur on cranial nerves ofthe dogfish. At about this time, he also the island, and is presumably a misidentification ofone won the Dalton Prize in Natural Histoid (Pescott ofthe other three species collected). Other major expe- 1954: 90). Following this, Spencer transferred to Ox- ditions followed, including those to Croajingolong and ford, entering Exeter College in October 1881. Here, he Yarra Falls with the Field Naturalists, both trips also at- was influenced in his zoological studies by Henry tended by Frost. In September-October 1891, he Nottridge Moseley, Professor ofAnatomy (recently re- mounted a major expedition (Spencer 1892) to Gayn- turned from the Challenger Expedition, which had vis- dah in Queensland in search ofeggs and embryos ofthe ited Australia) and E. Ray Lankester, Moseley's suc- Queensland Lungfish {Neoceratodus forsten (Krefft, cessor. Spencer's burgeoning interests in biology and 1870)). Although this was unsuccessful, his visit coin- comparative anatomy detracted from his medical stud- cided with that ofthe German biologist Richard Semon ies, and he failed his medical examinations at the Uni- (who had the same aim), and led to an invitation to con- versity of London in 1883. However, in 1884 he gradu- tribute a paper on the lungs ofNeoceratodus to the re- ated from Oxford with a first in Biology. port ofSemon's Australian expedition (Spencer 1898), and to visit Semon in Jena. One year after the Queen- The following year, SPENCER became assistant to sland expedition. Spencer collected around Dimboola Moseley, demonstrating in practical classes and lectur- and the Wimmera River, followed by a visit in the ing comparative anatomy, and in 1886, he became the inaugural Fellow in Biology at Lincoln College. Be- summer vacation of 1892/93 to Lake St Clair in Tasma- nia, where he collected the specimens that provided tween 1884 and 1886, he wrote eight papers, five of Frost and Lucas' first reptile description (the skink which were on herpetological subjects (SPENCER 1885a, Hemisphaeriodon tasmanicum Frost & Lucas, 1894, 1885b, 1886a, 1886b, 1887), including frog embryology later to prove synonymous with Cyclodomorphus and the pineal eye ofsquamates. The final paper ofthis & casuarinae (Duméril Bibron, 1839)). latter project, published in the Quarterly Journal of Mi- croscopical Science, featured hand-coloured plates, all In early 1888, the year following his arrival. Spencer 1500 copies ofwhich were tinted by SPENCER, his fian- became a council member ofthe Royal Society ofVic- cée, and his friend Gilbert BOURNE in a one-week pe- toria, becoming secretary/editor the following year. The riod, and is still considered a major contribution to the year 1888 also saw Spencer's first Australian trip out- subject (Eakin 1973). side of Victoria, when he attended the inaugural meet- ing of the Australasian Association for the Advance- In 1886, the Chair of Biological Science at the Univer- sity of Melbourne was advertised. A very strong field ment of Science meeting in Sydney as the Society's applied, including T.J. PARKER and W.A. Haswell delegate. It was at this meeting that he met Joseph Fletcher for the first time and the two rapidly devel- (later to write a standard zoology text of the period: Parker & Haswell 1897). Spencer's selection from oped a close friendship (Mulvaney et al. 2001: 273, 402, 482), which extended in later years to Spencer this field is thought to have been on the basis of his staying with Fletcher during annual visits to Sydney strong publication record and good testimonials from en route to holidays in New Zealand. Also in his first (among others) Marshall, Moseley and Lankester, three years in Melbourne, Spencer formed a Science as well as colleagues in other fields and students. He Club at the University, he and Lucas were members of was appointed to the Chair in January 1887, departing the same government committees enquiring into the es- England on 18.ii.l887 and arriving in Melbourne tablishment of a Port Phillip Biological Survey and the 30.iii.l887, at the age of26. reservafion of Wilson's Promontory, and Spencer was Spencer's acfivifies rapidly developed close parallels general secretary for the second AAAS meeting in Mel- with Lucas, who soon became a close friend, and was bourne. In 1893, he visited Europe, and on his return to given a key to Spencer's rooms (Lucas 1937:153). Al- Australia in 1894, he began writing popular articles on though Spencer's biological studies in England had science for the local press, in addition to his teaching been laboratory-based, he quickly developed an interest and administrative duties. in field studies on arrival in Australia, and within seven In 1894, Spencer was invited to participate in the months was hunting giant earthworms with LuCAS in Horn Expedition (see below), and subsequently edited Gippsland. Two months later, in November 1887, he the report ofthat expedition. joined the King Island expedition of the Field Natural- ists' Club of Victoria, along with Charles FROST. The combination ofwinter and a drought season during Spencer wrote and illustrated the narrative of this ex- the expedition resulted in Spencer's dissatisfacfion © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at Glenn M. Shea: The Horn Expedition (1894) to Central Australia 253 with the collections made. Consequently, he returned to ofthe skink specimens was subsequently (Storr 1969) Charlotte Waters in February 1895, making further col- nominated as the holotype ofCtenotiis robiistiis. lections after rain. The observations made during this Between 1903 and 1911, SPENCER was heavily involved visit, together with collections sent to him by Frank GiLLEN, Patrick Michael ("Pado") BYRNE and Charles in administrative duties, becoming President ofthe Pro- Ernest COWLE between 1895 and 1896 (MULVANEY et fessorial Board and a member ofthe University ofMel- bourne Council, coinciding with a Royal Commission al. 2000, 2001), were incorporated in the Horn Expedi- into the University's finances and activities. He was tion Report. also appointed to a variety of Government Committees Recalcitrance on the part of Edward Stirling, the ex- into education in general. pedition's official anthropologist, led to Gillen produc- ing, at Spencer's request, an anthropological memoir At the end of 191 1, SPENCER visited the Top End ofthe for the report, initiating a series of Spencer-Gillen Northern Territory between June and August, collecting collaborations. Between mid-November 1896 and 8 Ja- and making anthropological observations at Melville Is- nuary 1897, Spencer revisited Alice Springs to work land, Pine Creek. Katherine and Roper Bar, although with Gillen in documenting a series of aboriginal based mostly in Darwin. This visit led to his being ap- ceremonies, and took the opportunity to make further pointed Chief Protector of Aborigines, spending the biological collections. These, however, were too late for whole of 1912 in the Top End at this task. Some time inclusion in the HORN Expedition Report, and the an- was set aside for fieldwork, including six weeks in thropological studies became the basis for their first ma- March to April on Melville and Bathurst Islands, the pe- jor monograph, "The Native Tribes of Central Austra- riod June to July at Oenpelli, a pioneering car-based lia" (Spencer & Gillen 1899). overland trek from Darwin to Bonoloola between Au- gust and September, and a return to Bathurst Island in In 1895, soon after his return from central Australia, December. Again, the anthropological observations led Spencer was appointed a member ofthe Board ofTrus- to a book (Spencer 1914). tees ofthe Public Library, Museums and National Gal- lery of Victoria, a blanket administrative umbrella for In addition to his scientific interests, SPENCER became a the major public institutions. By 1899, he had become major patron ofthe arts, and visited England in 1916 on Vice-President, and with McCoy's death in the same behalf of the National Gallery of Victoria. He also year, also became simultaneously President of the Mu- served as President ofthe Victorian Football League be- seum Committee and Director ofthe National Museum tween 1919 and 1926. of Victoria. He immediately began lobbying for new Finally worn out by his workload, SPENCER retired from museum buildings, new exhibitions, and transfer of the existing collections to new accommodation. the University in June 1920, although he still retained his position at the National Museum. He revisited Alice In 1901, a further period of fieldwork ensued. The Springs in winter 1923 to report on aboriginal welfare, Spencer-Gillen Expedition left from Oodnadatta on and again in 1926. This was his last Australian field- 19.iii.l901, travelling through Charlotte Waters and Al- work. He travelled to England in mid-1927, ostensibly ice Springs, before moving to new collecting grounds at for a short visit, but stayed for the next year and a half, Barrow Creek, Tennant Creek, Powell Creek and Bor- writing his final book, "Wanderings in Wild Australia" roloola. The onset ofthe wet season led to the party be- (Spencer 1928). a popular narrative ofhis field expedi- coming trapped at Borroloola for three months before tions. On 19.ii.1929, he left England for an anthropo- being evacuated by boat to Normanton, departing from logical expedition to Tierra del Fuego with his compan- there for Brisbane on l.iii.l902. As with previous expe- ion Jean Hamilton. Overworking himself in the cold, ditions, the anthropological results became the basis for wet climate, he died there on 14.vii.l929. a major book (Spencer & Gillen 1904), which also in- Although Spencer's later scientific career and fame corporated the results of a brief visit to tribes north of Lake Eyre in August 1903. Although no coordinated was primarily in anthropology, he published about 50 papers in biology (MULVANEY & Calaby 1985). Of zoological report resulted from the Spencer-Gillen these, nine were herpetological in nature or had herpeto- Expedition (Spencer's focus in this and subsequent fieldwork was primarily anthropological), the zoological logical relationships. Apart from the five written prior to collections made did include a new varanid, Varaniis moving to Australia, which undoubtedly played a major spencen, named by LuCAS & FROST (1903), while one role in obtaining the position that launched his career, he wrote two papers on frogs (Spencer 1896c, 1901) and two on pentastomids obtained from the lungs ofthe copperhead snake {Aiistrelaps superbus (Günther, 3 Two other herpetological patronyms honour Spencer: the frogs 1858)), including material collected on his visit to King Limnodynastes spenceri Parker, 1940, and Litoria spencen Du- bois, 1984. Island with FROST and the Field Naturalists' Club © Biodiversity Heritage Library, http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/; www.zoologicalbulletin.de; www.biologiezentrum.at 254 Bonner zoologische Beiträge 52 (2004) (Spencer 1888. 1893). In addition to the herpetological (Smith 1981), and would further extend Spencer's work of Spencer himself, he was also instrumental in pioneering work on the pineal eye and brain ofSpheno- establishing the careers of Arthur Dendy (1865-1925; don, as well as publishing on the embryology ofthe ge- see below) and Georgina SWEET (1875-1946). The lat- nus; Dendy 1899a, 1899b, 1909, 1910, 191 1). As illus- ter began as his assistant demonstrator at the University, tration of this association, not only did SPENCER, and later became the University's first woman associate Fletcher and Dendy publish on these invertebrate professor, teaching in biology and veterinary science groups, but each ofthe five had a planarian named after (Maccallum 1990). Sweet published a few papers on them, Dendy (1889, 1890) naming Geoplana spenceri, amphibian anatomy and vertebrate parasitology, includ- G. lucasi and G.fletcheri, and SPENCER (1891) naming ing reptile parasites (Sweet 1897, 1908a,b, 1909, Gil- G.frosti and G. dendyi. ruth et al. 1910), among a wide range oftopics. THE HORN EXPEDITION TO Despite the quality of his work on the pineal eye of 3C.ENTRAL AUSTRALIA, A N(E5.WV.G-7E.OVIGIRI.A18P9H4)IC lepidosaurs, SPENCER is best remembered in zoological DIRECTION IN AUSTRALIAN HERPETOLOGY circles today for his biogeographical interpretations. This work, first expounded in the HORN Expedition re- On 8.iii.l894, the wealthy pastoralist and mining mag- port (Spencer 1896b), recognised the distinction be- nate William Austin HORN (1841-1922), who had been tween arid, tropical and cool climate faunas in Australia, a meinber of the South Australian House of Assembly and applied the names Eyrean, Torresian and Bassian to between 1887 and 1893, wrote to the South Australian these faunas. However, it has its roots in earlier work, Premier offering to fund a scientific expedition to cen- notably by Fletcher, who had recognised similar pat- tral Australia, and inviting the Premier to nominate two terns in the Australian frog fauna. The account of the scientists to accompany the expedition, and further to reptile fauna of the Horn Expedition provided by LU- request the Premiers ofNew South Wales and Victoria CAS & Frost (1896a) also provided much of the detail to nominate one additional scientist each. Horn's un- used by SPENCER in devising his scheme. FLETCHER derlying motives in proposing the expedition are un- also played a more direct role in Spencer's herpeto- known, but have been suggested to be the desire for a logical output, providing advice for the HORN Expedi- knighthood, like Sir Thomas Elder, the pastoralist who fion amphibian report (SPENCER 1896c) and encourag- had financed the Elder Expedition only three years be- ing Spencer to write his second amphibian systematics fore, or the possibility of discovery of gold or gem- paper (Spencer 1901). stones, although both were explicitly denied by HORN (Brown 1983; Mulvaney & Calaby 1985: 116, 118; In summary, at the beginning of 1894, when the HORN mulvaney 1996: 4). Expedition was initiated, SPENCER was ensconced as Professor ofBiology at the University ofMelbourne, his The offer was promptly accepted, with the South Aus- thoughts turned towards herpetological matters by asso- tralian Government appointing Professor Edward STIR- ciation with Marshall in England, and later by Frost LING (1848-1919) of the South Australian Museum as and Lucas in Australia, and towards biogeography by anthropologist and medical officer, and Professor Ralph Fletcher's work on frog distributions, and with a love Tate (1840-1901) of the University of Adelaide as of fieldwork nurtured by LUCAS and FROST. LuCAS, botanist and palaeontologist (Mulvaney & Calaby who had been instrumental in creating the position that 1985). The New South Wales Government nominated caused SPENCER to move to Australia, and who had John Alexander Watt (1868-1958), a recent geology started to write on herpetological systematics (stimu- graduate from the University of Sydney (possibly lated by Fletcher and Frost), had moved to Sydney through the intervention of his major professor, T.W. one year before, becoming closely associated with Edgeworth David) to serve as geologist and petrologist Fletcher, while Frost, who had guided Spencer in (Branagan 1996), and the University of Melbourne fieldwork, and collaborated with LuCAS in his herpeto- was asked on 5.iv.l894 to release Baldwin Spencer logical studies, was becoming a significant figure in the from his duties to allow him to participate as biologist Field Naturalists' Club ofVictoria, and the major herpe- and photographer (Mulvaney 1996: 4). Within a tologist remaining in Victoria. month, the expedition had been fitted out, and departed from Oodnadatta, the northern railhead. The close relationship between these four figures ex- tends not only to herpetology, but to a common interest Unlike all previous expeditions, the HORN Expedition in earthworms, planarians and onychophorans (also aimed not to explore previously uncharted territory, but shared with Arthur Dendy, Spencer's laboratory assis- to record the geology, biology and anthropology of an tant, who subsequently became Professor ofZoology at area which had not only previously been traversed sev- Canterbury College in New Zealand and later at the eral times, but was even then gradually becoming set- University of Cape Town and King's College, London tled (albeit sparsely) by Europeans. Many ofthe collect-

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