Charles Branch Wilson
#129,738
Most Influential Person Across History
American marine biologist
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Biology
Charles Branch Wilson's Degrees
- Bachelors Natural History University of California, Berkeley
- Masters Natural History University of California, Berkeley
- PhD Zoology University of California, Berkeley
Why Is Charles Branch Wilson Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Charles Branch Wilson was an American scientist, a marine biologist. He is known for his extensive work on copepods, minute crustaceans. Early life and education Charles Branch Wilson was born in Exeter, Maine on October 20, 1861. He received his bachelor's and master's degree from Colby College of Waterville, Maine. He completed his doctorate from the Johns Hopkins University in 1910.
Charles Branch Wilson's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- The copepod crustaceans of Chesapeake Bay (1932) (97)
- North American parasitic copepods belonging to the family Caligidae. Part 1. — The Caliginae (93)
- Crustacean parasites of West Indian fishes and land crabs, with descriptions of new genera and species (77)
- Copepods gathered by the United States fisheries steamer "Albatross" from 1887 to 1909, chiefly in the Pacific Ocean (1950) (74)
- Parasitic copepods in the United States National Museum (1944) (56)
- North American parasitic copepods belonging to the family Caligidae. Parts 3 and 4..A revision of the Pandarinae and the Cecropinae (41)
- North American parasitic copepods: A list E2025of those found upon the fishes of the Pacific coast, with descriptions of new genera and species (39)
- North American parasitic copepods belonging to the family Dichelesthiidae (35)
- New North American parasitic copepods, new hosts, and notes on copepod nomenclature (34)
- Parasitic Copepods from the Pacific Coast (1935) (33)
- A new species of Argulus, with a more complete account of two species already described (29)
- North American parasitic copepods: New genera and species of Caliginae (28)
- North American parasitic copepods belonging to the new family Sphyriidae (25)
- Additional notes on the development of the Argulidae, with description of a new species (25)
- North American parasitic copepods belonging to the family Caligidae. Part 2. The Trebinae and Euryphorinae (19)
- North American parasitic copepods. Part 9. The Lernaeopodidae (17)
- New species and a new genus of parasitic copepods (15)
- A new and important copepod habitat (1935) (13)
- Some parasitic Copepods from Panama Bay (1937) (12)
- Parasitic Copepods from Japan, including five new species (11)
- Two new semi-parasitic copepods from the Peruvian coast (1937) (10)
- North American parasitic copepods. Descriptions of new genera and species (7)
- A Parasitic Copepod, Pupulina flores, Redescribed after Forty Years (1935) (5)
- A new species of parasitic copepod, with notes on species already described (5)
- New parasitic copepods (1935) (5)
- Some marine fishes from Colombia and Ecuador (1916) (4)
- Parasitic copepods from the Congo Basin. Bulletin of the AMNH ; v. 43, article 1 (4)
- Parasitic Copepods from the Williams Galapagos Expedition (4)
- The North American semiparasitic copepods of the genus Clausidium (3)
- Dragonflies of the Mississippi Valley collected during the pearl mussel investigations on the Mississippi River, July and August, 1907 (3)
- Copepods from the far north collected by Capt. R. A. Bartlett (1936) (2)
- A new genus and species of parasitic copepod from Lower California. American Museum novitates ; no. 81 (2)
- Plankton of the Bermuda Oceanographic Expedition. IV. Notes on Copepoda (1936) (2)
- The wrinkling of frog's eggs during segmentation. (2)
- Crustacea. Part L Parasitic Copepoda (1)
- The Copepod Parasites (1)
- Plankton copepods collected during Admiral R. E. Byrd's expedition to the Antarctic, 1933 to 1935 (1938) (1)
- ACTIVITIES OF MESENCHYME IN CERTAIN LARVAE (1898) (0)
- Crustacea. Part L (0)
- A new species of parasitic copepod from Florida. American Museum novitates ; no. 80 (0)
- The mussel fauna of the Maumee River [by H. Walton Clark and Charles B. Wilson] (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Charles Branch Wilson?
Charles Branch Wilson is affiliated with the following schools:
