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25 January 2018 Fifty-Three Years a Tadpole
Ronald Altig
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Abstract

The first section of this perspective explains how my early years shaped my thought processes, how I was shoved into academia, and how I stumbled onto a track to employment, tenure, and retirement at a single university. I always sought a broad education to support studies of mostly descriptive biology that were driven by my curiosity and the diversity of the amphibian life cycle. In that regard, I experienced the benefits of being gainfully employed without just having a job. The second section highlights my graduate students, collaborations, and research focus on larval amphibians at Mississippi State University. I felt it was my responsibility to prepare undergraduate and graduate students for their choices of life's pursuits. At the end, I try to think about the future study of larval amphibians, and based on technological advances and the sporadic insights of a few lucky persons, I am optimistic about what will happen.

Copyright 2018 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles
Ronald Altig "Fifty-Three Years a Tadpole," Journal of Herpetology 52(1), 1-5, (25 January 2018). https://doi.org/10.1670/16-034
Accepted: 1 August 2016; Published: 25 January 2018
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