Christian Miguel Pinto
Christian Miguel Pinto Baez, often stated as C. Miguel Pinto or Miguel Pinto, is an Ecuadorian zoologist noted for his research work on rodents, small carnivora, and bats from the Neotropics and their parasites. He was banned from the Smithsonian because of sexual harassment findings, and as of 2016, held a research position at the National Polytechnic School in Quito, Ecuador.
Career
In 2004, he described the bat species Lophostoma yasuni from the Yasuni National Park in Ecuador. In 2006, he was among a team who did research work on a new olingo-like carnivore in the Ecuadorian Andes which was scientifically described as olinguito in 2013. In 2012, he was recipient of the Albert R. and Alma Shadle FellowshipIn 2013, he described the new shrew opossum Caenolestes sangay from Ecuador.
Pinto has been accused of a number of instances of sexual harassment, some of which he admitted, and as a result in 2016 was banned from the laboratories and collections of the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.
Works
- Bernal XE, Pinto CM. 2016. Sexual differences in prevalence of a new species of trypanosome that infects túngara frogs. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 5: 40-47.
- Pinto CM, Soto-Centeno JA, Núñez Quiroz AM, Ferreyra N, Delgado-Espinoza F, Stahl PW, Tirira DG. 2016. Archaeology, biogeography and mammalogy do not provide evidence for tarukas in Ecuador. Journal of Mammalogy 97: 41-53.
- Ojala-Barbour R, Pinto CM, Brito J, Albuja-V L, Lee Jr TE, Patterson BD. 2013. A new species of shrew-opossum with a phylogeny of extant caenolestids. Journal of Mammalogy 94: 967-982.
- Helgen KM, Pinto CM, Kays R, Helgen LE, Tsuchiya MTN, Quinn A, Wilson DE, Maldonado JE. 2013. Taxonomic revision of the olingos, with description of a new species, the Olinguito. Zookeys 324: 1-83.
- Helgen KM., Kays R, Helgen LE, Tsuchiya-Jerep MTN, Pinto CM, Koepfli K, Eizirik E, Maldonado JE. 2009. Taxonomic boundaries and geographic distributions revealed by an integrative systematic overview of the mountain coatis, Nasuella. Small Carnivore Conservation 41: 65-74.