Walter E. Bryant
Walter Pierce E. Bryant was an American ornithologist and mammalogist who focused primarily on the bird and mammal fauna of the western coast of North America.
Biography
Walter E. Bryant was born in 1861 in Sonoma, Sonoma County, California, the son of Daniel Sharp Bryant and Susan H. Bryant. When he was four years old, he moved with his parents to Oakland, California, where he lived until 1896 before relocating to Santa Rosa. He attended a private school followed by public school in Oakland. From an early age, Bryant showed a strong interest in nature. At the age of seven, his father gave him a firearm and taught him how to use it. Bryant collected insects and bird eggs and began preparing birds through taxidermy. In 1884, he learned mammal preparation techniques from William Temple Hornaday and studied museum practices at the National Museum and the Museum of Comparative Zoology.In 1886, Bryant became a curator at the California Academy of Sciences, a position he held until 1894. He undertook numerous collecting expeditions, including trips to Oregon in 1883; Guadalupe Island in 1894 and again in 1895–1896; across California and into Nevada in 1887–1888; to Baja California and Magdalena Bay in 1889; to the Gulf of Mexico region and again to Baja California in 1890; to Santa Rosa del Cabo in 1892; to Central America in 1901; to Alaska in 1902–1903; and to San Blas, Mexico, in 1904–1905. In 1888, Bryant became a member of the American Ornithologists’ Union. In 1889, he co-founded the California Ornithological Club and served as its first president. The organization later became the Cooper Ornithological Club, which named Bryant an honorary member in 1894.