Background
Frederick Bayer was born on Halloween night 1921, in Asbury Park, New Jersey, but spent much of his childhood in south Florida, where he collected seashells and became an amateur naturalist.
Frederick Bayer was born on Halloween night 1921, in Asbury Park, New Jersey, but spent much of his childhood in south Florida, where he collected seashells and became an amateur naturalist.
In 1958, he completed a doctorate in taxonomy from George Washington University.
Bayer joined the Army Air Forces during World World War II and served in the Pacific as a photographic technician. While in the military, he often sketched and collected fish, shells and butterflies throughout the Pacific region. Bayer received his bachelor"s degree from the University of Miami.
He continued his studies and obtained a master"s degree in taxonomy from George Washington University in 1954.
Bayer worked at the Smithsonian"s National Museum of Natural History from 1947 until 1961. He returned to work at the museum again from 1975 until 1996.
He served as a professor at the University of Miami"s marine science school between 1961 and 1975. While at Miami, Bayer participated in a number of soft coral collecting expecitions in the Caribbean Sea and in the waters off West Africa.
Following his arrival at the Smithsonian, Bayer was sent to Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Oceanto study the effects of nuclear testing on the island"s marine life, just two years after the tests were carried out.
Bayer also spent several months doing field research throughout the rest of Micronesia. Bayer wrote over 130 scholarly papers on the history and taxonomy of soft coral. He focused much of his soft coral research on octocorals, which include sea fans and sea whips.
He discovered 170 new species of marine life, 40 new genera, and three new families.
Japan"s Emperor Hirohito, who was also a marine biologist, actually named a hydroid, Hydractinia bayeri, in honor of Frederick Bayer. Bayer returned the favor while Hirohito was on a state visit to Washington, District of Columbia in 1975.
He presented Hirohito with a rare snail shell which was the "size of a hat."
Bayer painted and designed a total of fourteen scientifically accurate marine scenes. These particular scenes were used for a set of Haitian postage stamps in 1973.
Frederick Bayer died of congestive heart failure on October 2, 2007, at the Washington Home hospice in Washington District of Columbia at the age of 85.
Of Frederick Bayer include:
Bayerxenia Alderslade, 2001
Bayericerithium Petuch, 2001
Bayerotrochus Harasewych, 2002
Bayergorgia Williams & López-González, 2005
Hydractinia bayeri Hirohito, 1984
Taxa named by Frederick Bayer include:
gastropods:
Babelomurex fax (F M Bayer, 1971)
Babelomurex sentix (Bayer, 1971)
Bayerotrochus midas (Bayer, 1965)
Bayerotrochus pyramus (Bayer, 1967)
Cyomesus chaunax (Bayer, 1971) and Teramachia chaunax Bayer, 1971 are synonyms of Latiromitra cryptodon (P Fischer, 1882)
Lyria cordis Bayer, 1971
Peristarium Bayer, 1971
Peristarium aurora (Bayer, 1971)
Peristarium electra (Bayer, 1971)
Peristarium merope (Bayer, 1971)
Perotrochus amabilis (Bayer, 1963)
Perotrochus lucaya Bayer, 1965
Scaphella evelina Bayer, 1971
Siphonochelus tityrus (Bayer, 1971)
Thelyssa Bayer, 1971
Thelyssa callisto Bayer, 1971
Volutomitra erebus Bayer, 1971
Volutomitra persephone Bayer, 1971
bivalves:
Amphichama inezae (F M Bayer, 1943).
Bayer served as a member of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature from 1972 to 1995.