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A 
The son of a sculptor who works 
primarily with animal figures and 
the grandson of a watchmaker whose 
hobby was natural history, Franyois 
Vuilleumier came by his interest in 
animals naturally. As a boy growing 
up in Geneva, he was frustrated by 
the nocturnal nature of most mam- 
mals in the area and began studying 
birds. In 1964, inspired in part by 
a desire to see the Indian dancers 
of the Bolivian high plateau, Vuilleu- 
mier made his first field trip to the 
Andes. Since then he has returned 
many times to continue his research 
on species formation and the bio- 
geography of Andean birds. Vuilleu- 
mier, who received his Ph.D. from 
Harvard University, is a curator in 
the Department of Ornithology at 
the American Museum. 
In 1967 Marjorie L. Reaka, then 
studying at the Bermuda Biological 
Station, became interested in stoma- 
topods, or mantis shrimps, when she 
noticed their startling aggressive be- 
havior. Now an assistant professor 
in the Department of Zoology at the 
University of Maryland, she has done 
fieldwork on the competition for 
space and food among coral-dwelling 
stomatopods and studied their rates 
of evolution. She has also examined 
the impact of fish predation on a 
variety of stomatopod species. Reaka 
has plans to study the rate of bio- 
degradation of coral reefs, with spe- 
cial emphasis on organisms that bore 
into live and dead coral substrates. 
2 
