Hartford H Keifer


Hartford Hammond Keifer was a world authority on eriophyid mites. Based in California, he initially studied the local microlepidoptera before turning to mites in 1937.

Personal life

Keifer was born 1902 in Oroville, Butte County, California, to John McCarl Keifer and Elizabeth Burt. As a child he had an interest in natural history and insects, and was encouraged by an aunt, Dr. Cordelia Burt Leggett. From 1920 to 1924, he attended the University of California, Berkeley and gained a Bachelor of Science degree in entomology. He married Mary Isabelle in August 1928 and moved to Sacramento to work at the California State Department of Agriculture.

Biography

After graduation, Keifer worked for the Forest Service before accepting a position as an assistant to the curator at the California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco where he mounted and labelled a backlog of material. In 1925 he joined the Academy's expedition to the Mexican islands of Revillagigedo and Tres Marias, collecting 10,000 specimens. Turning to microlepidoptera, Keifer's first species described was Recuvaria bacchariella, which he reared from larvae, and his approach was to describe life histories. In a letter to Annette Braun he stated that because of the climate, San Francisco was not the ideal place for running a light or net collecting.
Following his marriage in August 1928, he moved to Sacramento to become first laboratory assistant in charge of identifications and the collection of the California Department of Agriculture. As California's agriculture expanded, identification of species averaged 2,300 per year in 1928 and increased to 45,000 per year with the discovery of the Oriental fruit moth in 1942. Identifications increased to 188,000 by the 1960s. By then, there were eight taxonomists and over the years they handled infestations by Khapra beetle, pink bollworm, and carried out fruit fly surveys.
In 1937, there was an infestation of citrus bud mite in southern California and Keifer was assigned to the identification of eriophyid mites. His descriptive work of this economically important group, spanned thirty years and describing 630 new taxa in 56 publications led to Keifer becoming a world expert on the group. In his 39 years at the Department of Agriculture, his expertise covered all orders of insects, recording the biologies, geographical distributions and first occurrences. He published his results in the Bulletin of the California Department of Agriculture and also published papers on more than 150 species of moths. His collection of mites was donated to the National Museum of Natural History Entomological Collection at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

Honorary positions and awards