Derived dynamically from EAC-CPF in xEAC.
James Wade Atz was born on July 23rd, 1915 in Newark, New Jersey. He received his B.A. from Cornell University in 1936 and both his M.S. in 1951 and his Ph.D. in 1959 from New York University. Dr. Atz began his career studying fish at the New York Aquarium first as a lab technician in 1937, then as assistant curator in 1947, associate curator in 1957, and finally as a full curator in 1961. He joined the American Museum of Natural History with an honorary position as a research associate in the Department of Animal Behavior in 1960. In 1965 he moved to the Department of Ichthyology where he became an associate curator and then a full curator in 1970.
During his studies at NYU, he wrote his graduate thesis on narial breathing in fishes and the evolution of internal nares, and his doctoral thesis on morphological and genetic studies on the pigmentary patterns of xiphophorin fishes and their hybrids. (1) He also spent time as an Adjunct Professor of Biology at NYU’s Graduate School of Arts and Science beginning in 1961. Atz worked at the New York Aquarium for about 26 years, though some of these years were spent serving in the U.S. Army as a Staff Sergeant and then as a Captain from 1941-1947. (2)
Dr. Atz began his career at the New York Aquarium first as a lab technician in 1937, then as assistant curator in 1947, associate curator in 1957, and finally as a full curator in 1961. He joined the American Museum of Natural History with an honorary position as a research associate in the Department of Animal Behavior in 1960. In 1965 he moved to the Department of Ichthyology where he became an associate curator and then a full curator in 1970. In 1981 he retired and took the title of Curator Emeritus but still enjoyed coming in to the museum for research. For much of his life he resided in the town of Malverne and later Port Washington, both in Long Island, NY, with his wife Ethel Hafter to whom he was married in 1952. The pair had three children, Alison, Mical, and Joshua. James W. Atz passed away in March of 2013.
One of Dr. Atz’s most notable contributions during his time in the Department of Ichthyology was the undertaking of a comprehensive bibliography covering ichthyological literature, known as the Dean Bibliography of Fishes. (3) During his time at the AMNH he also published a number of papers, a major publication having to do with homology and behavior, as well as a work concerning kosher and non-kosher fishes. His main research interests included the endocrinology of fishes, oral brooding in cichlids, and the domestication of fishes and their maintenance in captivity. Other notable publications by Dr. Atz include his book Aquarium fishes: their beauty, history and care and his research done with notable ichthyologist Grace Pickford on the physiology of the pituitary gland of fishes. He was also involved in the AMNH’s acquisition and subsequent study of a Coelacanth specimen in the 1970s (see related collections).
Dr. Atz was a member of a number of societies including the New York Zoological Society, the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, the Genetics Society of America, and the American Society of Zoologists.
(1), (2) Curriculum Vitae, James Wade Atz. 1964. Folder Atz, James Wade (1915-2013) Ichthyologist. Vertical Files, American Museum of Natural History Research Library.
(3) A Brief Expedition into Science at the American Museum of Natural History. 1969. Folder Atz, James Wade (1915- 2013) Ichthyologist. Vertical Files, American Museum of Natural History Research Library.
Atz served as an Associate Curator and in 1981 became Curator Emeritus in the AMNH's Department of Ichthyology.
Atz served as a Research Associate in the AMNH's Department of Animal Behavior in 1960 after working at the New York Aquarium.
Atz served as a laborer and later a curator at the New York Aquarium for 26 years.
approximately 1960s-1970s. Atz served as a chairman of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists.
approximately 1960s-1970s. Atz was a fellow and active member of the New York zoological Society.
approximately 1960s. Atz served as a consultant for the National Fisheries Center and Aquarium in Washington, D.C.
Charles M. Breder was a fellow ichthyologist and Atz considered him a mentor. They maintained a correspondence approximately from 1937-1987
Donn Rosen was a fellow member of the AMNH Department of Ichthyology, working there from 1960-1985.
J.L.B. Smith was a prominent ichthyologist working in South Africa. He was a correspondent of Atz's, as well as a part of AMNH's procurment of the Coelacanth specimen in 1962.
C. Lavett Smith was a fellow ichthyologist and was hired to the Department of Ichthyology in 1962. He participated in the research of the Coelacanth at AMNH.
Ernst Mayr was a renowned evolutionary biologist with whom Atz maintained a correspondence in the 1960s.
Bob Shaeffer of the American Museum of Natural History Department of Vertebrate Paleontology participated in the procurement and subsequent research of the Coelacanth specimen.
Grace Evelyn Pickford was a renowned biologist and endocrinologist with whom Atz worked on the hematology and endocrinology of fishes. They maintained a correspondence throughout the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.
Ethel Hafter was married to Atz in June of 1952. Ethel was an administrative secretary at the Long island Jewish Hospital-Hillside Medical Center in new Hyde Park. She was also involved with the AMNH on grant funded research projects.
Daughter of James and Ethel Atz. Mical married James Brenzel in October of 1986. She received an M.B.A. degree from New York University
Daughter of James and Ethel Atz. Alison Atz married Deepak Gulati in May of 1980. She attended the Columbia University Graduate School of Business.
Son of James and Ethel Atz.