The Southwestern Association of Naturalists
Minutes of the Business Meeting

Albuquerque, New Mexico
Friday, 10 April 1998



President Echelle called the meeting to order at 1300 MT. A quorum was present.

Approval of the minutes of the 1997 Business Meeting was moved and seconded. The minutes were approved without correction.

President Echelle appointed Jeff Carpenter, Paul Shipman, Brian Arbogast, William Lutterschmidt, Brock McMillan, and Karen Voltura to be tellers for elections.

President Echelle and the tellers conducted the election of four new members of the Board of Governors to replace members (Stanley Fox, Robert Dowler, Beth Leuck, Brenda Clark) whose terms expire this year. No nominations by mail were reported by the Secretary. President Echelle called for nominations from the floor and 10 members were nominated and seconded. Gary Schnell moved that nominations cease, Jerry Choate seconded and the motion carried. Ballots were distributed, collected and were to be counted and the results announced at the banquet Friday evening.

Treasurer Williamson reported on 1997 finances. A summary is contained in the minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Governors and Officers. Income totaled $50,273, expenses totaled $68,589, expenses exceeded income by $18,316 and Williamson transferred $4,150 to the Trustees for investment. The checkbook balance was $47,448 (31 December 1996) and $24,982 (31 December 1996). Williamson explained that the seemingly large difference between expenses and income was due to a publication delay in 1996 and that the money was held over from the 1996 budget to pay for delayed issues of the journal. Further details are included in the Minutes of the Board of Governors and Officers and in the Treasurer's written report.

The Treasurer then reported on 1997 memberships, which were 831 in various categories of individuals and 375 institutions. By April 1997,individual memberships had declined to 659. This decrease is consistent with patterns from earlier years, and probably will be recouped by years' end. Next, Williamson conducted the election of new members. She introduced a list of 47 regular, 37 student, 1 sustaining, 4 family (8 persons), and 6 gift prospective members. There was a motion and second to approve the new members. The motion carried. She then reported that from the data collected for the directory, 346 members work primarily with mammals, 213 with birds, 244 with amphibians and reptiles, 175 with invertebrates, 183 with plants, and 157 with fishes. This total of 1,318 exceeds the membership total of 1251 because some individuals reported more than one area of primary interest.

Williamson then reported on the 1999 balanced budget of $54,300 approved at the Meeting of the Board of Governors and Officers on 9 April 1998. A summary is contained in the minutes of that meeting.

Jerry Choate reported for the Board of Trustees that: (1) as of 31 December 1996 the endowment fund included mutual-fund shares valued at $158,230.63; (2) as of 31 December 1999 the value of the fund had increased to $199,679.20 due to a strong stock-market performance (market performance of +24.8%) and $2,150 in contributions. President Echelle called for questions and discussion of the Trustee's report. There were none, and Echelle thanked Choate for the report and for his and the other Trustee's work for the association.

Beth Leuck reported for the Budget Oversight Committee that the committee found the fiscal affairs of the association to be in good order.

Managing Editor Edie Marsh-Matthews reported the same information to the Business Meeting as was earlier provided to the BOG and reported in the Minutes of the Board of Governors and Officers. The journal is back on publication schedule, Karen McBee will now take over as Managing Editor, and David Edds is now Associate Editor for Fishes.

Marsh-Matthews then thanked José Pedro do Amaral, a University of Oklahoma graduate student, for his work on the WWW homepage, and thanked Troy Baird, Bill Van Auken, Aurelio Ramirez-Bautista, Steve Cook, Caryn Vaughn, and Paula Williamson for ad hoc or acting editorial services this year. She also thanked Bruce DeMarais for serving as Associate Editor for Fishes (he is stepping down), and Jenni Thommpson and Sylvia Montero for service in the editorial office, and extended thanks to all continuing Associate Editors for their work.

William J. Matthews reported for the Honors Committee that:

  1. The Robert L. Packard Teaching Excellence Award for 1998 will go to Dr. Terry C. Maxwell of Angelo State University;
  2. The 1998 W. Frank Blair Eminent Naturalist Award will go to Robert Rush Miller of The University of Michigan;
  3. The 1998 Donald W. Tinkle Research Excellence Award will go to Salvador Contreras- Balderas of Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo Leon;
  4. The awards will be presented at the 1999 banquet.

Caryn Vaughn gave the Conservation Committee Report. The Conservation Award (reported in the Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Governors and Officers) was to be made at the banquet.

President Echelle reported for the Public Relations Committee that the committee provided announcements of association awards to appropriate media, and thanked committee members for their help.

Robert Dowler reported on the status of back issues. Storage of back issues is expensive, but will be reduced to nothing in the future, because Angelo State University will donate storage space. We need to liquidate additional sets, which are available for $100, payable to the Treasurer; requests to Dowler. Sets will be given to Mexican colleagues and institutions and Dowler asked for volunteers to transport them to Monterey next year. Echelle thanked Dowler for his report.

Program Chair Karen McBee reminded the meeting that the 1999 meeting will be hosted by Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo Leon in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, the 2000 meeting by the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas, and that no new nominations or proposals for meeting sites have been received. She reported that plans are proceeding for both meetings. She also introduced Ron Van Den Bussche, the new committee chair.

Salvador Contreras-Balderas reported on plans for the 1999 meeting in Monterrey. He issued assurances of an excellent meeting and encouraged participation. The meeting will occur on 22 24 April following Easter weekend. There was some discussion from members regarding travel to Mexico and transportation.

Michael Bogan announced for the Local Committee that the paper by Brian S. Arbogast and Joseph B. Slowinski ("Pleistocene Vicariance and the Mitochondrial DNA Clock") originally scheduled for the Plenary Session and a competitor for the Wilks Award, would instead be presented in the Community Modeling and Bird Ecology session at 4:00 p.m.. The rearrangement was necessitated by flight delays caused by weather. The paper remained eligible for the Wilks competition.

The Local Committee also announced that the banquet was moved to the area where the posters were viewed and that a shuttle schedule for transport to the airport was posted at the registration desk. Joseph Manness asked for nominations for free student memberships before the end of the meeting. President Echelle reminded members to attend the banquet and social Friday evening.

No new business was brought forward.

The following actions were taken at the 1998 Banquet on the evening of Friday 10 April 1998: President Echelle announced that Robert Dowler, Edie Marsh-Matthews, Phillip Sudman and Christopher Taylor were elected to three year terms as Governors.

The Robert L. Packard Award for Teaching Excellence was presented to Mark. S. Hafner of Louisiana State University and the W. Frank Blair Eminent Naturalist Award was presented to Harley P. Brown of The University of Oklahoma.

The Wilks Award for the Outstanding Student Paper was given to Karen Voltura of The University of Oklahoma Department of Zoology for her report, "Parental Investment in House Sparrows (Passer domesticus): An Experimental Manipulation of Brood Sex Ratio." Voltura received a check for $250 from the Student Awards Fund and a nearly complete set of back issues of The Southwestern Naturalist.

Erin Walker of Texas Tech University received a $150 check from the Student Awards fund and a nearly complete set of The Southwestern Naturalist for winning the competition for the Outstanding Student Poster. The winning poster was titled "Effect of Variable Winds on Dispersal of Wind Dispersed Fruits: The Role of the Beak," and was co-authored by Mark A. McGinley.

A.T. Robinson, D.M. Kubly, R.W. Clarkson and E.D. Creef received the George M. Sutton Conservation Award for their paper, "Factors Limiting the Distributions of Native Fishes in the Little Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Arizona" (The Southwestern Naturalist 41:378-387).

Jerry Choate read and the membership adopted the following resolution:

Following a motion, second and approval for adjournment, the Business Meeting adjourned at 1515 MDT.

Submitted by David L. McNeely, Secretary

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