Aaron Bauerâs Legacy is Forged from Renowned Herpetology Research and Grown by Generations of Students
Dr. Bauer, a Biology professor in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, remains a steadfast pillar for current and aspiring herpetologists

Generations of Dr. Bauer's students, many of them leading herpetologists themselves, pose with the renowned professor during the 2024 World Congress of Herpetology in Borneo.
, the Gerald M. Lemole Endowed Chair in Integrative Biology, stood smiling at the center of the group, dressed in a Hawaiian shirt and khaki shortsâthe outfit that has become quintessential to the Villanova professor. Flanking him on both sides were 13 other herpetologists, ranging in age, origin, discipline and career stage.
A bystander snapped their photo, and they relaxed back into conversation. Dr. Bauer remained at the center.
The photo was taken at the 2024 World Congress of Herpetology in Borneo, but it might as well have been taken on Villanovaâs campus. Each one of those 13 individualsâsome as postdocs or undergrads, but mostly masterâs studentsâstudied in Dr. Bauerâs lab. At that meeting, he estimated Bauer Lab students and alumni (18 in total) constituted more overall attendees than any other institution, and even entire countries.
As the worldâs foremost expert in geckos, and a dabbler in just about everything else, Dr. Bauerâs academic achievements are widely known and celebrated in the scientific community.
âHeâs a present-day Charles Darwin,â said Elizabeth Patton â25 MS, before correcting herself. âActually, heâs probably more productive than Darwin.â
Dr. Bauerâs first species descriptionâthe formal scientific documentation of a new speciesâhappened to be the largest gecko to ever exist, and the specimen he studied was the only one ever found. He has since described 310 new species of reptiles, more than any other living scientist and fifth-most all-time. An impressive 940 publications, including 54 published in a single year, bear his name.
âIâm not sure if that figure includes the two I described last week, though,â he interjected with a slight grin, although he was not joking.
There is even a species of geckoâHemidactylus aaronbaueri, or Aaron Bauerâs house geckoânamed in homage to his achievements.
But Dr. Bauerâs influence on the history, present and future of his field extends far beyond his . It extends internationally and in in many ways began at ĂŰĚŇTV.
âItâs the âAaron Bauer Pipeline,ââ Patton said. âAnd itâs a very real thing.â

At Villanova, Dr. Bauer has helped shape the career paths for dozens of herpetologists. His guidance and collaboration with those former students continue long after they leave his lab.
By numbers alone, the âAaron Bauer Pipelineâ speaks for itself. Since 2000, a little more than a decade after he began teaching at Villanova, 50 masterâs students have come through his research lab, and Dr. Bauer estimates 40 of them have gone on to obtain PhDs and remain in herpetology. Of those who didnât, several work in other branches of zoology. Â
âWe are populating the world with systematic herpetologists,â Dr. Bauer said with a laugh.
In its simplest form, the pipeline is this: his masterâs students leave Villanova and most obtain their PhDs, largely remaining in herpetologyâa crowded fieldâand academia. Many of them teach undergraduates, who they then recommend join Dr. Bauerâs lab for their masterâs work. Some of those masterâs graduates pursue their PhD under the guidance of previous pupils of Dr. Bauerâs. Currently, two of his former students are advising PhD candidates who also came from his program. Â
âItâs really cool to see a generation of Villanova masterâs students going on to their careers and now mentoring the next generation,â Dr. Bauer said. âThey know what our students are going to be like, because they have been through the program themselves.â
All the while, the entire cohort of Wildcat herpetologists support one another in research endeavors with collaborations often facilitated and nurtured by Dr. Bauer himself. His mentorship begins on arrival.
âI came to his lab with the interest, but didnât know the community or how to begin,â Patton said. Dr. Bauer listened to her ideas, helped her cultivate relationships in the field and guided her toward a thesis project that aligned with her interests.
âDr. Bauer is one of those people who can list five colleagues off the top of his head that would be able to help you,â Patton said. âThen heâll put you in contact with them for possible collaboration and help you secure funding. He holds on to relationships for decades. Itâs having a person on the inside, and not just anywhere on the inside, but the pillar.â
âThey have a network to tap into,â Dr. Bauer said. âSometimes, we have four or five people on a paper who didn't overlap with each other at all in my lab, but they have been in touch with one another because they came out of Villanova and have similar research interests. Itâs a really rewarding thing to know there's a community carrying on with this work.â
That community, and no doubt the professor and researcher at the center of it, has attracted students to Villanova from across the planet: China, the United Kingdom, Angola, TĂźrkiye and South Africa, to name a few.
âI came here from South Africa to study with him because he has that big of an influence in this field,â said Gary Nicolau â25 MS.
âWe attract students from all over the world,â Dr. Bauer said. âBut then we send them back out all over the world to continue their contributions to the field.â

Pictured here with current and former students, Dr. Bauer (center) and Dr. Jackman (front, left) are complementary forces in the Biology department, helping prepare future leaders of the field in unique ways.
You might have to pry out of the humble professor the details of his career achievements, but ask him about the successes of his students, and he will talk for hours. Effusing praise for their drive and skill and speaking proudly of their post-Villanova adventures come as easy to him as discovering a new gecko.
He will also be the first to tell you that a professor just down the hall in the Mendel Science Center is a major reason his own masterâs students have left Villanova with the toolkit they have.
âTodd Jackman is absolutely integral to everything we do,â Dr. Bauer said. âWhen he came here, the program really started to take off.â
Todd Jackman, PhD, professor of Biology and fellow herpetologist, joined Dr. Bauer at Villanova in the late 1990s. It was almost as if they were predestined to work together. Both professors earned their PhDs from University of California, Berkeley but never metâthey missed one another by a year. Dr. Bauerâs future wife, who he met at UC Berkeley, was the lab technician who trained Dr. Jackman.
When the two researchers finally joined forces on the East Coast, it elevated the appeal of Villanovaâs herpetology program for both prospective students and professors.
âToddâs arrival at Villanova was a catalyst,â Dr. Bauer said. âAfter that, we could do everything in-house.â
Though their labs and research interests differ, the two are perfectly complementary. Dr. Bauer mainly concentrates on morphology and taxonomy and has carved a niche advising masterâs students. Dr. Jackmanâs forte is molecular systematics, and he often has undergraduate researchers working on projects. Each professor has his own separate research lab, but they do what Dr. Bauer calls a âhuge amount of collaborative work.â
âMy students either work in morphology, molecular systematics or both,â Dr. Bauer said. âEven though I am their advisor, if they had components of their research that fell into the molecular side, they would receive a lot of guidance from Todd.â
âIf you were to go study morphology elsewhere, you might never be exposed to anything at the molecular level, like genes or bioinformatics,â Dr. Jackman said. âOr, you could end up in a molecular lab where you never actually get to see or hold an animal in your hand. Together, we provide both of those things, plus the field work. Thereâs a real synergy.â
Arianna Kuhn, PhD, â11 CLAS, â16 MS, benefited from that synergy from the time she stepped foot on campus as a first-year student until she left with her masterâs degree. Dr. Jackman advised her summer and independent undergraduate research, but Dr. Bauer was her senior thesis advisor, and she was formally a masterâs student in his lab. Dr. Kuhn, who says the two professors were foundational to her career success, was recently named Herpetology Curator at the Illinois Natural History survey within the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaignâs Prairie Research Institute.
For masterâs students like Ed Stanley, PhD, â09 MS, associate scientist with the University of Floridaâs Florida Museum of Natural History, the work in each lab was concurrent and condensed into his time in the graduate program. The molecular work on his thesisâinvestigating the DNA-based evolutionary relationships of a group of African lizardsâwas done under the guidance of his advisor, Dr. Jackman. At the same time, Dr. Bauer was finding Dr. Stanley opportunities for intensive field work and helping him engage with the historical and biological meaning of his work.
Dr. Stanleyâwho came to Villanova from Scotland unsure of his career goalsâis now considered the worldâs foremost expert in the use of micro-computer tomography (CT) scanning to study the evolution of snakes, lizards and amphibians. His current PhD candidate recently completed masterâs-level work with Dr. Bauer, and the professor continues to collaborate with both Drs. Bauer and Jackman on numerous projects.
âAll of us are connected, and that tether keeps growing longer,â Dr. Stanley said. âYou might be out the door [at Villanova], but that door of opportunities never closes.â

Dr. Bauer searches for a book on one of the bookcases in his home library. His collection of 20,000 herpetology textsâand his knowledge of each of themâare inavulable and otherwise inacessible resources for students.
In the 2012 movie âThe Amazing Spiderman,â the superheroâs nemesisâan evil reptile researcher aptly named âThe Lizardââis depicted in a scene in front of his large scientific library. But during production, the filmmakers received feedback that their library didnât look very scientific. One of them contacted a professor he knew at ĂŰĚŇTVâa professor with the largest collection of herpetology texts in the world. That collection ultimately served as the model for the film.
Dr. Bauerâs personal library, which he calls his hobby, fills more than just a few rooms in his home and features upward of 20,000 texts in various languages, spanning several centuries and countless subjects. This unrivaled collection, and Dr. Bauerâs vast comprehension and retention of the material, gives his students invaluableâand otherwise inaccessibleâaccess to resources. He uses some of them for curated readings in his coursework and discussions and often draws from them to answer specific questions from students. Dr. Stanley refers to his knowledge as âtruly encyclopedicâ and Patton calls it the âwidest and deepestâ of anyone she has ever met.
âAnd because of that knowledge, no matter what your interests are, he's able to point you in the right direction,â Nicolau said.
âHis understanding of the natural world comes from a sense of wonder that has been kind of lost in the modern era,â said Phil Skipwith, PhD, â11 MS, assistant professor of Biology at The University of Kentucky. âAnd you now see that in so many of the students that have come through his lab.â
Indeed, a common thread among Dr. Bauerâs students is the contagious sense of curiosity they learn from him. They revel in sharing anecdotes showcasing how his bewildering mastery of literature helped their own studies.
âHe'll pull out some obscure, 18th-century text that only exists physically in his living room to reference something,â Nicolau said. âOnce we were talking about an ancient species, and he made a point referencing the climate in Eritrea 15,000 years ago.â
âHe can read Afrikaans and also speaks English, German, French and Latin, as good as anyone speaks Latin these days,â Patton said. âYou might come across a handwritten German journal that you canât plug into Google Translate, but he can translate it for you with no problem. He's literally a better resource than the Internet.â

Both his remarkable scientific achievements and the impressive work carried on by those under his mentorship have shaped Dr. Bauer's legacy.
Famed journalist Margaret Fuller once said, "If you have knowledge, let others light their candles in it." Dr. Bauer has been lighting othersâ candles for nearly four decades, in ways that resonate deeply.
âSomeone with the level of productivity he has could easily become arrogant, or make you feel that you arenât worthy of his time,â Dr. Jackman added. âBut Aaron is not like that at all.â
Dr. Bauer is accessible and attentive, taking any idea or question posed to him with sincerity, no matter who it came from. He is prompt and incredibly comprehensive in his feedback. Perhaps most important, he is funny, energetic and enthusiastic. Any student entering his lab who might have felt intimidated by his academic stature left after the first day feeling invigorated instead.
âThat enthusiasm is infectious,â Patton said. âIt is difficult to be around Dr. Bauer and not develop excitement about this field. You may start off with a passing interest, but you walk away with a passion.â
There is unlikely a herpetologist in the world who would argue in describing Dr. Bauerâs legacy by his scientific achievements. Humans possess a far better understanding of reptiles because of his contributions, and the reptiles he has studiedâparticularly endangered speciesâhave been the true beneficiaries of his lifeâs work. But for those under his tutelage, that doesnât paint the whole picture.
âIt feels a little silly to look at his achievements and say his students are his legacy, but itâs true,â Dr. Stanley said. âItâs all of the above: the discoveries, the publicationsâhis whole body of work. That includes the continued work of his students. Itâs a real tribute to his teaching and mentorship.â
âHopefully people will continue to cite the things I publish, but eventually they will become old news,â Dr. Bauer said. âBut, while there is nobody who does the exact same type of work I do, everything I am interested in is being worked on by these former students. Not only are they pursuing these areas, but they are also taking leadership positions and still interacting with each other.
I get to see them for the first time when they are just starting to have these incredible ideas but still have a lot to learn. By the time they leave, they are leading their field.â
One of his former students just described his 99th and 100th species of Indian gecko. Another has become what Dr. Bauer calls âthe world expertâ in a large group of snakes with knife-like teeth. Still others, like Dr. Stanley and his micro-CT scanning, are renowned for a technique. Bauer Lab alumni have gone to careers studying skinks, Australian and South American frogs, Asian snakes, reptile specimens found in amber and a âvast majorityâ of the 40 families of lizards, including, of course, geckos. Many who havenât remained in herpetology pursued similar work in other zoological branches, researching weaver birds, insects and marsupials.
All of their successes are further inspiration to current students like Nicolau, who intends to pursue his PhD in South Africa and, like his predecessors, continue collaborating with Dr. Bauer.
Those successes are also why that photo taken at the 2024 World Congress of Herpetology in Borneoâand others like itâis a source of pride for Dr. Bauer. It is an opportunity to see a large number of his students together and witness firsthand their continued enthusiasm for the field. It is also personal; these are not just students, colleagues and collaborators, but also friends.
âSeeing everyone together makes me incredibly proud and always reminds me that I can't imagine a job I would have ever preferred more than this one.â