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  1. Rosalind Murray (1890–1967, aged 76–77) was a British-born writer and novelist known for The Happy Tree and The Leading Note. Murray's parents were the classical scholar Gilbert Murray OM (1866–1957) and Lady Mary Henrietta Howard (1865–1956), daughter of George Howard, 9th Earl of Carlisle.

  2. Chronic road salt exposure across life stages and the interactive effects of warming and salinity in a semiaquatic insect. VM Zhang, RL Martin, RL Murray. Environmental Entomology 51 (2),...

  3. Rosalind Murray (1890-1967) was the daughter of the well-known classical scholar Gilbert Murray and Lady Mary Howard. Brought up in Glasgow and Oxford, she was educated by governesses and at the progressive Priors Field School.

  4. Diversity in mating and parental sex roles. Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Biology, 2ndEdition. Submitted. Wiberg, R.A.W., Murray, R.L., Herridge, E.J., Gwynne, D.T. & L.F. Bussière. Deceptive female display signals drive diversification of sensory counter-adaptations in systems with male nuptial gift provisioning. Submitted.

  5. Rosalind Murray (1890-1967) was the daughter of the well-known classical scholar Gilbert Murray and Lady Mary Howard. Brought up in Glasgow and Oxford, she was educated by governesses and at the progressive Priors Field School.

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  6. Rosalind Murray’s The Happy Tree, the 108th book on the Persephone list, was first published in 1926. This beautiful novel has so many themes delicately threaded through its plot – family, politics, wartime, love, friendship, jealousy and, perhaps most importantly for its protagonist, the notion and hardships of growing up.

  7. Research. I am an evolutionary ecologist broadly interested in environmental impacts on sex differences and life history trade offs. Work in the lab focuses on insects with a combination of field and lab experiments. Current experimental systems include mosquitoes, dance flies (empids), notonectids and dragonflies.