Ralph Neville Hermon Bulmer (3 April 1928 – 18 July 1988) was a twentieth-century ethnobiologist who worked in Papua New Guinea, particularly with the Kalam language people. From 1974 he made a radical shift by changing the role of his Kalam informants and collaborators, allowing them to shape the purpose of ethnography and to make them authors rather than consultants. Bulmer's tree frog ( Ranoidea bulmeri) is named after him.
He received a doctoral scholarship and pursued his Ph.D. at Australian National University (1962). His doctorate was based on field-work in the Western Highlands of Papua New Guinea, where he documented the social and political life of the Kyaka-Enga people in the Baiyer Valley.
In 1964, Bulmer began to study the Kalam people along with Bruce Biggs, and in 1968 he moved to Port Moresby, working as a professor of anthropology at the University of Papua New Guinea. Along with a Kalam hunter and naturalist, Ian Saem Majnep (whom he made the primary author in publications), he wrote several books starting with Birds of My Kalam Country (1977). His later work, as lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Auckland, was pioneering in the field of Ethnobiology, particularly documenting the Kalam people. Among his well-known works was on ethnozoological classification and a particularly well known paper was titled " Why is the Cassowary Not a Bird? A Problem of Zoological Taxonomy Among the Karam of the New Guinea Highlands".
He was diagnosed with cancer in 1988 and died the same year. He was buried at Manukau Harbour, New Zealand. A memorial volume was published, Man and a Half: Essays in Pacific Anthropology and Ethnobiology in Honour of Ralph Bulmer, edited by Andrew Pawley (University of Hawaii Press, 1993).
Towards the end of his life, Bulmer also considered biblical ethnoornithology, leading to the publication of The Unsolved Problems of the Birds of Leviticus (1986).
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