Luciano Javier ÃÂvila (born 26 March 1965) is an Argentine herpetologist and biologist. His research focuses on reptiles of southern South America.
ÃÂvila obtained his Licenciado degree in biological sciences from the Universidad Nacional de RÃÂo Cuarto (UNRC) in March 1990. In April 1996, he earned his Ph.D. in biological sciences with a specialization in zoology from the Universidad Nacional de Tucumán (UNT). From 1997 to 1998, he worked as a domestic postdoctoral fellow at UNRC, and from 2000 to 2004 he held a postdoctoral fellowship abroad at the Department of Integrative Biology, Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, United States.
ÃÂvila served as a research assistant and fellow at the Secretariat of Science and Technology of UNRC, and as a fellow of the Consejo de Investigaciones CientÃÂficas y Técnicas de la Provincia de Córdoba (CONICOR). He also received training, internal, and external postdoctoral fellowships from the National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) of Argentina.
Since 1998, ÃÂvila has been a scientific member of CONICET, and since 2010, an independent research associate. His scientific work has been published in more than 100 papers and notes in Argentine and international journals, including Herpetologica, Evolution, Systematic Biology, Cuadernos de HerpetologÃÂa, Journal of Herpetology, Herpetological Review, Tropical Zoology, FACENA, Bulletin of the Maryland Herpetological Society, Biogeographica, BoletÃÂn de la Sociedad de BiologÃÂa de Concepción, Revista Española de HerpetologÃÂa, Herpetologische Zeitschrift, Acta Zoológica Lilloana, Zootaxa, Amphibia-Reptilia, Herpetozoa, BoletÃÂn del Museo Regional de Ciencias Naturales de TorÃÂn, Bulletin of the Chicago Herpetological Society, and BoletÃÂn de la Asociación Herpetológica Argentina. He has also published conference proceedings from scientific meetings in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, Venezuela, and the United States.
ÃÂvilaâÂÂs research interests include the taxonomy, systematics, phylogeny, evolution, ecology, conservation, biological inventories, and biogeography of South American reptiles, with a particular emphasis on Patagonian lizards. He has contributed to the description of more than 20 reptile species, including species in the genera Homonata, Liolaemus, Phymaturus and Teius.
His professional activities include basic research, postgraduate teaching, student advising and evaluation, curatorship of herpetological collections, management of scientific projects, evaluation of research proposals and scientific positions, biological baseline surveys for private oil and mining companies, and biodiversity assessments.
ÃÂvila has been married to Mariana Mirando since 1997. They have one son, born in 2003.