While a student at UF, he became a member of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity.[4] From UF, he received bachelor's degree in 1932, M.S. in 1934, and Ph.D. in 1937.[5]
He was a high school science teacher before becoming a college professor. He published numerous books and articles, including Ulendo: Travels of a Naturalist in and out of Africa, High Jungles and Low, So Excellent a Fishe (about his green turtles), The Windward Road and several Time-Life books such as The Everglades and The Reptiles. He also authored the Handbook of Turtles, and with Coleman Jett Goin, Guide to the Reptiles, Amphibians and Freshwater Fishes of Florida. While a serious scientific and nature writer, he also published a parody of scientific taxonomic keys – his A Subjective Key to the Fishes of Alachua County, Florida, affectionately known as the "Carr Key".
Carr became a bit of a legend at UF, and students vied with one another to take his Community Ecology course in which they were involved in several major and minor field trips around northern Florida and southern Georgia. Listening to Carr talk about the Sand Pinescrub near Ocala or his comments as he guided students through the Okefenokee Swamp in canoes was considered a great privilege.[citation needed]
A book about Carr entitled The Man Who Saved Sea Turtles: Archie Carr and the Origins of Conservation was published in 2007 by Oxford University Press. This book was written by Frederick R. Davis, Assistant Professor of History at the Florida State University.
Carr's work is referenced in the 1985 romantic-drama film Turtle Diary.
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection has named its newest building after Archie and Marjorie Carr.
Carr is commemorated in the scientific name of a species of snake, Sibon carri.[7]
World Sea Turtle Day is celebrated on June 16th, coinciding with Archie Carr's birthday.[8]
Works
Carr, Archie (1952). Handbook of Turtles; the Turtles of the United States, Canada, and Baja California.[9] Carr, Archie (1952). 1995 pbk edition. Comstock Pub. Associates. ISBN0-801-48254-2.
Archie Carr graduated with his PhD in 1938 from the University of Florida under J.S. Rogers. His academic ancestry passes from Rogers (PhD 1929 University of Illinois), through Stephen Alfred Forbes (PhD 1884 Indiana University) (the first Chief of the Illinois Natural History Survey and a founder of aquatic ecosystem science[14]), the eminent evolutionary biologist and ecologist David Starr Jordan (PhD 1872 Cornell), to Louis Agassiz (PhD 1829 Munich, Germany) the eminent ichthyologist, geologist, and natural historian.
Carr advised and graduated 18 PhD students while faculty at the University of Florida: D.A. Belkin (1961), Karen A. Bjorndal (1979), D.K. Caldwell (1957), S.P. Christman (1975), M.J. Corn (1981), J.W. Crenshaw, Jr. (1955), D.C. Dietz (1979), D.W. Ehrenfeld (1966), D.E. Goodman (1971), E.V. Gourley (1969), H.F. Hirth (1962), C.G. Jackson (1964), J.F. Jackson (1972), A.B. Meylan (1984), J.A. Mortimer (1981), Robert H. Mount (1961), Peter C. Pritchard (1969), and Douglas A. Rossman (1962).[15]
^Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Carr", p. 48).
^Milne, Lorus J.; Milne, Margery J. (August 15, 1952). "Review of Handbook of Turtles: The Turtles of the United States, Canada, and Baja California by Archie Carr. Ithaca, N. Y.: Comstock Pub., Cornell Univ. Press, 1952. 542 pp. $7.50". Science. 116 (3007). American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS): 181. doi:10.1126/science.116.3007.181.a. ISSN0036-8075. S2CID239822332.
^Lynn, W. Gardner (1957). "Review of The Windward Road by Archie Carr. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1956. Pp. xvi, 258. Index. $4.50.)". The Americas. 13 (1). Cambridge University Press (CUP): 95–96. doi:10.2307/979224. ISSN0003-1615. JSTOR979224. S2CID146889122. p. 96
^Ellison, Aaron M. (March 1995). "Review of A Naturalist in Florida: A Celebration of Eden by Archie Carr; edited by Marjorie Harris Carr". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 70 (1): 62–63. doi:10.1086/418871.
^Adler, Kraig, editor (2012). Contributions to the History of Herpetology. Volume 3. Vancouver, British Columbia: Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles. 564 pp. ISBN9780916984823.