Over his 35 years at Northwestern State University Williams authored or co-authored 147 professional publications[3] and received both NSU's Distinguished Faculty Award and their Alumni Association's Excellence in Teaching Award.[3]
During his career, he specialized in studying the milk snake, Lampropeltis triangulum.
In 1988, he published a book identifying 25 subspecies of milk snakes which is considered seminal and cited by most papers on milk snakes.[4][5]
Williams concluded from his research that Lampropeltis triangulum temporalis is intermediate between the scarlet kingsnake and the eastern milk snake, and therefore that these so-called Coastal Plains phase milk snakes are intergrades and thus not a proper scientific designation.[5][10][11]
In 2000, the subspecies Sceloporus merriami williamsi, a taxonomic patronym, was named to honor Kenneth L. Williams for being a specialist in snake classification and the herpetology of Honduras and Mexico.[12][13]
References
^ abWilson, Larry David (2018). "Kenneth Lee Williams 1934–2017: My Fast Friend and Herpetological Colleague of More than Half a Century". Herpetological Review49 (1): 178-180.
^Smith, Hobart Muir; Williams, Kenneth L. (1966), "A New Snake (Geophis) from Mexico.", Journal of the Ohio Herpetological Society, 5 (3), Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles: 90, doi:10.2307/1562611, JSTOR1562611
^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. ("Williams, K.L.", pp. 286-287).
Selected bibliography
Williams, Kenneth L. (1985), "Cemophora, C. coccinea ", Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles, 374: 1–4
Williams, Kenneth L. (December 1994), Snakes of the World, Krieger Publishing Company, ISBN0-89464-302-9
Williams, Kenneth L. (1994), "Lampropeltis triangulum ", Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles, 594: 1–10
Wilson, Larry David[in French]; Williams, Kenneth L. (2002), "Scolecophis, Scolecophis atrocinctus ", Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles, 758: 1–3