Honorary Doctor of Science, Occidental College (1953) Phi Beta Kappa, Occidental College Chapter (1962) Professor Emeritus, Riverside City College (1965) Honorary Doctor of Laws, University of California, Riverside (1967) Member, University of California Chapter of Sigma Xi (1966) [1]: 216, 378, 397, 404, 406
A Preliminary Report on the Flora of the Charleston Mountains of Nevada. Occasional papers of Riverside Junior College., v. 1, no. 1. Riverside, CA: The Junior College. 1927. p. 15. OCLC5663721.
Birds of the Charleston Mountains of Nevada. Occasional papers of Riverside Junior College., v. 2, no. 1. Riverside, CA: The Junior College. 1927. p. 8. OCLC16016140.
Denizens of the Mountains. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. 1929. p. 168. ASINB00085C1KE. OCLC716567.
A Dictionary of Greek and Latin Combining Forms used in Zoological Names (revised and enlarged from 1930 ed.). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. 1931. ASINB002AQF1BU. OCLC10567568.
The California Deserts: A Visitor's Handbook (also 1933, 1938, 1955 ed.). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 1965. p. 220. ISBN978-0804712231. OCLC716807042. (Samuel Stillman Berry and Malcom Jennings Rogers contributed chapters)
A Source-book of Biological Names and Terms (3rd ed.). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. 1978 [1944]. p. 323. ISBN978-0398061791. OCLC1524400. (illustrations by Merle Gish and the author)[15]
The Biologist's Handbook of Pronunciations (first in 1960 ed.). Charleston, SC: Nabu Press. 2011. p. 340. ISBN978-1175764539. OCLC310096649. (illustrations by Morris Van Dame and Jaeger)
Desert Wildlife (revised and enlarged of 1950 Our Desert Neighbors ed.). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 1961. p. 320. ISBN978-0804701242. OCLC637075718.
"Monk of Palm Springs". Palm Springs Villager. 4 (6): 22. January 1950.
"From Cheese to Cash". Palm Springs Villager. 5 (87): 18–19, 38. February 1951.
"I Well Remember J. Smeaton Chase". Palm Springs Villager. 6 (8): 54–56, 58. March 1952.
"Tall Tales from Old Palm Springs". Palm Springs Villager. 6 (11): 14, 33. June 1952.
Archives of Jaeger's work
Much of Jaeger's original work is archived at the University of California, Riverside, Library Special Collections.[16]
Also see: Manuscripts and correspondence, OCLC44935014 (Summary: biographical material, list of publications, newspapers articles and correspondence of Edmund C. Jaeger, Head of the Zoology Dept. at Riverside City College. 358 items in one box)
In 1986 The Nature Conservancy completed development[19] of the "Edmund C. Jaeger Nature Sanctuary" in the Chuckwalla Mountains near Desert Center, California.[20] It was in the Chuckwalla Mountains that Jaeger discovered the poorwill, and after his death in 1983, his cremated remains were scattered in the same canyon.[21]
The University of La Verne of La Verne, California, Cultural and Natural History Collections (formerly the Jaeger Museum), maintains personal and professional materials pertaining to the life of Edmund C. Jaeger, including his 1947 field notes recording his initial study of the common poorwill in hibernation. The Collections is located inside the Jaeger House, named in his honor.[22]
Pacific Union College of Angwin, California, annually presents an "Edmund C. Jaeger Award" in biology[23] and "Dr. Edmund C. Jaeger Scholarship Grant" in education[24] to deserving students.
^ abcWild, Peter (2007). News from Palm Springs: The Letters of Carl Eytel, Edmund C. Jaeger, J. Smeaton Chase, Charles Francis Saunders, and Others of the Creative Brotherhood and Its Background. Vol. I and II. Johannesburg, CA: The Shady Myrick Research Project. OCLC163456618.
^Ewan, Joseph (May 1987). "Edmund Carroll Jaeger (1887–1983), Dave Keck's Mentor". Taxon. 2. 36 (2): 402–04. doi:10.2307/1221431. JSTOR1221431. (Nita Hiltner, next reference, says the move was in 1910.)
^Jaeger, Edmund C. (May–June 1949). "Further Observations on the Hibernation of the Poor-will". The Condor. 3. 51 (3): 105–09. doi:10.2307/1365104. ISSN0010-5422. JSTOR1365104. OCLC478309773. Earlier I gave an account (Condor, 50, 1948:45) of the behavior of a Poor-will (Phalaenoptilus nuttallinii) which I found in a state of profound torpidity in the winter of 1946–47 in the Chuckawalla Mountains of the Colorado Desert, California. (photographs by Kenneth Middleham)
^Hiltner, Nita (February 20, 2011). "A Look Back". The Press-Enterprise. Riverside, CA: Enterprise Media. Retrieved November 15, 2011.[permanent dead link] (Joseph Ewan, the preceding reference, says the move was in 1906.)
^Houk, Rose (2000). Mojave Desert (American Deserts Handbook). Tucson, AZ: Southwest Parks & Monuments Association. p. 26. ISBN978-1583690086. OCLC44039342.
^Lillard, Richard G. (April 1973). "The Nature Book in Action". The English Journal. 62 (4). National Council of Teachers of English: 537–48. doi:10.2307/813109. JSTOR813109.
^Translated into Chinese as: 生物名称和生物學术语的词源 (sheng wu ming cheng he sheng wu xue shu yu de ci yuan). Beijing: 科学出版社 (ke xue chu ban she) (Science Press). 1965 and 1979. p. 577. OCLC49256075, 36154159. (responsibility includes: 滕砥平, 蔣芝英譯. (Teng Di Ping, Jiang Zhiying translation))
^"Past Award Recipients: Auld Lang Syne Award". Occidental College. Archived from the original on May 19, 2012. Retrieved December 14, 2011. For unwavering loyalty to Occidental College and the principle for which it stands, the Auld Lang Syne Award is presented to deserving members of the Fifty Year Club on Fifty Year Club Day each spring. More than 100 alumni have received the award, which was created in 1954.
^V.W. Steinmann & J. André, Aliso 30(1): 1. (2012)
Lawton, Harry (October 13, 1957). "Edmund C. Jaeger Fills Role of Nature's Sherlock Holmes". Press-Enterprise. Riverside, CA: Press-Enterprise Company. pp. B: 4, 5.
Whitney, Harry L. (October 1948). "Edmund C. Jaeger, Denizen of the Desert". Palm Springs Villager. 3 (2). Palm Springs, CA: 15–16.
Wild, Peter (Summer 1999). "Edmund C. Jaeger: From the Classroom to Palavers". Wildflower. 15 (3). Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada: North American Native Plant Society: 40–43.