Influential colleagues and Ideas
Some Influential Colleagues
In September 1970 my wife Sandra
and I immigrated to the UK
from South Arica , for me to take up a
lectureship in the Zoology Department of Newcastle University. This essay is
about how this came about and the role of the Head of Zoology, Professor Robert
Clark in bringing it about.
Bob, as we called him, was
ever a remote figure as was usual in the days when the title ‘Professor’ meant
something, so I was never privy to his plans for me or for the Zoology
Department. Nevertheless I own him a great debt of gratitude for bringing me to
the UK
with its professional opportunities. Conjecture leads me to the
conclusion that, probably encouraged by Professor Leonard Beadle, Bob brought
me to the UK
to develop ecology as a major subject in the Zoology Department. At the same time
Dr Stewart Evans was appointed to carry out the same role for animal behaviour.
Such a plan would have made sense as both ecology and behaviour were subjects popular
with students in a department previously dominated by physiology and
palaeontology. I was to join Norman Philipson a senior ecologist already in
post. I was to learn later how lucky I was to have Norman as a friend and colleague. Norma and I were provided with a large modern laboratory with capacity
for at least a dozen research students and a full time staff demonstrator post.
Here was a grand and generous innovation owed entirely to Bob.
Professor Arthur Cain FRS
Dr Alec Panchen
Professor Leonard Beadle
Professor Margaret Kalk
Some transformative Lectures
Striking in my memory is an
Arthur Cain lecture on systematics given as a guest lecture at Wits University Zoology
Department in the late 50s when I was an undergraduate. In those days, at least
at Wits, undergraduate work was heavily focused on systematics and comparative
anatomy so Cain’s lecture was timely for me in bringing together these two
themes. Strangely no one had attempted to do this for us before. Dr Cain, as he
was then, was a fine orator, making his subject both exciting and memorable.
I cannot neglect a lecture by a Dr Brink from the
Bernard Price Palaeontology Institute at Wits entitle The Thermal Barrier. We students
were familiar with the concept of the water barriers to the colonisation of land
but the idea of a thermal barrier was new to us. So stimulated were we that
some of us, including my future wife Sandra Bosazza and my brother Ian both
made palaeontology a focus of their interests thereafter.
A guest lecture by the eminent
John Maynard Smith, another fine orator, turned everything on its head with a
title something like A Chicken is the Eggs
Way of Making Another Egg. This is typical of him.
A great innovator, he is responsible for the theory of evolutionary stable
strategies (EES) and Game Theory which reinforced my budding interest in
natural selection.
A Book
I add here one book of
considerable influence entitle Ontogeny and Phylogeny (Gould, 1977). S. J. Gould’ moves away from the adult centric
zoology in fashion for many years, to a focus on the life cycle of organisms.
This is just what I needed to move my study of the ecology of the common chironomid
midge from the feeding larva stages to the reproducing adult (McLachlan & Ladle, 2001)( McLachlan, 2013).
References
Beadle, L. C. Obituary. Arch.
Hydrobiol. 108, 583-587.
Cain, A. (1999). Obituary.
Nature, 401, 872.
Gould, S. J. (1977). Ontogeny and
Phylogeny. London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Kalk, M., McLachlan,
A. J., & Howard-Williams, C. (Eds.). (1979). Lake Chilwa: Studies of change in a tropical ecosystem (Vol. 35).
London: Dr. W. Junk.
McLachlan, A. J.,
& Ladle, R. (2001). Life in the puddle: behavioural and life-cycle
adaptations in the Diptera of tropical rain pools. Biological Reviews 76, 377-388.
McLachlan, A. J.,
& Ladle, R. (2011). Barriers to Adaptive Reasoning in Community Ecology. Biological Reviews, 86, 543-548.
Williams, G. C.
(1966). Adaptation and Natural Selection.
Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Wynne-Edwards.
(1962). Animal Dispersion in Relation to
Social Behaviour. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.