Since 1972, he has
been a Fellow of The Royal Entomological Society of London.
His
post-doctoral career has taken him around the world, tackling problems and
investigations in applied biology. Although entomology has been predominant
among most of those tasks, he has always adopted a multi-disciplinary approach
and the human and wider ecosystems have never been ignored. Similarly,
pragmatism and a concept of sensible economics have been prime considerations.
In later years, project and organisational management have been at the forefront
and he has taken a keen interest in the application of IT from its outset as a
practical tool.
The width and variety of his work can be seen from the
accompanying list of selected publications, many of which are analytical and
several have been widely cited. The change of behaviour findings for Anopheles
farauti have passed into the "folk-lore" of malaria and its
vectors. Similarly, his work on strategic timing of insecticide applications for
the control of Yellow Stem Borer was at the forefront of Integrated Pest
Management in rice. He has residential experience from the Solomon Islands,
Nigeria, Bangladesh, Tanzania and Malawi, as well as conducting field trials of
2-3 months duration in Sudan, El Salvador and Colombia.
His involvement
in international development has demanded much in the way of hands-on training
and four of his "counterparts" have gone on to gain PhD degrees.
Public Relations and extension activities have been essential elements, with
much of his work being on-farm and demanding full cooperation from local people.
On a wider field, in 1985-87, he led a major Environmental Education and
Interpretation Team in Derbyshire.
The present "electronic
publications" stem from his interest in IT and its use in the data-handling
and analysis, in cataloguing and in the spread of knowledge. That interest has
matched his long-held desire to make fuller use of the great amount of
information on ants which he gained while in Nigeria (1974-76), on deepwater
rice and its pests in Bangladesh (1981-83), on the upland "cooking"
bananas of East Africa (1987-90), on anti-malaria operations in the Solomons
(1969-73) and, last but not least, to develop ideas germinated in the
late-1960's as to how the innate system of activity timing might operate.