Saturday 27 November 2021

Bruce S Grant’s book ‘Observing Evolution’ and observing scientists who wrote on evolution


I have enjoyed reading Bruce Grant’s book Observing Evolution (Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, 2021) which describes his work from the early 1980s on industrial melanism in the Peppered Moth. Grant illustrates just how difficult it is to devise experiments on a natural phenomenon and how many traps for the unwary lie in the way. However, the reason for writing this article is not to go over old ground on the status of industrial melanism since despite the efforts of an American science writer to disparage the work of Henry Bernard Davis Kettlewell (1907-1979) in Oxford, the concept we first heard about at school is, thanks to the extensive work of the late Michael Majerus (1954-2009) and Bruce Grant himself, among others, even more firmly established than it was in Kettlewell’s time. Nor is to discus further one of the key rules of life: avoid reading anything by an American ‘science writer’ (the one in question being described by Grant as ‘notorious’). Instead it is to pick up a point that Grant made about E.B. ‘Henry’ Ford (1901-1988) and his book Ecological Genetics. The later editions failed to mention a paper published in Science in 1968 which threw doubt on one of Kettlewell’s untested speculations. Grant’s students were said to be ‘disappointed that world-renowned scientists could so uncritically accept and promote untested hypotheses’.

The late Bryan Clarke (1932-2014) in his Biographical Memoir on Ford for the Royal Society wrote of the approach taken in Ecological Genetics:

It is written, of course, in his [Ford’s] wonderfully lucid style. It contains accounts of the researches that have already been described above, as well as those of his friends, colleagues and students…This was a galaxy of talent indeed, and a testimony to Henry's skill in choosing students and colleagues, but there were other galaxies that did not get a mention. The book was brilliantly and annoyingly parochial. Henry did not like mathematics, despite his friendship with Ronald Fisher, so that other theoreticians got short shrift. Nor did he like molecular biology, so that even in later editions of the book there was little about variation in proteins or DNA. Workers in the U.S.A. were largely ignored. One year before the last edition of Ecological Genetics, in 1974, R.C. Lewontin produced another brilliantly and annoyingly parochial book, The Genetic Basis of Evolutionary Change. The two works, both major events in the history of evolutionary writing, hardly shared a reference in common. But still Ecological Genetics, like its American counterpart, is necessary fare for serious workers in the field, still it is the clearest and least compromising statement of the 'selectionist' view, and still it is a joy to read.

My take is that Ford’s book (and, it would appear, Lewontin’s) followed the tradition of the book—and the major scientific review—as a personal statement on the subject in question, not just as an annotated bibliography with no conclusions drawn or personal view expressed. The purchaser of the book was buying the author’s considered opinion and the evidence that the author thought should get a mention. It was probably obvious to the highly eccentric Ford that the results of the experiments published in 1968 were deeply flawed. Should Ford have spent time describing and then dismissing that work? Or should he—as he obviously did—have simply ignored it?

I end with a question I argue about with myself. What should one do when discussing the dross—and there is a lot of it about—in published science? Spend time in minutely discussing why the authors (and the increasingly poor peer reviewers) were misguided, ill-read, incompetent or just stupid? Or simply ignore it, as many British scientists did in the 20th century on the genteel grounds of, if having nothing good to say, say nothing. The first approach might though be considered akin to taking sweets from children; the second construed as intellectual arrogance.

…and a final couple of words on Grant’s book and his pursuit for research on natural selection of Biston betularia across its entire range in the northern hemisphere: highly recommended.


Wednesday 24 November 2021

Snakes’ Teeth: New light on their structure and evolution

As the dentist’s drill vibrated my teeth last week—and before being interrupted by the nurse being stung by a wasp (in Scotland in the middle of November)—I was thinking of a paper I had been reading on the teeth of snakes and the role of a particular component, plicidentine.

Plicidentine—a folded form of dentine—was found in the teeth of the snakes examined. Potentially it is present in all species of snake. Previously in extant reptiles it had only been found with any degree of certainty in some ‘varanoid’ lizards. The authors of the paper realised that the direction of the folding could explain how tubular fangs of venomous snakes have developed independently three times during the course of evolution. Tubular fangs are viewed developmentally as fully closed grooved fangs. The orientation of the folds in the plicidentine makes it easy to envisage that any one of the folds in non-venomous ancestors could have developed as a grooved fang involved in the delivery of venom.

A previous suggestion that plicidentine increases resistance to bending or compression during biting was examined in but biomechanical experiments provided no support for that view. Instead the authors suggest that plicidentine acts to improve the attachment of the long but shallowly rooted teeth to the underlying bone by providing an increased surface area. Since the teeth of ‘varanoid’ lizards are also relatively long and shallowly attached, the presence of plicidentine in these lizards as well as in snakes would fit the explanation proposed.










Palci A, LeBlanc ARH, Panagiotopoulou O, Cleuren SGC, Mehari Abraha H, Hutchinson MN, Evans AR, Caldwell MW, Lee MSY. 2021 Plicidentine and the repeated origins of snake venom fangs. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 288. 20211391. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2021.1391 


Tuesday 16 November 2021

Masai Mara Safari - 30 years ago: Cheetah with Four Cubs

 It would be difficult to imagine a better introduction to the Cheetah than this mother and four cubs we saw in the Masai Mara of Kenya in 1991. She had killed a Thomson's Gazelle and all five were eventually so full they could manage no more. And for physiologists a perfect example of gastric accommodation. Nothing looks more uncomfortable than a carnivore which has eaten so much that bursting seems the only possible outcome.







Monday 15 November 2021

Edwin Ray Lankester: Gladly Making Fools Suffer

I have recently been reading a biography of Sir Edwin Ray Lankester (1847-1929). Most biologists never get to grips with the various mechanisms of evolution proposed or pursued in the six decades between Darwin and the Modern Synthesis. This was the era of comparative anatomy, a discipline which reigned triumphant in plotting the directions of evolutionary change and the relationships between organisms. Physiology was also making great progress but largely in isolation from comparative anatomy and evolutionary processes. Lankester, although a morphologist to the end, involved himself in both fields particularly as a young man. However, it is difficult to reconcile the enormous advances made by the comparative anatomists with the muddled thinking of how evolutionary change might occur propounded by those same individuals. Even while recognising the benefit of hindsight it is difficult not to conclude that many skilled anatomists with the ability to recognise homologous or analogous structures in other organisms simply could not get to grips with the implications of evolution or of natural selection. Some ideas propounded by well-established zoologists seem—and may have seemed at the time—nuts. It is for that reason that the era of Lankester is largely irrelevant to modern biologists. The twists and turns of evolutionary thought over the era fall firmly in the domain of the historians of science.

What many present-day biologists do not realise is that their immediate predecessors were brought up under a regimen of teaching the subject devised in the second half of the 19th century. One of the key players in that period was Lankester. The mix of lecture-style teaching with laboratory sessions in which ‘type’ specimens from major animal groups were dissected and drawn became the norm for around a century. 

Lankester was a man who did not mince his words, whether inveighing against the clerics who still ran Oxford or his nominal and clearly loathsome superior at the British Museum when the Natural History Museum, of which he was Director, was under its control. He walked away from a chair in Edinburgh after a few weeks when he found there was neither a lecture room or museum and that he would have to lecture throughout the whole year. He gave up this lucrative post (where the professor received the tuition fees) to return to his chair which had not been filled at University College, London. He gave the eugenics movement a mauling on the grounds its proponents were not distinguishing between the effects, in modern terms, of the genotype and the environment on the phenotype of the poor who they wished to stop breeding.

Lankester was a giant in British science, as practitioner, protagonist, promoter of new organisations, propagandist and populariser. He had interesting friends, Karl Marx, H.G. Wells and Anna Pavlova being notable examples, and many enemies. He had a rather sad personal life. Although there is some information on Lankester in books on other people and online (some of it inaccurate or misinterpreted) I had not read a proper biography. For such an important figure I was surprised to find that only one had been written. Few copies can have been printed because I had difficulty finding one to buy.

The biography, E. Ray Lankester and the Making of British Biology was published as a British Society for the History of Science Monograph in 1995. The history of its publication is interesting. Lankester’s papers were preserved by a niece. The author of the draft of the biography, Joseph Lester, contacted the niece in the 1950s. Eventually he was given access with the proviso that he would write an ‘approved’ biography. Initially the family had refused any access because Lankester was, in his time, a controversial figure. Lester worked on the biography in the 1950s and 1960s but could not find a publisher. He was an amateur—a reviewer of the book stated that he was a schoolteacher in Manchester and in his 90s at the time of publication—without the right contacts. Professor Peter Bowler FBA, a proper historian with interest in Lankester and his era of biological science, persuaded Lester that the only way his work would be published would be for it to be edited by a professional. Bowler, after reading the manuscript, decided to tackle the  job himself. He paid particular attention to the footnotes and to interpreting some of passages in the light of current knowledge. The title page therefore contains Lester as author and Bowler as editor.

The famous line about Lankester was written by his hero, Thomas Henry Huxley (under posthumous attack at present by the witchsniffers). Lankester need to work for his living and he felt his position at University College London had become precarious as student numbers and, therefore, income, fell. He wondered whether to apply for the job of Assistant Secretary at the British Association. Huxley dissuaded him:

Looking at things solely from the point of view of your interests, I should advise you against taking it—even if it were offered. My pet aphorism, ‘Suffer fools gladly’, should be the guide of the Assistant Secretary—You do not suffer fools gladly; on the contrary, you gladly make fools suffer.

….and having read about Lankester I have just remembered that in the final year at school for the Scholarship Level paper taken in addition to the ‘A’ Level papers I was asked to write about the body cavities and their origins. All that stuff about the coelom and in which phyla it is present came flooding back. It was Lankester who sorted it all out. Oh, and we were told that some examiners liked the blood to be referred to as a tissue, not just as a fluid. Lankester again.

I will though end with a quote from Lankester himself:

Science is no handmaiden, but in reality the master—the master who must be obeyed. The sooner and more thoroughly the people recognise the fact—and insist upon its acceptance in practice by tis representatives and governors—the better for them and their posterity.

Amen to that.


Ray Lankester by Leslie Ward, Vanity Fair 1905
The caption read::
”His religion is the worship of all sorts of winged and finny freaks"


Lester J. 1995. E. Ray Lankester and the Making of British Biology. Edited by PJ Bowler. British Society for the History of Science Monograph. ISBN 0-906450-11-X

This following obituary notice is rarely quoted because it is not picked up by internet searches, being buried in Proceedings of the Royal Society under a general title: Goodrich ES. 1930. Edwin Ray Lankester—1847-1929. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 106, ix-xv.


Sunday 7 November 2021

ZOO LIFE: ZSL’s Post-War Magazine 1946-1957

Zoo Life was a magazine published by the Zoological Society of London from 1946 until 1957. It was very different from its predecessor that had ceased publication in 1941 as wartime paper shortage made it impossible to continue. The pre-war magazine was a joint venture between ZSL and Odhams Press. It crammed an enormous amount of information, factual as well as anthropomorphic animal fiction, into its pages over the three years it was published under three titles, ending its run as Animal & Zoo Magazine.

Zoo Life was a far more sober affair. It was launched with the Spring issue of 1946. The first Honorary Editor was Edward Hindle FRS. He had become Scientific Director of the Zoo in 1944, vacating the regius chair in Glasgow which he had occupied for nine years.

The first page of the first issue contains the following editorial:


The Zoological Society of London has great pleasure in presenting to its Fellows and all other friends, a new publication which will be devoted mainly to illustrated descriptions of animals likely to be seen when visiting Regent’s Park or Whipsnade. The main features of each issue will be an article on some animal of special interest, because of its rarity or novelty, with a photographic illustration; a series of photographic studies; and an illustrated report on recent additions to the collection. Besides these attempts to portray some of the beauties of animal life, which should appeal to everyone, readers will also find vivid descriptions of the ways and manners of Zoo Life. 


Anybody coming across the early issues of Zoo Life will be struck by the quality of the artwork for the front covers. Many were available to subscribers as prints and may have been included with each issue since I found a number enclosed in a batch I have bought on eBay a few years ago.




The cover of the first issue was of a Markhor (Capra falconeri), reproduced from an original painting by the famous artist Joseph Wolf (1820–1899) around 1865 and held in the Society’s collection.




The first article was written by the former superintendent of London Zoo, Reginald Innes Pocock FRS (1863-1947). It was on the Okapi and gives far more information on its discovery than finds its way into modern accounts. A regular features was on happenings at London Zoo. The first was  particularly interesting because it described how the Zoo was trying to recover from the war years. One snippet from the war years was the arrival of a Coyote, brought from the USA in a bomber as a mascot by its crew and swiftly impounded as a potential carrier of rabies.

Finally, there is a reminder of the pre-war magazine. One of the articles—on play in animals at the Zoo (i.e. ‘behavioural enrichment’ in modern jargon) was by Craven Hill. He was the Evening Standard’s Zoo Correspondent at a time when all the major newspapers had such a designated position to follow the goings-on at Regent’s Park.


Wednesday 3 November 2021

THE SEALS AND THE SCIENTISTS. A 1979 Book About an Important Study in 1950 on Lactation and Growth in the Grey Seal

Around 4 o’clock on days he was in Amo1 with cigar burning brightly in his hand would wander into the coffee room for tea and regale us with stories of his exploits, of his enemies and of his mishaps. Several were about his work on seals on Ramsey, an island off the Welsh coast, in the late 1940s to early 1950s. Amo and his colleagues were the first to study the growth of the young seal in relation to the transfer of nutrients from the fat reserves of the mother. During a period of a few weeks when the pup grows from around 14 kg to over 50 kg the mother does not feed. All the pup’s growth and energy expenditure comes from the mother’s reserves. As one grows, the other shrinks. The fat-rich milk (1½ times the concentration in double cream) can only be described as having the consistency of emulsion paint with the smell of none too fresh fish. (For anybody contemplating working on pinniped milk my advice is not to use a mouth pipette; take it from one who knows.)


The take home message from the study was that about half the loss of weight of the mother manifests itself as growth of the pup. The other half fuels the mother’s and the pup’s energy requirements. However, having got that bit over most of Amo’s stories involved interactions with the locals who were utterly mystified by the comings and goings of these strangers to the offshore island.



What I did not know when I left in 1978—and have only recently discovered—was that an account of the work on the seals and on the scientists who took part was published by Leonard ‘Leo’ Harrison Matthews2, his principal collaborator. The book, The Seals and the Scientists, appeared in 1979 (London: Peter Owen). It covers other studies on seals around the British coast and is beautifully written in a style that has long died out. One can almost see Matthews wearing his cape and carrying his swordstick on a trip to the publisher.


Matthews explained how the idea of penning a mother seal in a weighable cage on or near the beach and then weighing both mother and pup, while also taking milk samples, came about:


Professor Amoroso was sitting with me beside the fire in my study at Bristol one stormy winter evening in 1949. We were enjoying biological gossip over a jorum of hot rum and after discussing some puzzling things I had found in the insides of Basking sharks I had cut up with Gavin Maxwell on the island of Soay off the coast of Skye, the talk came round to the seals I had been studying in west Wales. He was Professor of Physiology at the Royal Veterinary College in London and was used to handling many kinds of strange animals, but had never had any dealings with seals.


After preliminary trips with various people interested in seals and decisions made on what was needed, the heavy equipment was made in Amo’s department’s workshop. Matthews described the party:


In the end only some of those who were interested in the seals could go with the Professor and me — Gwen Halley3, his brightest research student, Dolly4 [Matthews’s wife], Jean5 (Matthews’s daughter) and Allen Goffin6…Allen was the Professor’s head laboratory technician, section cutter, photomicrographer, mechanic and general standby; he had been in the Commandos during the war and was the strong man of the party— he could turn his hand to anything from cooking a splendid meal or humping a hundredweight of gear up an almost vertical cliff, to fixing and preserving the most delicate histological material.


They also had considerable help from Peter Rowe, the son of the local farmer.


The whole study was dubbed Operation LACTRAM—the investigation of LACTation in the Grey Seal at RAMsey. However, because the mother seal was named ‘Mrs Mopp’ after the  charwoman character in the radio programme ITMA, the whole affair is referred to as the Mrs Mopp Expedition. Her pup was named ‘Willie’.


The book has photographs of the Mrs Mopp expedition. They were extracted from a ciné film taken I suspect by Allen Goffin who amongst the many attributes listed by Matthews was a good man at ciné and still photography. I have been unable to find what happened to the film. It was shown at a meeting of the Physiological Society in November 1950, only around a month after the party left Ramsey, but it appears not to be held by the BFI (where another of Goffin’s films is archived). Does anybody know if it has survived?


Mrs Mopp and Willie were captured 3 days after parturition and kept in a large cage which could be weighed. When they were released 15 days later the mother went to sea and the party departed. Peter Rowe then noted that  the mother returned to feed the pup regularly for another 3 days and then left him to his own devices. 


The book ends with what happened a year later. Amo and Matthews were again on Ramsey. They had packed their equipment in October 1951 and were on the beach when Matthews decided to demonstrate his ability to ‘call’ out the cows from the sea. He succeeded in doing so but Amo sneezed and they retreated. However, they and the other scientists with them noticed that one of the cows hadn’t seemed bothered by human scent. Then Matthews saw the distinctive scars on her back. It was Mrs Mopp.


That ending though was not Amo’s most memorable story of their work on Ramsey. Amo realised that to get milk samples, a breast pump of the type used by human mothers was needed. As he said, a medical graduate and possessor of that ancient degree, Bachelor of the Art of Obstetrics (BAO) which Dublin awarded alongside its degrees in medicine and surgery, should have anticipated such a requirement. The comings and goings of the scientists visiting Ramsey were the talk of the small town on the mainland from which they obtained supplies. There were—shock horror—women with the men and one of those men, Amo, was black—and in 1950, Amo was the only black man they had ever seen. What was going on? Tongues were wagging when one of the party went ashore asking where he could buy a breast pump. Mission accomplished, the purchaser heard the gossip as he passed by: ‘Looking for a breast pump (the word ‘breast’ would have been whispered) he was. One of them must have had a baby’.


A final swig of tea and a long puff of the cigar, by now diminished in length, and Amo was across the corridor and back in his tiny office.







1 Professor Emmanuel Ciprian Amoroso CBE FRS (1957) 1901-1982.

2 Leonard Harrison Matthews FRS (1954) 1901-1986.

3 Gwen Halley went on to become lecturer in embryology at the then new Bristol vet school; I have no later information.

4 née Dorothy Hélène Harris 1901-1997.

5 Jean Dorothy Matthews, later Trewhella 1929-2021.

6 I am fairly sure that Allen Goffin was Alan Richard Goffin 1920-1984.