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John Gilchrist (zoologist)

John Dow Fisher Gilchrist FRSSAf (1866–1926) was a Scottish ichthyologist, who established ichthyology as a scientific discipline in South Africa. He was instrumental in the development of marine biology in South Africa and of a scientifically based local fishing industry.

John D.F. Gilchrist
Born1866 (1866)
Died(1926-10-22)22 October 1926
NationalityScottish
EducationMadras College
Alma materUniversity of St Andrews
University of Edinburgh
University of Munich
University of Zurich
Known forGilchrist's round herring
SpouseElfreda R. Raubenheimer
Scientific career
FieldsMarine biology

Education and career

Gilchrist was born in Anstruther, Fife, Scotland in 1866.[1][2] His early education was at Madras College, St Andrews, Scotland. He studied at the University of St Andrews and the University of Edinburgh,[3] graduating with a Bachelor of Science (BSc) and a Master of Arts (MA). He was awarded an 1851 Exhibition scholarship for advanced studies and research, which enabled him to study feeding in marine fishes. After further studies at the University of Munich and the University of Zurich he obtained his PhD in geology at Jena University in 1894.[2]

 
Opening of the Great Exhibition, 1 May 1851

He studied marine biology in Naples, Monaco and the Isle of Man before returning to teach zoology at the University of Edinburgh.[2] During his three months at Naples (May to July 1893) he completed most of the translation of Monismus als Band zwischen Religion und Wissenschaft, by Ernst Haeckel, into English as Monism as Connecting Religion and Science. The Confession of Faith of a Man of Science[4] (1894). Haeckel sent a copy of the English translation to Huxley and complained about the difficulties Gilchrist had encountered trying to find a publisher.[5]

Gilchrist was appointed Marine Biologist in the Department of Agriculture of the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa in December 1895 and took up the position in early 1896. He held the post of Professor and Director of Fisheries and Marine Biological Survey of South Africa[6] and initiated a marine biological survey in 1897, using the vessel Pieter Faure, which led to the discovery of new stocks of hake near Dassen Island and sole near Mossel Bay. The survey was extended in 1901 to the coast of Natal but no new trawling grounds were found.[2][7]

A biological laboratory for marine research focusing on marine fauna, sea temperature and salinity as a means of studying ocean currents, was built at St James in 1902 at Gilchrist's request.[2] William Wardlaw Thompson was his assistant for most of Gilchrist's tenure[8] and Thompson co-authored many important papers with him, including The Freshwater Fishes of South Africa[9] and A catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal.[10]

The specimens collected during the marine surveys resulted in the discovery of hundreds of new species and several new genera of marine organisms, including many that had not been observed in South African waters before. Gilchrist described many of the new species himself, while others were sent to overseas specialists such as G.A. Boulenger, G.B. Sowerby, T.R.R. Stebbing, S.J. Hickson and J. Stanley Gardiner, whose descriptions were published in the six volumes of Marine investigations in South Africa (1902-1910), the first marine science journal in southern Africa, which Gilchrist edited and to which he contributed many papers.[2][11]

Gilchrist was an examiner for the University of the Cape of Good Hope in botany (1902-1903) and zoology (1903, 1912-1916). He was awarded a DSc in 1905 by the University of Edinburgh[12] and was appointed supervisor of marine studies at the South African College. In 1907 he was appointed professor of zoology at the South African College, replacing Arthur Dendy. His teaching assistant at that time was J. Stuart Thompson. He remained professor of zoology until shortly before his death in 1926.[2]

 
Hemichordate (Acorn worm)

In 1907, the post of Government Biologist was abolished but Gilchrist continued to play an important role in the Department of Agriculture's marine survey as Chairman of the Fishery Advisory Board. In 1908, he described a new species of hemichordates. After 1910 he became director of the Fisheries Survey of the Union of South Africa. As fisheries advisor to the Cape Provincial Administration he compiled four Marine Biological Reports covering activities during the years 1912 to 1917.[2][7]

Gilchrist resigned his position in December 1910, when a full-time curator of marine collections was appointed under the Union of South Africa. Together with his assistant, W.W. Thompson, Gilchrist published a comprehensive Catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal in the Annals of the Durban Museum[13] In 1918 he described a new genus of crawling medusa and investigated trematode parasites.[2]

In 1920 Gilchrist led marine survey expeditions in a converted whaler, the Pickle. The expeditions went as far as Laurenço Marques to the east and Walvis Bay to the north. Amongst other discoveries were new trawling grounds for hake north-west of Cape Town. These discoveries were covered by the reports of the Fisheries and Marine Biological Survey for the years 1920 to 1925, issued by Gilchrist.[7] In 1925 he discovered a new enteropneust.[2]

 
Members of the Herring Family.

He is the recognised authority for many genera and species of fish, such as Paralichthodes algoensis, the peppered flounder.[14] His standard abbreviation under the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature is Gilchrist.

The genus Gilchristella, a member of the Clupeidae (herring) family, was named in 1935 in his honour.[1]

Gilchrist was modest and well-liked although he had the reputation of being an absent-minded professor. He married Elfreda R. Raubenheimer and they had one son and one daughter.[3] He was forced to retire in 1926 owing to his failing health. He visited Europe in an effort to recover his health and returned to South Africa in July 1926. He died at the marine laboratory at Saint James, Cape Town, South Africa on 22 October 1926.[1][2]

Other scientific interests

Gilchrist was a member of the Meteorological Commission of the Cape of Good Hope from 1898 to 1908. In 1896 he joined the South African Philosophical Society (predecessor of Royal Society of South Africa) and served as its president, vice president and treasurer at various times. In 1908 when the Royal Society of South Africa was founded, Gilchrist was elected a foundation Fellow and served on its council (1908-1910) and as president(1918-1922).[2]

He was a founding member of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science in 1902. In 1916 he became a foundation member of the South African Biological Society. He was a member of the Zoological Society of London, a fellow of the Linnean Society of London, and an honorary member of the Societe Centrale d'Aquiculture of Paris.[2]

Selected publications

Gilchrist contributed numerous scientific papers to the following journals, amongst others:

  • Annals of the South African Museum,
  • Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society,
  • Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa, and
  • Reports of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science.

In 1905 he was joint editor with W. Flint of the journal Science in South Africa. He and Cecil von Bonde wrote Dissection of the platana and the frog (Cape Town, 1919) and Practical zoology for medical and junior students (Edinburgh 1922).[2]

Other publications of note are:

  • The Blenniidae of South Africa Part 2 of Volume 6 of the Annals of the South African Museum (Trustees of the South African Museum, 1908) (with William Wardlaw Thompson)
  • South African Zoology. A Text Book for the Use of Students, Teachers and Others in South Africa (Cape Town and Pretoria, 1912)
  • The Freshwater Fishes of South Africa: Volume 11, Parts 5-6 of Annals of the South African Museum (Trustees of the South African Museum, 1913) (with William Wardlaw Thompson)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "John Dow Fisher Gilchrist". Neglected Science. 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n C. Plug. "Gilchrist, Dr John Dow Fisher". S2A3.org.za. S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Gilchrist, John Dow Fisher, (1866–1926), Professor of Zoology, University of Cape Town, since 1918", Who Was Who, Oxford University Press, 1 December 2007, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u196891, ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1, retrieved 4 May 2019
  4. ^ Gilchrist, John (1894). Monism as Connecting Religion and Science (PDF) (in English and German). London: A. and C. Black. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  5. ^ Haeckel an Huxley Jena, 30. Nov. 1894, in: Georg Ushmann und Ilse Jahn, "Der Briefwechsel zwischen Thomas Henry Huxley und Ernst Haeckel. Ein Beitrag zum Darwin-Jahr“, in: Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift der Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Jahrgang 9, 1960, S.28.
  6. ^ "Gilchrist, John Dow Fisher". Archives Catalogue. Natural History Museum. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  7. ^ a b c van Sittert, Lance (1985). "The Handmaiden of Industry: Marine Science and Fisheries Development in South Africa 1895–1939". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. Great Britain: Elsevier Science Ltd. 26 (4): 531. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  8. ^ C. Plug. "Thompson, Mr William Wardlaw (ichthyology)". S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  9. ^ Gilchrist, J.D.F.; Thompson, W.W. (1913). "The Freshwater Fishes of South Africa". Annals of the South African Museum. Trustees of the South African Museum. II. Parts 5-6.
  10. ^ Gilchrist, J.D.F.; Thompson, W.W. (1914). "A catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal". Annals of the Durban Museum. 1: 291. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  11. ^ Marine Investigations in South Africa (PDF) (3rd ed.). Cape Town: W.A. Richards & Son. 1905. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  12. ^ Gilchrist, John Dow Fisher (1905). "The development of South African fishes (Parts I and II)". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ "Catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal". Annals of the Durban Museum. 1: 255–431. 1914–1917.
  14. ^ "Paralichthodes algoensis Gilchrist, 1902". Fishbase. Retrieved 20 February 2019.

john, gilchrist, zoologist, john, fisher, gilchrist, frssaf, 1866, 1926, scottish, ichthyologist, established, ichthyology, scientific, discipline, south, africa, instrumental, development, marine, biology, south, africa, scientifically, based, local, fishing,. John Dow Fisher Gilchrist FRSSAf 1866 1926 was a Scottish ichthyologist who established ichthyology as a scientific discipline in South Africa He was instrumental in the development of marine biology in South Africa and of a scientifically based local fishing industry John D F GilchristBorn1866 1866 Anstruther Fife ScotlandDied 1926 10 22 22 October 1926St James Western Cape South AfricaNationalityScottishEducationMadras CollegeAlma materUniversity of St AndrewsUniversity of Edinburgh University of Munich University of ZurichKnown forGilchrist s round herringSpouseElfreda R RaubenheimerScientific careerFieldsMarine biology Contents 1 Education and career 2 Other scientific interests 3 Selected publications 4 See also 5 ReferencesEducation and career EditGilchrist was born in Anstruther Fife Scotland in 1866 1 2 His early education was at Madras College St Andrews Scotland He studied at the University of St Andrews and the University of Edinburgh 3 graduating with a Bachelor of Science BSc and a Master of Arts MA He was awarded an 1851 Exhibition scholarship for advanced studies and research which enabled him to study feeding in marine fishes After further studies at the University of Munich and the University of Zurich he obtained his PhD in geology at Jena University in 1894 2 Opening of the Great Exhibition 1 May 1851 He studied marine biology in Naples Monaco and the Isle of Man before returning to teach zoology at the University of Edinburgh 2 During his three months at Naples May to July 1893 he completed most of the translation of Monismus als Band zwischen Religion und Wissenschaft by Ernst Haeckel into English as Monism as Connecting Religion and Science The Confession of Faith of a Man of Science 4 1894 Haeckel sent a copy of the English translation to Huxley and complained about the difficulties Gilchrist had encountered trying to find a publisher 5 Gilchrist was appointed Marine Biologist in the Department of Agriculture of the Cape of Good Hope South Africa in December 1895 and took up the position in early 1896 He held the post of Professor and Director of Fisheries and Marine Biological Survey of South Africa 6 and initiated a marine biological survey in 1897 using the vessel Pieter Faure which led to the discovery of new stocks of hake near Dassen Island and sole near Mossel Bay The survey was extended in 1901 to the coast of Natal but no new trawling grounds were found 2 7 A biological laboratory for marine research focusing on marine fauna sea temperature and salinity as a means of studying ocean currents was built at St James in 1902 at Gilchrist s request 2 William Wardlaw Thompson was his assistant for most of Gilchrist s tenure 8 and Thompson co authored many important papers with him including The Freshwater Fishes of South Africa 9 and A catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal 10 The specimens collected during the marine surveys resulted in the discovery of hundreds of new species and several new genera of marine organisms including many that had not been observed in South African waters before Gilchrist described many of the new species himself while others were sent to overseas specialists such as G A Boulenger G B Sowerby T R R Stebbing S J Hickson and J Stanley Gardiner whose descriptions were published in the six volumes of Marine investigations in South Africa 1902 1910 the first marine science journal in southern Africa which Gilchrist edited and to which he contributed many papers 2 11 Gilchrist was an examiner for the University of the Cape of Good Hope in botany 1902 1903 and zoology 1903 1912 1916 He was awarded a DSc in 1905 by the University of Edinburgh 12 and was appointed supervisor of marine studies at the South African College In 1907 he was appointed professor of zoology at the South African College replacing Arthur Dendy His teaching assistant at that time was J Stuart Thompson He remained professor of zoology until shortly before his death in 1926 2 Hemichordate Acorn worm In 1907 the post of Government Biologist was abolished but Gilchrist continued to play an important role in the Department of Agriculture s marine survey as Chairman of the Fishery Advisory Board In 1908 he described a new species of hemichordates After 1910 he became director of the Fisheries Survey of the Union of South Africa As fisheries advisor to the Cape Provincial Administration he compiled four Marine Biological Reports covering activities during the years 1912 to 1917 2 7 Gilchrist resigned his position in December 1910 when a full time curator of marine collections was appointed under the Union of South Africa Together with his assistant W W Thompson Gilchrist published a comprehensive Catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal in the Annals of the Durban Museum 13 In 1918 he described a new genus of crawling medusa and investigated trematode parasites 2 In 1920 Gilchrist led marine survey expeditions in a converted whaler the Pickle The expeditions went as far as Laurenco Marques to the east and Walvis Bay to the north Amongst other discoveries were new trawling grounds for hake north west of Cape Town These discoveries were covered by the reports of the Fisheries and Marine Biological Survey for the years 1920 to 1925 issued by Gilchrist 7 In 1925 he discovered a new enteropneust 2 Members of the Herring Family He is the recognised authority for many genera and species of fish such as Paralichthodes algoensis the peppered flounder 14 His standard abbreviation under the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature is Gilchrist The genus Gilchristella a member of the Clupeidae herring family was named in 1935 in his honour 1 Gilchrist was modest and well liked although he had the reputation of being an absent minded professor He married Elfreda R Raubenheimer and they had one son and one daughter 3 He was forced to retire in 1926 owing to his failing health He visited Europe in an effort to recover his health and returned to South Africa in July 1926 He died at the marine laboratory at Saint James Cape Town South Africa on 22 October 1926 1 2 Other scientific interests EditGilchrist was a member of the Meteorological Commission of the Cape of Good Hope from 1898 to 1908 In 1896 he joined the South African Philosophical Society predecessor of Royal Society of South Africa and served as its president vice president and treasurer at various times In 1908 when the Royal Society of South Africa was founded Gilchrist was elected a foundation Fellow and served on its council 1908 1910 and as president 1918 1922 2 He was a founding member of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science in 1902 In 1916 he became a foundation member of the South African Biological Society He was a member of the Zoological Society of London a fellow of the Linnean Society of London and an honorary member of the Societe Centrale d Aquiculture of Paris 2 Selected publications EditGilchrist contributed numerous scientific papers to the following journals amongst others Annals of the South African Museum Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa and Reports of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science In 1905 he was joint editor with W Flint of the journal Science in South Africa He and Cecil von Bonde wrote Dissection of the platana and the frog Cape Town 1919 and Practical zoology for medical and junior students Edinburgh 1922 2 Other publications of note are The Blenniidae of South Africa Part 2 of Volume 6 of the Annals of the South African Museum Trustees of the South African Museum 1908 with William Wardlaw Thompson South African Zoology A Text Book for the Use of Students Teachers and Others in South Africa Cape Town and Pretoria 1912 The Freshwater Fishes of South Africa Volume 11 Parts 5 6 of Annals of the South African Museum Trustees of the South African Museum 1913 with William Wardlaw Thompson See also EditCategory Taxa named by John Dow Fisher GilchristReferences Edit a b c John Dow Fisher Gilchrist Neglected Science 2011 Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n C Plug Gilchrist Dr John Dow Fisher S2A3 org za S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b Gilchrist John Dow Fisher 1866 1926 Professor of Zoology University of Cape Town since 1918 Who Was Who Oxford University Press 1 December 2007 doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 u196891 ISBN 978 0 19 954089 1 retrieved 4 May 2019 Gilchrist John 1894 Monism as Connecting Religion and Science PDF in English and German London A and C Black Retrieved 20 February 2019 Haeckel an Huxley Jena 30 Nov 1894 in Georg Ushmann und Ilse Jahn Der Briefwechsel zwischen Thomas Henry Huxley und Ernst Haeckel Ein Beitrag zum Darwin Jahr in Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift der Friedrich Schiller Universitat Jena Jahrgang 9 1960 S 28 Gilchrist John Dow Fisher Archives Catalogue Natural History Museum Retrieved 20 February 2019 a b c van Sittert Lance 1985 The Handmaiden of Industry Marine Science and Fisheries Development in South Africa 1895 1939 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A Great Britain Elsevier Science Ltd 26 4 531 Retrieved 20 February 2019 C Plug Thompson Mr William Wardlaw ichthyology S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science Retrieved 20 February 2019 Gilchrist J D F Thompson W W 1913 The Freshwater Fishes of South Africa Annals of the South African Museum Trustees of the South African Museum II Parts 5 6 Gilchrist J D F Thompson W W 1914 A catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal Annals of the Durban Museum 1 291 Retrieved 21 February 2019 Marine Investigations in South Africa PDF 3rd ed Cape Town W A Richards amp Son 1905 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Gilchrist John Dow Fisher 1905 The development of South African fishes Parts I and II a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Catalogue of the sea fishes recorded from Natal Annals of the Durban Museum 1 255 431 1914 1917 Paralichthodes algoensis Gilchrist 1902 Fishbase Retrieved 20 February 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Gilchrist zoologist amp oldid 1128093913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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