Andrew Rodger Waterston


Dr Andrew Rodger Waterston FRSE FRES was a Scottish zoologist, specialising in malacology and entomology. He was interested in the insect fauna of the Middle East and in the fauna of the Outer Hebrides. He was generally known as Rodger Waterston.

Early life and pre war career

Rodger Waterston was born in the manse on 30 March 1912 in Ollaberry on mainland Shetland, where his father, the entomologist James Waterson was a minister in the United Free Church at the time.
When his father was appointed as an entomologist at the Imperial Bureau of Entomology in 1917 the family moved to London. In London, Rodger attended St Paul's School and through his father he came to know many of the respected entomologists of that time and developed his own interest in entomology and developed the field skills which were to serve him in his career. He returned to Scotland where he studied Zoology at the University of Edinburgh, graduating with a BSc First Class Honours degree in 1934, his honours paper was "On some points in the anatomy, histology and relationships of a new British slug ", about the greenhouse alien Limax nyctelius. He participated in the Edinburgh University Biological Society expedition to survey and record the fauna and flora of Barra in 1935. In 1938 he married Marie Elizabeth Campbell, who he had studied alongside. They had a daughter, Susan.
In 1935 he took a position as an Assistant Keeper of the invertebrate collections at the Royal Museum of Scotland, giving up his postgraduate studies. He was a specialist in entomology but his interests and expertise were wider and he had already published papers on molluscs and other invertebrates. Although he became more specialised as an entomologist as his career progressed he maintained a broader range of insects and continued to publish papers on other zoological groups. In 1938, he became the Conchological Society's Recorder for non-marine Mollusca, although his efforts to update the Society's records were interrupted by his war service.

Second World War and the Middle East

When the Second World War broke out in 1939 he was seconded to the Ministry of War Transport as District Transport Officer for Clydeside, based in Paisley where he was able to spend some of his spare time examining and rearranging the important entomological collection left to the Paisley Museum by the pioneering Scottish entomologist Morris Young. In 1942 he joined the Royal Scots with which he served for a year before being transferred to the Colonial Office where he was appointed to the Middle East Supply Centre in Cairo, his role there was Locust Officer in the Middle East Anti-Locust Unit and took charge of the Palestine Anti-Locust Unit in Saudi Arabia. When the war ended Waterston remained with the Colonial Office and travelled widely in the Middle East, northern Africa and India constructing a framework for the monitoring and control of the locust. In 1947 he was appointed as Chief Locust Officer with responsibility for locust monitoring and control in the Middle East Ethiopia, and Eritrea. He was Entomological Advisor to the British Middle East Office and Attaché for Scientific Affairs at the British Embassies in Cairo and Beirut. Waterston conducted research in the Middle East but he was mainly working to establish technical cooperation and coordination for controlling the desert locust under challenging international conditions. He was awarded the Order of the British Empire in recognition of this work in 1952.

Later Career and Retirement

He returned to Scotland in 1952, working from the Royal Scottish Museum where he was appointed Keeper of Natural History in 1958, retiring from that post in 1973, and he was retained as an Emeritus Researcher until 1978. Under Waterstone the museum's collections were increased and developed, with Waterston often using his contacts in the Middle East to add to the collections. Prior to the war his specialism was in the Hemiptera and Hymenoptera but in response to the bequest of the collection of Kenneth Morton he switched to Neuroptera and Odonata, publishing papers on the dragonflies of the Middle East, especially after he retired. He also published important papers on the fauna and ecology of the Outer Hebrides, an interest that was sparked on the 1935 Expedition.
In 1946 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Alexander Charles Stephen, Sir William Wright Smith, James Ritchie and D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson. In 1982, he was awarded the Society's Neill Prize Medal in recognition of his contribution to the natural history of the Hebrides and to Scottish entomology. Waterston co-edited the "Scottish Naturalist" from just before the war and again from 1983, where he set editorial standards, and he advised Curwen Press and then Harley Books, helping them to achieve exceptional standards in their entomological publications. He was one of the founders of the Scottish Natural History Library, and was instrumental in gaining the library of the Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh and the natural history holdings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for the SNHL. He was also, like his father, a curator at the Department of Entomology of the British Museum.

Family

In 1938 he married Marie Elizabeth Campbell.

Publications

The following is a list of the publications authored or co-authored by A. Rodger Waterston.