Simon Leather


Simon R Leather Hon.FRES is an entomologist in the UK, he is Professor of Entomology at Harper Adams University, Honorary Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society and is an expert in aphids and applied entomology.

Education and career

Leather had a childhood interest in insects and was educated at King George V School and Ripon Grammar School, he studied BSc Agricultural Zoology at the University of Leeds, graduating in 1977; and a PhD on the ecology of the bird cherry-oat aphid at the University of East Anglia, graduating in 1980. He was a Royal Society postdoctoral fellow in Finland, working on the bird cherry-oat aphid, he moved back to UEA and then worked at the Forestry Commission.
In the early 1990s he moved the Silwood Park campus of Imperial College London to be a lecturer, rising to Reader in Applied Ecology, in 2012 Leather moved to Harper Adams University to be Professor of Entomology.

Academic activities

Leather has done extensive research into integrated pest management of insect pests in agriculture, horticulture and forestry and he was a member of the UK government's Tree Health and Plant Biosecurity Taskforce.
His work on aphids includes the discovery in pea aphids of cannibalistic behaviour.
Leather has also carried out research in urban ecology, looking at the biodiversity value of roundabouts for over 10 years in Bracknell Forest.
He is an advocate of the need for specialist training in entomology and taxonomy and before his move to Harper Adams University was concerned that his then unique Masters courses in Entomology, Integrated Pest Management and Plant Pathology would cease on his eventual retirement. In 2009 he coined the phrase 'institutional vertebratism' to describe the bias of scientific research funding to vertebrate animals, rather than the more numerous invertebrates.
In late 2012 Leather joined Twitter with the account handle @entoprof and in 2013 he started a personal blog Don't forget the roundabouts. He has talked and written about new platforms for non-academic science communication that are available online.

Books