Education
He was educated at Gravesend Grammar School and Imperial College London Bachelor of Science in biology, Master of Science botany, then worked for his Doctor of Philosophy degree in zoology studies at Rothamsted Experimental Station.
entomologist university professor Zoologist
He was educated at Gravesend Grammar School and Imperial College London Bachelor of Science in biology, Master of Science botany, then worked for his Doctor of Philosophy degree in zoology studies at Rothamsted Experimental Station.
Sir Richard became interested in natural history at an early age, and developed his skills on the family dairy farm in Kent. He had his first research articles about insects published by the age of 16. He returned to Imperial as a Research Assistant and Lecturer, and in 1967 became Head of the Department of Zoology and Applied Entomology, and Director of Imperial College"s Field Station at Silwood Park.
He later became Dean of Science and Chair of the Division of Life Sciences.
Sir Richard"s research at Imperial concentrated on insect communities and population dynamics. His 1966 book Ecological Methods described techniques available for the study of populations and ecosystems, including population estimates with different sampling techniques.
In 1979, he took up the Linacre Chair of Zoology in the University of Oxford, and was elected a Fellow of Merton College. In 1989, he moved from being Head of the Department of Zoology to take up the Vice-Chancellorship of the University, from which position he set up a working party that would recommend the reform of the university"s governance.
Having stepped down from that position in 1993, he continued to research, teach and write, and in 2003 published The Story of Life, a book based on the first-year undergraduate lectures he gave at Oxford.
Sir Richard Southwood served as Chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution from 1981 to 1985, having been first appointed to the Commission in 1974. Under his chairmanship, the 1983 report Lead in the Environment aroused public concern about lead pollution. He was Chairman of the National Radiological Protection Board from 1985 until 1994, and also chaired the Working Party on Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (Biosystems Engineering ) set up by the British Government in 1988.
In 1993-1994 he was the first head of the Department of Environmental Sciences and Policy at the Central European University in Budapest.
A portrait of Sir Richard Southwood hangs at Merton College, Oxford.
Royal Society; Pontifical Academy of Sciences. National Academy of Sciences]
Southwood was also a contributing member of the Oxford Round Table, an interdisciplinary forum for the discussion of contemporary issues.