Brian Huntley

Last updated

Brian John Huntley
Brian Huntley.png
Born1944 (age 7980) [1]
Durban, South Africa [1] [2]
Education University of Natal (Bachelor of Science degree, Master of Science degree) [2]
Occupations
Organizations
Known forWas a conservation scientist from South Africa. Expanded the National Botanical Institute into South African National Biodiversity Institute, an authoritative repository on South African flora and fauna. Was a consultant for agencies and international organizations, including the United Nations, with regard to nature conservation. Took part in multiple conservation projects around Africa.
TitleEmeritus Professor at the University of Cape Town [3]
AwardsEdward T. La Roe III Memorial Award [5]

Brian John Huntley (born 1944) is a retired professor and conservation scientist from South Africa, best known for developing and transforming African national parks. He was involved in expanding the National Botanical Institute (later SANBI) to become an authoritative repository on South African flora and fauna. As an independent expert, he was a consultant for agencies and international organizations, including the United Nations, with regard to nature conservation. He himself took part in multiple conservation projects around Africa.

Contents

Early life, education and first expedition

Huntley was born in Durban, South Africa, in 1944. His parents and grandparents encouraged the boy's interest in natural history. [1] [2] It may have been in his blood; in 1850 his great-great grandfather introduced nurseryman and seedsman businesses to South African people, along with getting first trees to the Transvaal gold fields workers by sending oxwagon loads northwards from Pietermaritzburg. [6] As a teenager, Huntley discovered the term ecology and used it to define his career path. He enjoyed investigating the landscape of Natal, and later, inspired by Ian Garland, Roddy Ward and others, he kept exploring Ngoye, Mkuzi, St Lucia, and parts of Zululand during his schooldays. [6]

To get his Bachelor of Science degree, Huntley spent a year at the University of Pretoria, and then earned his Master of Science degree at the University of Natal. In 1965–1966, he took part in the Biological-Geological Expedition to the Prince Edward Islands – the first ever expedition to the area – as a plant ecologist. The expedition's findings were used for his MSc thesis and were published in the expedition's monograph. [2] [6]

Career

After graduation, Huntley's first job—with the Transvaal Division of Nature Conservation—took him to the bushveld of the Waterberg and beyond the Soutpansberg range. [1] [2] [6]

Work in Angola and South Africa (1970–1989)

In 1970, Huntley visited Angola for the first time. [7] A year later, he moved there with his wife, accepting an offer to be a government ecologist. He spent four years exploring the country, developing new national parks, and making recommendations for nature conservation. [2] In August 1975, while the country was on the verge of the Civil War, the Huntleys fled the country as refugees (with around 10,000 others) and returned to South Africa. [7]

The family settled in Pretoria, where Huntley got a job as Scientific Coordinator for the Savanna Ecosystem Project, a multidisciplinary study initiated by the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR). This research provided a research model used in multiple studies of South African landscapes. Huntley worked as Scientific Coordinator for 14 years. [2]

National Botanical Institute and South African National Biodiversity Institute

In 1990, the National Botanical Institute at Kirstenbosch was established, and Huntley was chosen as its first chief executive officer. [2]

In 2004, Huntley signed South Africa's new Biodiversity Act, turning the National Botanical Institute into the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI), the largest and most active South African institution in regard to biodiversity. The new institute became a nationwide scientific repository and bore responsibility for biodiversity research, implementation, and education across the country. [8]

Under Huntley's leadership, SANBI launched four major bio-regional programmes and one hundred school-based environmental projects. [2]

Huntley left his position at SANBI in 2007. [2]

Later positions

After leaving SANBI in 2007, Huntley served as a senior policy adviser to the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism for two years, retiring in 2009. [2]

Huntley's opinion was often sought by international organizations such as the UNEP, the UNDP, and UNESCO. [7] In later years, Huntley became an independent consultant, taking part in conservation projects in multiple African countries, working with several United Nations agencies, and reviewing conservation projects all around the world. [1]

Other positions, scientific and academic contribution

Over the years, Huntley became a member of the Academy of Science of South Africa; [4] Professor Emeritus at the University of Cape Town; and a research associate at the Centre for Invasion Biology Stellenbosch University. [3]

After his return to South Africa in 1975, Huntley started and successfully finished three interdisciplinary cooperative research projects: the Savanna Ecosystem Project (1975–1990), the Fynbos Biome Project (1977–1990), and the Southern African Botanical Diversity Network (SABONET) (1994–2002). [1]

Huntley has always been fond of Lusophone Africa, and worked closely with conservation activities in Angola and Mozambique. [3] His participation in international panels and committees, such as the International Union of Biological Sciences (IUBS) and Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI) were of huge advantage in supporting African institutions and initiatives at a global level. [3] He also took part in a number of international panels and committees, including the Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE), International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel of the Global Environment Facility (GEF–STAP). [1]

During his career, Huntley frequently published on ecological and environmental conservation issues. [3]

Personal life

During his career, Huntley traveled extensively. He visited Sub-Antarctic tundra and Congo rainforests, [3] the forests of Zululand, the savannas of northern South Africa, the national parks of Angola, and more. [1] [2] In general, he visited over 50 countries, learning to speak Portuguese and Afrikaans in addition to English. [3]

In retirement, Huntley and his wife settled in a small village near the southernmost tip of Africa, between the Kogelberg Mountains and the sea. [3]

Awards

Huntley received the Edward T. La Roe III Memorial Award in 2011. It was given to him for his leadership skills and ability to protect biodiversity and manage ecosystems in South Africa and Southern Africa. [5]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden</span> Botanical garden at the foot of Table Mountain in Cape Town

Kirstenbosch is an important botanical garden nestled at the eastern foot of Table Mountain in Cape Town. The garden is one of 10 National Botanical Gardens covering five of South Africa's six different biomes and administered by the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI). Prior to 1 September 2004, the institute was known as the National Botanical Institute.

Wendy Foden is a conservation biologist, best known for her work on climate change impacts on biodiversity.

<i>Atalaya</i> (plant) Genus of plants

Atalaya is a genus of eighteen species of trees and shrubs of the plant family Sapindaceae. As of 2013 fourteen species grow naturally in Australia and in neighbouring New Guinea only one endemic species is known to science. Three species are known growing naturally in southern Africa, including two species endemic to South Africa and one species in South Africa, Eswatini and Mozambique.

<i>Protea welwitschii</i> Species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae

Protea welwitschii is a species of shrub or small tree which belongs to the genus Protea, and which occurs in bushveld and different types of grassland.

Robert Harold Compton was a South African botanist. The Compton Herbarium at Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, which he founded in Cape Town in 1939, was named in his honour.

<i>Senecio barbertonicus</i> Species of shrub

Senecio barbertonicus, the Barberton groundsel or succulent bush senecio, is an evergreen succulent shrub of the family Asteraceae and genus Senecio, native to Southern Africa, named after one of its native localities Barberton and is now also being cultivated elsewhere for its drought resistance, clusters of sweetly scented, golden-yellow, tufted flower heads in winter and attractiveness to butterflies, the painted lady butterfly in particular.

Abraham Erasmus van Wyk, also known as Braam van Wyk is a South African plant taxonomist. He has been responsible for the training of a significant percentage of the active plant taxonomists in South Africa and has also produced the first electronic application (app) for the identification of trees in southern Africa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Miriam Phoebe de Vos</span> South African botanist (b.1912 d.2005)

Miriam Phoebe de Vos was a leading South African botanist and academic. She was an expert on bulbous plants, especially Romulea. She also had a special interest in Moraea and Clivia.

Johann Reinder Erlers Lutjeharms, was a leading South African marine scientist and an authority in the oceanography of the Agulhas Current, who authored a definitive work on the subject, The Agulhas Current. His main field of investigation was the large-scale circulation patterns of the oceans adjacent to southern Africa and their influence on weather and climate, and he participated in 17 research cruises and was responsible for a further 48 projects undertaken on such cruises.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marie Prins</span> South African botanist with special interest in southern African trees

Marie Prins is a South African botanist.

The South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) is an organisation tasked with research and dissemination of information on biodiversity, and legally mandated to contribute to the management of the country's biodiversity resources.

The Cape Winelands Biosphere Reserve is located in the Western Cape Province of South Africa approximately 40 km east of Cape Town. The Biosphere Reserve extends from the Kogelberg Biosphere Reserve in the south, northwards along the Cape Fold Belt Mountain Chain and the adjoining valleys constituting the Cape Winelands. The Biosphere Reserve incorporates key portions of the registered Cape Floral Region Protected Areas World Heritage Site. The Reserve was designated in 2007.

Graham Dugald Duncan(born 1959) is a South African botanist and specialist bulb horticulturalist at the Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, Cape Town, South Africa.

<i>African Biodiversity & Conservation</i> South African peer-reviewed open access scientific journal

African Biodiversity & Conservation, formerly known as Bothalia is a South African peer-reviewed open access scientific journal covering the fields of botany, zoology and biodiversity, produced by the South African National Biodiversity Institute. According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2017 impact factor of 0.52.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marine biodiversity of South Africa</span> Variety of living organisms that live in the seas off the coast of South Africa

The Marine biodiversity of South Africa is the variety of living organisms that live in the seas off the coast of South Africa. It includes genetic, species and ecosystems biodiversity in a range of habitats spread over a range of ecologically varied regions, influenced by the geomorphology of the seabed and circulation of major and local water masses, which distribute both living organisms and nutrients in complex and time-variable patterns.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SeaKeys</span> Collaborative marine biodiversity project in South Africa

SeaKeys is a large collaborative marine biodiversity project funded through the Foundational Biodiversity Information Program in South Africa. The purpose of the project is to collect and distribute genetic, species and ecosystem information relating to marine biodiversity in southern Africa, which may be used to support informed decision-making about the marine environment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Conservation in Angola</span>

Conservation in Angola is centered around the protection of the country's biodiversity and natural heritage. While Angola contains a remarkably diverse array of ecosystems and species, conservation has not been a priority for most of its history. Three decades of intense conflict during the Angolan Civil War had a catastrophic effect on the nation's environment, but since the end of the war in 2002, both the Angolan government and non-state actors have gradually established programs to protect the ecological well-being of the country. However, major structural issues and lack of political will have so far kept intervention limited, and many habitats and species remain deeply threatened.

<i>Protea convexa</i> Species of flowering plant in the family Proteaceae

Protea convexa, also known as large-leaf sugarbush, is a rare flowering shrub in the genus Protea of the family Proteaceae, which is endemic to the southwestern Cape Region of South Africa.

The Biodiversity of South Africa is the variety of living organisms within the boundaries of South Africa and its exclusive economic zone. South Africa is a region of high biodiversity in the terrestrial and marine realms. The country is ranked sixth out of the world's seventeen megadiverse countries, and is rated among the top 10 for plant species diversity and third for marine endemism.

<i>Hewittia malabarica</i> Species of flowering plant

Hewittia malabarica is a flowering plant in the monotypic genus HewittiaWight & Arn., belonging to the family Convolvulaceae and widespread throughout tropical Africa, Asia, and Polynesia. It is a climbing or prostrate perennial herb with slender stems and flowers that are pale yellow, cream, or white with a purple center, and large leaves that can be used as a cooked vegetable or used in folk medicine with the roots. The stems can be used to make ropes.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Huntley 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 JSTOR; Jul 11, 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ebdglo.com; Jan 1, 2019.
  4. 1 2 University of Cape Town 2020.
  5. 1 2 Centre of Excellence; Dec 1, 2011.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Sabonet News; Dec 22, 1997, p. 82.
  7. 1 2 3 angolafieldgroup.com; Dec 9, 2011.
  8. Cherry 2005.

Literature cited

Wenard Institute Logo.png This article is based on the text donated by the Wenard Institute under CC-BY-4.0 license.