John Pickett | |
---|---|
![]() Pickett delivering a keynote talk at the Xth European Congress of Entomology, York, 2014 | |
Born | 21 April 1945 |
Alma mater | |
Awards | Wolf Prize in Agriculture |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Chemistry |
Thesis | Compounds from hydrazine and dinitriles of possible use as blowing agents (1971) |
Website | www |
John Anthony Pickett (born 21 April 1945) is a British chemist who is noted for his work on insect pheromones. [1] Pickett is Professor of Biological Chemistry in the School of Chemistry at Cardiff University. He previously served as the Michael Elliott Distinguished Research Fellow at Rothamsted Research.
Pickett was educated at King Edward VII Grammar School, Coalville. [2] He went on to study at the University of Surrey (formerly Battersea College of Technology) where he received his Bachelor of Science degree in honours chemistry in 1967 and PhD in 1971 under the supervision of Professor John Elvidge [3] for research into compounds from dinitriles and hydrazine. He was awarded Doctor of Science (DSc) in 1993 by the University of Nottingham for his research into chemical ecology.
Following his PhD studies, Pickett began postdoctoral research at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (now the University of Manchester) in the laboratory of Professor Robert N. Haszeldine FRS in 1970, on the synthesis and photochemistry of perfluoroalkylpyridazines. In 1972, he started his career in biological chemistry researching the flavour active chemistry of hops and malt in the Chemistry Department of the Brewing Research Foundation, Redhill.
In 1976 he joined the Insecticides and Fungicides Department (later the Department of Biological Chemistry) at Rothamsted Experimental Station (now Rothamsted Research) as Principal Scientific Officer leading and coordinating studies on semiochemical aspects of insect chemical ecology. He was appointed Head of Department in 1984 and, concurrently in 2007, Scientific Director of the Rothamsted Centre for Sustainable Pest and Disease Management. On his retirement from administrative positions in 2010, Pickett was awarded the first Michael Elliott [4] Distinguished Research Fellow position at Rothamsted and returned to full time research in chemical ecology.
In 2017, he joined the School of Chemistry at Cardiff University as Professor of Biological Chemistry, from where he leads and collaborates research extending from chemical ecology to other aspects of biological chemistry.
Pickett has over 500 peer reviewed scientific publications, and patents. [5] His research specifically investigates the chemical identity of pheromones and other types of chemical signals (semiochemicals). Pickett led the first chemical characterizations, as novel molecular structures, of the sex related pheromones of insect vectors, of plant and human pathogens, including aphids, mosquitoes and sand flies. He leads new research into the biosynthetic routes to pheromones and other semiochemicals for practical exploitation. For sub-Saharan agriculture, semiochemicals are released from companion plants, including into the rhizosphere, for farm use particularly in collaboration with Professor Zeyaur R. Khan at the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology, Kenya. He also contributes to the development of semiochemicals by molecular biological techniques and led the first field experiments expressing an insect pheromone in a crop, wheat, for potential defence against insect pests. [6] Now, he is developing new research objectives for management of vectors of human pathogens particularly haematophagous (blood feeding) insects and the study of volatile chemical signalling from their human and farm animal hosts. [7] With new collaborators in chemistry and insect neurophysiology at Cardiff University, he is investigating novel molecular interactions for reducing emissions, and the capture, of greenhouse gases.
Pickett has had a long association with the University of Nottingham and is an honorary professor (1991) quod reliquum est vitae, with associated lecturing and current collaborative research. Other scientific collaborations and lecturing have resulted in further awards including honorary doctorates and professorships:
The Royal Society elected Pickett to the Fellowship in 1996, [8] and he delivered the Croonian Lecture in 2008 to the Royal Society on Plant and Animal Communication. [9] International academic recognition was in elected as Member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina in 2001 and in 2014 he was elected International Member of the National Academy of Sciences (United States) for his role as "an international driving force in the science and application of chemical ecology and in fostering advances in integrated pest management and agricultural sustainability". [10]
Particularly for his achievements in biological chemistry and its application to agriculture, he was awarded Rank Prize, Nutrition and Crop Husbandry in 1995. He received a CBE from the Queen in 2004 for services to biological chemistry. In 2008, Pickett won jointly, with James H. Tumlinson (Penn State University), and W. Joe Lewis (University of Georgia, Tifton) the Wolf Prize in Agriculture, "for their remarkable discoveries of mechanisms governing plant-insect and plant-plant interactions, their scientific contributions on chemical ecology have fostered the development of integrated pest management and significantly advanced agricultural". [11] As laureate of the Wolf Prize he presented at and chaired the Agriculture and Food Summit of the Word Laureates 3rd Forum, 2020.
For specific chemistry awards, for example, he was awarded the International Society of Chemical Ecology Medal 2002, [12] the Bruker Award (NMR) and Plenary Lecture given at the Phytochemical Society Europe meeting, Copenhagen, 2016 and the Sterling B. Hendricks Memorial Lectureship given at 254th American Chemical Society National Meeting, 2017. Pickett is a member/fellow of multiple other global scientific societies including the Royal Society of Chemistry for over 50 years, the Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Forestry, 2005 and the Chemical Society of Ethiopia 2010. He was elected President of the International Society of Chemical Ecology in 1995 and of the Royal Entomological Society in 2014. Reflecting his recent appointment to Cardiff University [13] and his growing chemical research for regional development of agriculture and animal husbandry, he was elected Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales in 2020. [14]
He married Ulla Birgitta Skålèn in 1970, they have a son and a daughter.[ citation needed ]
Rothamsted Research, previously known as the Rothamsted Experimental Station and then the Institute of Arable Crops Research, is one of the oldest agricultural research institutions in the world, having been founded in 1843. It is located at Harpenden in the English county of Hertfordshire and is a registered charity under English law.
Chemical ecology is a vast and interdisciplinary field utilizing biochemistry, biology, ecology, and organic chemistry for explaining observed interactions of living things and their environment through chemical compounds. Early examples of the field trace back to experiments with the same plant genus in different environments, interaction of plants and butterflies, and the behavioral effect of catnip. Chemical ecologists seek to identify the specific molecules that function as signals mediating community or ecosystem processes and to understand the evolution of these signals. The chemicals behind such roles are typically small, readily-diffusible organic molecules that act over various distances that are dependent on the environment but can also include larger molecules and small peptides.
A semiochemical, from the Greek σημεῖον (semeion), meaning "signal", is a chemical substance or mixture released by an organism that affects the behaviors of other individuals. Semiochemical communication can be divided into two broad classes: communication between individuals of the same species (intraspecific) or communication between different species (interspecific).
Push–pull technology is an intercropping strategy for controlling agricultural pests by using repellent "push" plants and trap "pull" plants. For example, cereal crops like maize or sorghum are often infested by stem borers. Grasses planted around the perimeter of the crop attract and trap the pests, whereas other plants, like Desmodium, planted between the rows of maize, repel the pests and control the parasitic plant Striga. Push–pull technology was developed at the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) in Kenya in collaboration with Rothamsted Research, UK. and national partners. This technology has been taught to smallholder farmers through collaborations with universities, NGOs and national research organizations.
Atta-ur-Rahman, is a Pakistani organic chemist and is currently serving as Professor Emeritus at the International Center for Chemical and Biological Sciences at the University of Karachi and as Chairman of PM Task Force on Science and Technology. He has twice served as the President of Pakistan Academy of Sciences. He was the Federal Minister of Science and Technology (2000-2002), Federal Minister of Education (2002) and Chairman Higher Education Commission with status of Federal Minister (2002-2008) He is also the President of the Network of Academies of Sciences in Countries of the Organisation of Islamic Countries (NASIC). After returning to Pakistan from Cambridge after completing his tenure as Fellow of Kings College, Cambridge University, he contributed to the development of the International Center for Chemical and Biological Sciences at the University of Karachi, and transforming the landscape of higher education, science and technology of Pakistan. He is Fellow of Royal Society (London), Life Fellow of Kings College, Cambridge University, UK, Academician Chinese Academy of Sciences and Professor Emeritus at University of Karachi.
Agenor Mafra-Neto is a chemical ecology researcher and entrepreneur in the entomological field of insect chemical ecology. He is the CEO of ISCA Technologies, a company specializing in the development semiochemical solutions for pest management, robotic smart traps and nanosensors. Dr Mafra-Neto is the CEO and Director of Research and Development at ISCA Technologies, Inc. which he founded in 1996 in Riverside, California. ISCA Tecnologias, Ltda was founded in Brazil in 1997.
Graham John Hutchings is a British chemist, Professor for Research at Cardiff University.
Bill S. Hansson is a Swedish neuroethologist. From June 2014 until June 2020, he was vice president of the Max Planck Society.
David G. Heckel is an American entomologist.
Zeyaur R. Khan is a professor and the principal scientist at International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (icipe). He has dedicated his 30-year career as an international agricultural scientist to advancing the science and practice of agriculture by studying and applying chemical ecology, behavior, plant-plant and insect-plant interactions to improve farm productivity to combat poverty and food insecurity in Africa. He is responsible for the discovery and wide scale implementation of a pro-poor scientific innovation for enhancing food security and environmental sustainability in Africa]. This was achieved through the biologically-based IPM technology called "Push-Pull", developed for small-holder cereal-livestock African farmers. Prof. Khan’s work is an example demonstrating that creativity and innovation in science can provide practical solutions for the real problems of thousands of small-holder poor farmers and promote their food security and sustainable livelihoods.
Hugh David Loxdale is an entomologist. He was professor of ecology at the Institute of Ecology, University of Jena from 2009 to 2010, president of the Royal Entomological Society from 2004 to 2006, and honorary visiting professor at the School of Biosciences, Cardiff University. Loxdale works on the population biology, ecology, and genetics of insects, especially aphids and their wasp parasitoids.
Lionel Roy Taylor was a British ecologist, president of the British Ecological Society 1984/85, and editor of the Journal of Animal Ecology.
James Henderson Naismith is a Scot, Professor of Structural Biology and since autumn of 2023 the Head of the Mathematical, Physical, and Life Science Division (MPLS) Division at the University of Oxford. He was the inaugural Director of the Rosalind Franklin Institute and Director of the Research Complex at Harwell. He previously served as Bishop Wardlaw Professor of Chemical Biology at the University of St Andrews. He was a member of Council of the Royal Society (2021-2022). He is also currently the Vice-Chair of Council of the European X-ray Free Electron Laser and Vice-President (non-clinical) of The Academy of Medical Sciences.
Sir Harry Work Melville, was a British chemist, academic, and academic administrator, who specialised in polymer research. He spent his early career in academia as a lecturer and researcher, before moving into administration as a civil servant and university college head.
Walter Soares Leal is a Brazilian biochemist and entomologist who is known for identifying pheromones and mosquito attractants, and elucidating a mechanism of action of the insect repellent DEET.
Linda Mary Field is a British scientist noted for her work on the insecticide mode of action and resistance.
John Philip Simons is a British physical chemist known for his research in photochemistry and photophysics, molecular reaction dynamics and the spectroscopy of biological molecules. He was professor of physical chemistry at the University of Nottingham (1981–93) and Dr. Lee's Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford (1993–99).
Mahmoud Hafith was a pioneering Egyptian scientist in entomology and former president of the Egyptian Scientific Academy and the Arabic Language Academy in Cairo. He was the first Egyptian to obtain a doctorate in entomology, and the second Egyptian to combine the presidency of the Arabic Language Academy and the Academic of sciences, after the Dean of Arabic Literature, Taha Hussein. He died one week after the fire at the Egyptian Scientific Institute, following protests in Cairo.
Chemical communication in insects is social signalling between insects of the same or different species, using chemicals. These chemicals may be volatile, to be detected at a distance by other insects' sense of smell, or non-volatile, to be detected on an insect's cuticle by other insects' sense of taste. Many of these chemicals are pheromones, acting like hormones outside the body.
Baldwyn Torto is a Ghanaian scientist. He is a chemical ecologist, and a principal scientist at the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE). He also doubles as an extraordinary professor and the head of Behavioural and Chemical Ecology Unit, Department of Zoology and Entomology at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. He is a fellow of the Entomological Society of America, a fellow of the African Academy of Sciences, and a member of the American Chemical Society.
"All text published under the heading 'Biography' on Fellow profile pages is available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License." -- "Royal Society Terms, conditions and policies". Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 9 March 2016.{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)