C. H. Gimingham
Charles Henry Gimingham was a British botanist at the University of Aberdeen, patron of the Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management, former president of the British Ecological Society, and one of the leading researchers of heathlands and heathers.
Early life and education
Gimingham was the son of Conrad Theodore Gimingham, of Harpenden, Hertfordshire, and Muriel Elizabeth. He was named after his grandfather, another Charles Henry Gimingham, an eminent British entomologist who was President of the Association of Applied Biologists.Gimingham was educated at Gresham's School, Holt, and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he was an open Scholar and graduated BA in 1944, then at Aberdeen University, graduating Doctor of Philosophy.
Career
Gimingham began his career as a Research Assistant, first at Imperial College, London from 1944–1945, then at the University of Aberdeen from 1946–1948. He continued his academic career in Aberdeen, becoming a lecturer in 1948, a senior lecturer in 1961, a Reader in Botany in 1964, a Professor in 1969, and a Regius Professor in 1981, a post he held until 1988.He was also a member of several governing bodies and advisory boards related to his field, including the Countryside Commission for Scotland, the Board of Management of the Hill Farming Research Organisation, the Council of Management of the Macaulay Institute for Soil Research, the Governing Body of the Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, the Advisory Board of Robert Gordon University Heritage Unit, the Scientific Advisory Committee of Scottish Natural Heritage, the Scientific Advisory Panel of RSK Environment Ltd, and the Mar Lodge Estate Management Committee of National Trust for Scotland. He was also the convenor of the English Nature Heathlands Committee from 1981 to 1995.
He was also a member of the Governing Body of Aberdeen College of Education, and served as editor of the Outline Studies in Ecology series, and on the editorial board of the Botanical Journal of Scotland.
Honours
- 1938-1940: President of the Association of Applied Biologists
- 1961: Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- 1967: Fellow of the Institute of Biology
- 1974: Member of the Order of the British Empire
- 1977: ScD degree, Cambridge University
- 1982–1984: President of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh
- 1986: President of the British Ecological Society
- 1988: Emeritus Professor, University of Aberdeen
- 1990: Officer of the Order of the British Empire
- 2000: Patron of the
- 2004: Honorary British Fellow,
- 2004: President of the Heather Trust
- 2004: Honorary Member of the British Ecological Society
Family
Books
- Ecology of Heathlands
- An Introduction to Heathland Ecology
- Methods for the Measurement of the Primary Production of Grassland
- The Lowland Heathland Management Handbook
- Ecology, Conservation and Land Use of the Cairngorms
Publications
- A Note on Water-Table, Sand Movement and Plant Distribution in a North African Oasis
- Tussock Formation in Ammophila arenaria
- The Use of Life Form and Growth Form in the Analysis of Community Structure as Illustrated by a Comparison of Two Dune Communities
- Investigation of Correlations between Growth Form and Habitat in Mosses
- Development of a Soil Microflora in Relation to Plant Succession on Sand- Dunes, Including the Rhizosphere Flora Associated with Colonizing Species
- A Note on the Behaviour of Ammophila arenaria Link. in relation to sand-dune formation
- Ecological Studies on Growth-Form in Bryophytes: I. Correlations Between Growth-Form and Habitat
- Biological Flora of the British Isles: Calluna vulgaris
- Calluna Salisb.
- North European Heath Communities: A Network of Variation
- The Effects of Fire on Regeneration of Calluna Vulgaris
- Litter Production by Calluna Vulgaris Hull
- The Monoculture of Heather Calluna Vulgaris and its effects on Hill Grazings
- Vegetative Regeneration of Calluna Vulgaris after Fire
- Interpretation of a Vegetational Mosaic on Limestone in the Island of Gotland
- Quantitative Community Analysis and Bryophyte Ecology on Signy Island
- The Description and Interpretation of Cyclical Processes in a Heath Community: I. Vegetational Change in Relation to the Calluna Cycle
- The Morphology of Vegetative Regeneration in Calluna vulgaris
- The Loch of Strathbeg
- Some Effects of Fire and Grazing on Heath Vegetation
- Conservation: European Heathlands
- The Effects of Planting Technique on the Growth of Ammophila arenaria
- Ecological Effects of Heather Burning: I. Water Infiltration, Moisture Retention and Porosity of Surface Soil
- Germination and Establishment of Seedlings in Different Phases of the Calluna Life-Cycle in a Scottish Heathland
- Studies on Fire in Scottish Heathland Communities: I. Fire Characteristics
- Studies on Fire in Scottish Heathland Communities II. Post-Fire Vegetation Development
- Studies on Fire in Scottish Heathland Communities: III. Vital Attributes of the Species
- The Use of Thermocolour Pyrometers in the Study of Heath Fire Behaviour
- Ecological Effects of Heather Burning: II Effects on Seed Germination and Vegetative Regeneration
- Vegetation, Fire and Herbivore Interactions in Heathland
- Harnessing the Winds of Change: Heathland Ecology in Retrospect and Prospect: Presidential Address to the British Ecological Society, December 1986
- Experimental Investigation of Bryophyte Interactions on a Dry Heathland
- A Model of Calluna Population-Dynamics - the Effects of Varying Seed and Vegetative Regeneration
- Coastal Sand Dunes, proceedings of the Symposium organised by the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Succession from Heather Moorland to Birch Woodland: I Experimental Alteration of Specific Environmental Conditions in the Field
- Succession from Heather Moorland to Birch Woodland: II Growth and Competition Between Vaccinium Myrtillus, Deschampsia Flexuosa and Agrostis Capillaris
- The Effect of Heather Beetle Lochmaea Suturalis on Vegetation in a Wet Heath in NE Scotland
- Succession from Heather Moorland to Birch Woodland: III Seed Availability, Germination and Early Growth
- Seed-Shedding in a Scottish Heath Community
- An Overview of Scottish Habitats