Boris Uvarov Explained

Boris Uvarov
Birth Name:Boris Petrovitch Uvarov
Birth Date:1886 11, df=yes[1]
Death Place:London
Alma Mater:Saint Petersburg State University
Awards:Fellow of the Royal Society (1950)[2]
Spouse:Anna Fedorovna Fedorova (Prodaniuk)
Children:Evgenii (1910-1993)

Sir Boris Petrovitch Uvarov (3 November 1886[1] – 18 March 1970) was a Russian-British entomologist best known for his work on the biology and ecology of locusts.[2] He has been called the father of acridology.

Biography

Boris Petrovitch Uvarov was born in Ural'sk, in the Russian Empire (now Oral, Kazakhstan[3]), the youngest of three sons of Pyotr P. Uvarov, a state bank employee, and his wife, Aleksandra. His interest in natural history was aided in young life by his father's gift of six volumes of Brehm's Tierleben. He went to a school in Uralsk from 1895 to 1902 where he was encouraged by S. M. Zhuravlev. He then studied briefly at the School of Mining at Ekaterinoslav (now Dnepropetrovsk) but transferred in 1906 to study biology in the Saint Petersburg State University, graduating in 1910. He was influenced by the teachings of Shimkevitch, Wagner, and Palladin but enjoyed most the meetings of the Russian Entomological Society where he was influenced by, among others, D. N. Borodi, and A. A. Lyubishev. His first job after graduating was as an entomologist at the Murgab Crown Cotton Estate (Transcaucasia) but he moved to St Petersburg in 1911. He then worked at Stavropol on Locusta migratoria becoming director of the entomological bureau at the age of 23 and helped put locust control on a sound scientific basis. From 1915 he worked in Tiflis, which after the Russian revolution of 1917 had become the capital of the short-lived Democratic Republic of Georgia. With the rise of Georgian nationalism he found himself selling pies in the marketplace to supplement income. A chance meeting with a British army medical entomologist Patrick A. Buxton in Georgia who in turn contacted Guy A.K. Marshal in London led in 1920 to an invitation to join the Imperial Institute of Entomology. He moved to London along with his wife and son and would not visit Russia again until 1968. He became a naturalized British citizen in 1943.[4] [5]

Starting in 1945, Dr. Uvarov and his small team received official designation as the Anti-Locust Research Centre, London. During the next fourteen years, the Centre developed into the foremost laboratory in the world for research on locusts. His assistants included the sisters Zena and Nadia Waloff. The organization published profusely, collaborated with a wide range of scientists from around the world. He influenced the FAO to take an interest in the coordination of monitoring and research towards prediction and control of locusts. He personally published nearly 430 papers and made important contributions in the areas of taxonomy, population biology and locust control.

Uvarov's principal contribution was the phase theory of locusts. He identified the solitary and migratory phases and provided an ecological theory on what triggered their transformation. He suggested that environmental conditions could be controlled to prevent the transformation into the migratory phase. Throughout his career he and his team investigated the proximate and ultimate triggers for the phase transition. These included endocrinological, behavioural, and genetic studies.

Honours

Uvarov was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1950,[2] his nomination reads:

Personal life

Uvarov's oldest brother Nikolai was sentenced to death in 1920. Nikolai's daughter Olga Uvarov (1910–2001) was brought from Russia to London in 1923 with the help of the International Red Cross.[1]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Fedotova . Anastasia . Kouprianov . Alexei . 2016 . Archival research reveals the true date of birth of the father of locust phase theory, Sir Boris Uvarov, FRS . Euroasian Entomological Journal . 15 . 4 . 321–327 . 1 December 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20161220031213/http://www.eco.nsc.ru/EEJ_contents/15/201615405.pdf . 20 December 2016 . dmy-all .
  2. Web site: Uvarov, Sir Boris Petrovich . . 10 April 2014.
  3. Book: Lockwood, Jeffrey A. . Locust: The Devastating Rise and Mysterious Disappearance of the Insect That Shaped the American Frontier . 139 . 2004 . Basic Books . 10 April 2014. 9780786738878 .
  4. 10.1146/annurev.en.35.010190.000245. Sir Boris Uvarov (1889-1970): The Father of Acridology. Annual Review of Entomology. 35. 1–26. 1990. Waloff. N.. Popov. G. B.. 85928439 .
  5. Web site: Mentions of Sir Boris Uvarov in the London Gazette . Baker . Ed. 2018-11-28 .