Heather Simpson | |
Other Names: | Heather Vivian Simpson |
Thesis1 Title: | Water and electrolyte transfers in ruminants |
Thesis1 Url: | https://hdl.handle.net/10179/3762 |
Thesis1 Year: | 1969 |
Heather Vivian Simpson is a New Zealand animal physiologist, and is professor emerita at Massey University, specialising in the biology of gastrointestinal parasites of sheep.
Simpson earned a Bachelor of Science with Honours at the University of Queensland in Australia.[1] Simpson then joined Massey University in New Zealand as a part-time demonstrator, while also completing her PhD. Her dissertation was titled Water and electrolyte transfers in ruminants, and was finished in 1969, and supervised by Donald Titchen, Maurice Lancaster and Campbell Reid.[2] Simpson joined the faculty at Massey in 1976, initially part-time as she was raising two children. She was appointed senior lecturer by 1994, and associate professor in 2000, rising to full professor, as Professor of Animal Physiology, in 2007.[3]
During her time at Massey, Simpson taught nearly every veterinary student to graduate in New Zealand, and was patron of the Veterinary Students Association. She published more than 60 papers and supervised 21 postgraduate students. Simpson's research focused on agriculturally important gastrointestinal parasites of sheep, such as Teladorsagia spp. and Haemonchus contortus, which she found interesting because of "the relationship between two organisms and the struggle between them".
When Simpson retired in 2015, she was the longest-serving academic at Massey, having at that point spent fifty years at the university, forty-five of them on staff. The previous longest-serving academic was Sylvia Rumball. Simpson retained an honorary position at AgResearch, and continued to supervise her remaining doctoral students after her retirement.
Simpson is married to Dr Bruce Simpson. Her hobbies include growing orchids, and collecting shells and stamps.