Hugh Lamprey Explained

Hugh Lamprey (2 August 1928 - 10 February 1996) was a British ecologist and bush pilot. After travelling on student expeditions to Iceland, the Himalayas, and the Canary Islands, he served in Palestine and Egypt as a tank officer. Subsequently he obtained a position in Tanganyika, and in the Game Department in 1953, he designed methods of estimating game densities that are still widely used.[1] He applied these to studies of food sources of Tsetse flies (specifically Glossina swynnertoni) in Kenya.[2]

In 1975 he prepared a United Nations Environment Programme report on desertification in the African Sahel region, in which he concluded that "the desert southern boundary has shifted south" by an average of NaNkm (-2,147,483,648miles) in the preceding 17 years. This statement has been instrumental to the belief that desertification is a great threat to the world and especially Africa.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Obituaries.
  2. 10.2307/2336. 2336. A Simultaneous Census of the Potential and Actual Food Sources of the Tsetse Fly Glossina swynnertoni Austen. Lamprey. H. F.. Glasgow. J. P.. Lee-Jones. Frances. Weitz. B.. Journal of Animal Ecology. 1962. 31. 1. 151–156.