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-. .
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
?
57343
MIMORANDUM
0
?
SENATE
?
From ?
ACADEMIC PLANNING COMMITTEE
Sub joct
?
GRADUATE STUDIES - MASTER
OF PEST
?
Date ?
MARCH 15, 1973
MOTION:
?
?
"That Senate approve, and recommend approval to
the Board of Governors, the new graduate program,
as set forth in
S.73-43,
as follows:
1.
The Master of Pest Management program, including
the following new courses:
BiSc 601-3 - Urban and industrial pest management
BISc 602-3 - Forest, wildiand, and watershed pest
management
BiSc 603-3 - Vegetable, cereal, and forage crop
pest management
B1Sc 604-2 - Fruit crop pest management
BiSc 605-1 - Management of animal disease vectors
BISc 849-3 - Individual scholarly study in pestology.
2.
The degree title be Master of Pest Management."
IF-]

 
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
?
S-
73-9.3
MEMORANDUM
Iq
-
o
........... ... Senate
Subject. Master of Pest Management Proan
R.D. Bradley, Chairman,
From.......................................................................................
Academic
Planning
Committee
March 8, 1973
Date............................................................................................
At its meeting held on March 1, 1973, the
Academic Planning Committee recommended approval of
the proposed Master of Pest Management Program, which
is attached.
The Academic
Planning
Committee therefore
recommends to Senate that:
(a)
The proposed Master of Pest Management
Program be adopted, and
(b)
The degree granted be Master of. Pest Management.
& 4-0-8d7-
R.D. Bradley
Attachment,
S

 
1-r
PC -
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
(00
?
Prof. R.
?
From ?
Jon Whatley
Chairman
fleian
nf Graduate Sl-iiMe
Subject
?
Date
?
Feb. 26 1973
The proposed program in Pest Management passed the
Senate Graduate Studies Committee at its meeting today. In
a separate motion it was passed that the name of the degree
should be Master of Pest Management (M.P.M.). There was one
small amendment made to the description of the program. On
p.
11 at the end of (iii) the following words were added:
. ?
"which includes BiSci 849-5, which
is an individual project."
rj
?
Jon Wheatley
cc Miss Marian McGinn
is

 
?7f; ?
•f
o
To
_fl
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
From
(Miss) Marian McGinn
Committee
?
I ?
Assis.
?
gjspr_GradUate Studies
Subject
Date Februar
y
15, 1973
Attached is the proposed Master of Pest Management Program
which was approved by the Assessment Committee on February 13,
1973. This program will be discussed at a meeting of the
Senate Graduate Studies Committee on February 26, 1973, at
2:30 p.m. in Room 3172, Administration Building.
-
> 1? ?
)V
C
/cg
?
N. McGinn
0
i 0

 
VICTORIA
January 30, 1973.
.
01
/
S
Dr. John Wheatley,
Dean of Graduate Studies,
Simon Fraser University,
BURNABY 2, B.C.
RE: Proposal for Master's Degree and?
pro
g
ramme in pest Management
Dear Dr..Wheatley:
I appreciate the opportunity to review and
comment on the above proposal. The B. C. Department of
Agriculture has been actively involved in several aspects
of pest management over the past number of years.
?
This
has included such things as alfalfa pollination, integrated
mite control, sterile male and phermone codling moth programs
in co-operation with the Canada Department of Agriculture.
In addition, we have perhaps the most progressive legislaticfl
in Canada regarding both the sale and application of
pesticides. We believe, however, that the gains 'that we
have made are only a beginning and that well trained people
are needed to provide the know how and impetus to better
pest management programs. While the training is suggested
for Simon Fraser University, I would suggest that the opportunity
for employment for such qualified students covers the globe.
However, I do not suggest that employment opportunties will be
unlimited but will grow as the science develops and management
becomes aware of its values.
I would like to comment particularly on the
proposed new courses to be added.
601-2 Urban and Industrial pest management. Page 86.
Some consideration should be given to the inclusion
of pests of institutions and associated problems, also
of weed control around buildings, storage yards, schools
and similar situations.
0

 
.
.
V
Dr.
J. Wheatley
?
-2-
?
Januar y
30, 1973.
602-3 Forest, wildiand and watershed pest management. Page 89.
While weeds are mentioned in rights-of
-way,
one of the
major pests is nuisance trees such as alder, willow and
maple which present or retard conifer release and rapid
growth. Herbicides are used extensively in such situa-
tions. Nuisance pests of recreation areas are cited.
would hope that both black fly and mosquito control
would be thoroughly discussed here and also as to its
need in urban situations. Problems of community
pastures should not be overlooked.
605-1 Management of Animal disease vectors.
I would suggest emphasis on encephalitis and how to
detect, organize and carry out a control program.
There is considerable conflict of emphasis as to what
and how to implement such a program.
849
?
Individual scholarly Study in Pestology.
I would suggest that this course be only open to those
students who have already taken some of the above "600"
courses. In many cases literature on pest management
may not be readily available, or it may be limited.
This should not necessarily exclude a suggested study
but in such cases a well documented proposed pest manage-
ment program, together with available literature might
well be a valuable contribution to the particular
segment of industry.
In conclusion, I like the concept, particularly the emphasis on
field instruction wherever possible. The experience of guest
lecturers should be given all possible support. Several of your
staff are experts in their particular fields, but have not too
much experience at "putting the pieces together" hence experienced
guest lecturers,
particularly during the first year would be
invaluable.
Again my thanks for the opportunity to review the proposal.
Yours very truly,
(
C. L. Neilson
CLN :dr
?
Provincial Entomologist
n

 
Agriculture
Canada
• Ottawa
KM 006
Fe.b/waity 9, 1913.
Your file
?
Votre reference
Our file ?
Notre rOlérence
At. Jon Wke.aU4f,
Dean o6 Gnaduwte StLLcUe4,
Simon
Fxa6
e/L Un.Lv e.k4Lty,
&inaby 2, BiLWsh Co!umb.La.
Veait V/i. (UheatLe.y:
I have examined the plwpo4ai AoA the e6tahtishment o a new gMdLulJ2e
pn.og/win in Pe.600gy and Put Management by the Vepa.'i.tnieni o
&oogLca2 Sc,Lence4, Snon FM4e)L UnLveX6.ty. 1 was
y
e/ui £avouAaby
LmpMA4e.d by the document.
U ..L6 a new and oLgLncJ a.pp/ioach to jut6iZting a. need that haA Long
.
?
been Lett in pLan.t piote.o2Lon. I note that a cand.A.da.te with a
M. P.M.
Ven.e.e wilt have had an e.xceUen-t ba6i in the key eLemen-to
o6
pe-t
management.
I am we,LL acquainted with the 6acatty a Wted and deem .them to be
oJ high caLLbex. The Lact that p/ioe44.LOnaeA in gove.'u'imen-t Labo/ia,toJu,eo
alie avaAzab.ee. a,o 6pe.c,LaLL6t Le.ciw.eM wiLe enhance. the LacuU
y
capacity.
I am pLe.a4e.d to oe.e. a Canadian anLve4i-ty de.ve2opLng a gitadaate p'wgitam
Leading to a dL4Unctve and de4cLptLve deg/ie.e Ute.. 1 aJ_6o xea.&ze
that with z,uch a backg/iound and a good baLance. between .theo'uj and
paclAce. g4.adaa..te2 in PeJ..toLogy and Pe-6t Management 4houLd have bette/i
job oppoMwii2Le4 in Fedeo2, PwvLnc)d2 and otJie.k ancA.e6.
Y6ufl4 ve/iy t'w2y,
/
B.B. MLg.Lcov4fzy,
VAJte.cto/i Ge.ne'taL,
Re.4e.a/ic.h Stanch.
S

 
MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND
St.
John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Department
of
Biology
?
29 January 1973
Dean of Graduate Studies
SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
Burnaby 2, B.C.
Dear Dr.Wheatley:
Thank you for your letter of 11 January and its enclosure.
I have to comment as follows on your Pestology Centre's
"Proposal for a New Master's Degree and Programme in Pest Management."
• (1) This proposal represents a logical development of the training
programme initiated on the Centre's establishment in 1967, and its
acceptance by SFU would assure full implementation of the graduate-
level instructional activities foreseen at the award of.NRC's
?
Negotiated Development Grant.
(2)
The envisaged Master in Pest Management qualification, attainable
in three consecutive semesters by a student who has all the prerequisites,
will fill a very real need in Canada at a time when growing enthusiasm for
sophisticated, integrated pest control methodologies is far outstripping
the availability of appropriately trained pest management personnel.
(3)
From the international standpoint, such a programme at SFU would
nicely suppinent the similar ones being organized at the University of
California t Berkeley and Mississippi State University, in filling
the rapidly'increasing need for personnel able, to implement integrated
control methodologies in both economic and public health entomology. With
special regard to the latter field, the proposed new Master's Degree
would be particularly relevant to the requirements of candidates from
developing countries where major vector control and disease eradication
programmes are under way.
?
In this context, I am attaching a reprint of
a newly-published article of mine and should like to draw your attention
to the last three paragraphs - were SFU to approve the present proposal,
I would certainly do my best to refer West African candidates (whose
• •
?
full expenses would be covered from funds at my disposal) to your Pestology
Centre. ?
• ?
(4) My only adverse comments are minor ones. (a) "field internships" (p.11
of proposal) represents a contradiction in terms; '"interns" being inmates,
as of a school, "externships" are obviously what is implied - but I'd
personally prefer to drop the medical parallel. (b) I would like to see the

 
S
question of "Management of animal disease vectors" (605-1,
p.21
of
proposal) considered at a higher level of priority than its present
one - it stands last in the "Summer Semester only" alternatives,
which hardly reflects the present significance of the control of
arthropods of medical and veterinary importance at either the national
or the international level.
In sum, my assessment of the proposal is highly favourable.
greatly hope that SFU will soon be offering the M.P.M. degree and programme
set out therein.
Yours sincerely,
Marshall Laird, Ph.D.,D.Sc.
S ?
( ?
Research Professor of Parasitology
& Director, Research Unit on Vector
Pathology
0

 
already been under study by Memorial University re-
searchers for some time:
Coelornomyccs
fungi of mos-
quitoes
and midges; and two very different disease
agentsof mosquitoes blackflies, and some other hosts
microsporidan protozoa and mermithid nematodes.
All three groups have high priority within the mandate
of the Research Unit on Vector Pathology. Initially,
however, mermithid worms of blackflies will be receiv-
ing the lion's share of attention.
The first phase of the program calls for laboratory
and field studies of mermithids present in natural
populations of Canadian blackflies, and of relevant
aspects of the biology and ecology of these insects
themselves. It also calls for investigations in West
Africa to examine the feasibility of using local or in-
troduced parasites of this group against
Simuliuni
dim,,osu m.
The Research Unit on Vector Pathology will employ
three different categories of people. There will be a
;mall core group, consisting of the director, a project
manager, and postdoctoral research fellows, supported
by secretarial, technical, and stenographic help.
Certain Memorial University personnel whose pri-
mary concern is with teaching or their personal re-
search will participate in the program on a contractual
basis, tackling specific assignments paid for from Unit
funds. These assignments may be either within the
province, or in West Africa - sometimes, indeed, they
.
may involve field work in the latter area followed by
laboratory studies at St John's, or vice versa.
The volunteers concerned will be designated Resi-
dent Consultants. Because of the continuity they can
bring to a program lacking a regular budget that would
make possible the semi-permanent recruitment of senior
scientists on a full-time research basis, their role will
be a vital one - the more so as local graduate student
work under their supervision can also be encouraged
and assisted by the Unit. One of their essential func-
tions will be catalytic, promoting both the development
of biological control in medical entomology on an inter-
national basis and the training of Canadian talent
(under full departmental supervision) for later employ-
ment in a field destined to be of dominant importance
in the next few decades.
The third category of participants will be Visiting
Consultants, recruited (usually on a short-term basis)
for highly specialized work tasks. Each of these, like
each assignment undertaken by members of the core
group or Resident Consultants, will constitute one tes-
sera of a planned mosaic of collaborative research.
The program also has international components of
value at least equal to Canada's interests. Thanks to
the favourable reception by the International Develop-
.
ment Research Centre of the report of a scientific ad-
visory group sponsored by
IDRC
and convened at St
John's in January
1972,
a unique collaborative ven-
ture has been initiated (see
Preventing Onchocerciasis
through Blackfly Control,
IDRC - 006e,
1972).
This in-
volves the joint participation of Memorial University's
Research Unit on Vector Pathology and the Onchocer-
ciasis Research Unit of the Mission entomologique
ORSTOM/OCCGE (Office de la Recherche scientifique et
technique
0utre_mer/Organisation de Coordination et
de Coopration pour la Lutte contre les grandes endé-
mies). The ORU has been located for some time at Bobo-
Dioulasso, Upper Volta, and is in process of moving to
well-equipped new headquarters at Bouaké, Ivory
Coast.
With French entomological and parasitological ex-
pertise, the ORU, aided by Canadian funds furnished by
IDRC, will be
.
working in close liaison with Memorial
University's research unit toward field experiments
with innovative blackfly control techniques. Memorial's
research unit is further supported by grants from the
National Research Council of Canada, Merck Frosst
Laboratories, Dorval, and Carl Zeiss (Canada) Limited.
New quarters, to be occupied by late
1972,
are being
provided by the university. These experiments will be
undertaken in association with World Health Organi-
zation research linked with regional onchocerCiasis con-
trol efforts. They will provide for a type of training '\
for local personnel that might well prove of greater
value to developing countries receiving Canadian aid
than some past efforts in this field, which have simply
tapped off promising foreign talent into the North
American labour market.
Selected candidates for technical training or graduate
work will be recruited from West African francophone
countries. Following any necessary English language
training they will be accepted for appropriate special-
ized courses at institutions in Canada or elsewhere
willing to receive them. Such courses will be strictly
time-limited. In the case of graduate students, for ex-
ample, a maximum of one year's residence at the host
university will be allowed. In this period the candidate
will be expected to complete any course requirements
for a higher degree. He or she will then return to West
Africa, and (under the immediate supervision of the
director of the Onchocerciasis Research Unit) will un-
dertake a thesis. Like the work earlier referred to, the
thesis will comprise a unit of an overall mission-related
program that has as its goal the hastening of the day
when truly integrated control procedures become part
and parcel of practical medical entomology.
Naturally, there are many unanswered questions in
innovative investigations of this kind. For example,
which graduate schools will accept an approach so
novel that, by its very nature, it precludes peer judg-
ments and fully representational committee appraisals
at every step of a foreign student's progress toward
their degrees? I will venture an answer: the maturer
ones. ?
I
14
Science Forum 30

 
APPENDIX A
GRADUATE PROGRAM IN PESTOLOGY AND PEST MANAGEMENT
.
Moved by Dr. Reilly and seconded by Dr. Mackauer,
"The Graduate Studies Committee of the Faculty of
Science recommends that the 'Proposal for
Establishment of a new Graduate Program in
Pestology and Pest Management', as detailed in
Paper G-72-3, be accepted."
MOTION CARRIED
UNANIMOUSLY
The following items were brought out in discussion and evaluation
of the proposal:
1. Financing
The Committee felt that the continuing cost of hiring a Visiting
Professor was nevertheless highly desirable in order to meet the
program's need for certain areas of expertise. Support costs for
student transportation relating to field work was discussed and
felt to be adequate by' the Committee.
2.
600 Level Courses
The Committee felt the 600 level courses, embodying practical pest
management, were of graduate calibre. They will not be available for credit to
students outside the program and are numbered
11
600" merely to
distinguish them from the normal graduate course offerings available
to all graduate students within the Department.
3.
Legal Ramifications
The Committee was told that legal aspects associated with the
study of pest control would not be studied as a particular course
but that students would naturally be made aware of legal problems
in the course of their field work and classroom study.
4.
Prerequisites
The prerequisites of the required 400 level courses are offered
so frequently that students will not be held back in the program
if they have to take them.
S.
?
Level of Work Load
The Committee felt assured that the material covered in the proposed
program compared favorably with a Master's Degree program at SFU.
In fact, even without the 600 level courses, students in this program
are normally required to
complete
18 hours of 800 level course work,
more than enough to satisfy course requirements for a Master's Degree.
From
the Graduate Studiea. Coninittee
of
the Faculty of
Science,
Meeting
of
September 14, 1972.

 
U
CHC: c t
Enclosures
Glen H. Geen,
Chairman.
SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
?
MEMORANDUM
*To ?
Dr. S. Aronoff
?
From .
Dr. C. H. Ceen, Chairman,
Dean
of Science
?
Dept. of Biological Sciences
Subject ?
M.P.M. Proposal
?
Date... August 3, 1972..
The revised Master of Pest Management proposal is attached
for consideration by yourself and the Faculty Graduate Studies Committee.
The document has been considered by the Department Graduate Studies
Committee, approved by the Department, and the revised document considered
by the DCSC. The proposal has been revised in keeping with the new
Senate regulations.
I am also enclosing my comments on your memorandum of May 17, 1972.
Some of the points of concern are dealt with in the revised document.
However, all points have been considered to provide you with the additional
information.
RECEIVED'
AUG3 1972
DEAN CF
?
SCIENCE OFFICE
0

 
SIMON
FRASER
UNIVERSITY
?
MEMORANDUM
Dr. $. Aronoff
?
From, ?
Dr. G. H. Geen
Dean of Science
?
Dept. of Biological sciences.
MPM proposal
?
Date... August 3 1972.
Reference is made to your memorandum of May 17, 1972 regarding the MPM
proposal. I have considered your comments, discussed them with Dr. Beirne
and summarized our views to your questi('
11s
in this memorandum. The MPM
proposal was approved, subject to
.i
few editorial changes, at a meeting of
the Department of Biological Sciences on May 1, 1972. It is herewith trans-
mitted to you for consideratio
n
by the Faculty Graduate Studies Committee.
The following are my comments in the same order as in your memorandum.
i. ?
There is of course the perennial question of whether or not finances
are
the concern of a curriculum conumittee.
2.
?
Detailed description
s
of the n: 600-level courses are appended.
?
3. ?
a) There is the question of whether or not we are suf iciently
academically strong to be able to make our own judgements. As an
existing centre of excellence I would sugges
t
that we are quite able
to assess this program. However, s.ne suggested external revie
who collectively are com'cte
nt
to deal with both the academic vao
of the proposal and the extent to which it meets international, national,
and typical provincial needs are:
Dr. Marshall Laird, Dept. of Biology, Mcmorial University, St. John's
Newfoundland. (Formerly in charge of pest activiti( of the UN WHO, and
later represented NRC
re
the use by SFU of the Negotiated Development
Grant for pestology.)
Dr. B. B.
MigiCOVSkY,
Director-General, Research Branch, Canada
Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. (Or an associate to whom he might
delegate the task.)
Dr. C. R. Neilson, provincial Entomologist for British Columbia,
Douglas Building, Victoria.
b) There seems to be a misunderstanding here. The definition of
pestology does not specifically exclude human or other animal aspects.
In practice pestologY does not overlap onto areas covered by the medic'l
and veterinary professions, but it does cover human and livestock aspc;tS,
such as biting flies and the subjects dealt with in 605, not covered by
these professions.
./2

 
-2-
t)F. ?
._Aronoff
?
August 3, 1972
. ?
c) I am not clear on what is meant by the
q
uestion. The following
are some explanatory comments.
The 400 and 800 level courses are already available to Biological
Sciences students for credit towards F.Sc., M.Sc., or Ph.D. degrees.
No proposal is made that the 600 level courses will be available for
credit to anybody except M.P.M. students.
No proposal is made that the M.P.M. programme be available to
Continuing Education students. The statement (p.
3) is that it is
"potentially adaptable" for Continuing Education purposes; in the event
that it becomes desirable at some f.iture date to adapt it for such pur-
poses, an appropriate proposal for adaptation would be made.
d)
A prospective M.Sc. student who has an M.P.M. would still be required
to meet the various defin.:d requirements for an M.Sc. before he can be
awarded the M.Sc.
e)
There certainly seems to be a misunderstanding here. By specifying
"content" and "approach" tie intent was to infer clearly that the 'level"
and "depth" of the 600-level courses were markedly different from the
equivalent B.C.I.T. courses. This was also intnded to be inferred by the
existence of the. 400-level prerequi;ites to those courses, and by the
academic stature of tie course leaders. In their level and depth and in
. the previous training required to take them these 600-level courses are
graduate courses. Other reasons why they are numbered at the 600-level
are given on page 6, paragraph 6.
There is in fact i statement in memorandum that the 600-level courses
probably will be used in the proposed Diploma course. To the contrary,
there is a statement (page 11, note 4) that the Diploma programme is not
being proposed at this time pending clarification by the University of what
a Diploma should be.
f)
Evidently it was not made sufficiently clear in the memorandum. Th'
proposal is for one Supervising Committee for all M.P.M. students, on the
grounds that all the students will be taking essentially the same programme
and will not be doing different research theses that require supervision
based on specialized knowledge.
?
It is suggested that each student in 849 be supervised and assisted
?
I
by a faculty member in the same way we handle senior undergraduate research
courses.
I can readily agree that the Chairman of the Department Graduate Studies
Committee rather than the Department Chairman sit on the Pest Management
Supt'ivisory Committee. I believe that the DGSC Chairman might best serve
in an advisory capacity to the Pest Management Supervisory Committee,
S1flCC
it is basically a sub-committee of the Department Graduate Studies ommittCe
and reports to the parent committee on all matters relating to admission,
curriculum, etc.
/3

 
.
?
-.
?
-3- ?
August 3, 1972.
g)
There seems to be no problem in deleting beyond "(note 27)". However,
It was not our intent to require a comprehensive examinatiOno
f
all
students but only those about whom the Supervisory Committee had some
doubts as to the breadth of theirtbackground.
h)
The programme has indeed certain academic deficiencies, notably for
specialists in weed management and in insect pathology. These need to
be filled. They could be met adequately (though not optimally) during
the developmental phase by recruiting appropriate specialists temporarily
into the visiting professor posit.
LOfl.
When it becomes clear from student
enrollments and extramural support that the programme is a viable
permanent entity, new continuing academic positions to meet the
deficiencies are likely to be requested. To request them now would be
to increase considerably the requirements for p.gramme establiSh11.1t,
create difficulties in the priorities of the Department of Biological
Sciences, and create con
t
inuing situations that experience over the next
few years may show not to be the most desired ones. Consequently I am
not in favour of requesting new continuing positions at this time,
though in effect serving notice that they are likely to be requested at
some future date if the programme is a success.
\-tT
Glen H. Geen,
Chairman.
GHG/ms
cc Dr. B. P. Beirne
0

 
S1lOIN li{ .SIU UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
IC)
?
11r. ?
. (ecn , Chairman
?
From ?
Pr. S. Avono F f,
Iliological Scien's Department.
?
l)can of Science.
Sub
joci
?
Date. ?
May 17, 1972.
I should like to provide you with somc comments on the proposal for an
Mri degree in Biosciences as contained within the brochure provided the
Faculty Graduate Studies Committee by Prof. Brian Beirne.
If I may be permitted to state our thoughts on cch of three major aspects..
I may then he able to summarize our present position.
I) With regard to finances and resources, we have not yet pursued this
aspect at all.
2)
With regard to the proposed new courses, we did not feel that the
presentation was adequate for consideration by the Committee. We would
require greater detail concerning course content, including a relatively
complete outline of the proposed curriculum.
3)
Academic aspects, details of which follow.
a)
It was felt that in a new program of this nature, especially as the
first professional program within this Faculty, it would he
highly desirable that there be external reviewing prior to
its coming to the Faculty GSC. This would add strength to
the proposal and will certainly be required in any event by
the APC.
b)
The definition of pestology (p.
l
) specifically excludes human or
other animal aspects. Is this purposeful and/or desirable?
C)
There appears to be some confusion (p.3) concerning the
restriction of the program to MPM degree students. Would
this be available with or without credit to other Bioscience
students or in Continuing Education and what are the arguments
for the point of view developed?
d)
What would be required for an MPM student to obtain an M.Sc.
degree subsequently?
e)
The clear inference is made (p.4) that these courses are
identical in level to the BCIT diploma courses. it was
indeed stated that these courses were probably to be used
in the proposed diploma course here. Why then are they
is
?
designated as at the 600 level?
2

 
I.
-2-
1) Concern was expressed with thestructure of the
prOpOSCd
Pest. Management Supervisor)' Committee (P-S) . It is
suggeste
d
that this Committee be appointed initially
immediatel
y
upon the admission of the student into the
progra1. The two Faculty members from the I
l
estolOgY Centre
should then be chosen (by whatever mechanism the Department
wishes) according to the area of interest of the MPM studcnt.
The Chairman of this Supervisory Committee huld also be
t
he -tudent so that the latter feels
that
he
he
academic
has a base of
advisor
reference
r it is
to
wheneve
necessary
t
and
prior to the taking of his coi' se 849, which is a near-terminal
affair. It is also suggeste
d
that the Chairman of the
Departmental Graduate Studies Committee be a member of the.
Committee rather than the Chairman of the Department.
g)
It is suggested that (p.
7
) in the subSCCtjOTt0 the second
paragraph beginning "-all five proposed..." all the material
after "(note 27)" be deleted. The Committee believes it
confusing and unnecessary. Similarly, in the same paragraph
it was felt that a decision should be made initially whether
or not a comprehensive examination would he required and not
left to a subsequent discretionary basis. It was felt that
such an examination should in fact be held at some time
during the program.
h)
The one resource aspect questioned was whether a Visiting
Professor was in fact needed in the program. The argument
was that if this reflected an academic deficiency,
then this
should be stated and a regular Faculty member obtained. If
this is merely to add lustre, then it should be stated clearly
and the benefits weighed against the costs.
As 1 Indicated in my opening paragraph, we were not completely certain as to
the status of this proposal within the Department of Biosciences, as it would
ormall y
have been forwarded to us from the Departmental Graduate Studies
n
Committee. We are quite aware of the departmental vote taken on the matter
and are thus somewhat sanguine concerning its departmental status. However,
we are returning it to the Department for consideration by the Graduate
Studies Committee with the analysis provided above, and, following their
reconsideratio
n
and approvals plus the additional details requested for the
new courses, will then consider the resources aspect.
SA:dcp
C. C.
Prof. B. Beirne
0

 
a •
?
SL)N FRASER UNIVERLJY
MEMORANDUM
.......Dr. G. H.
Geen, Chrm
an.................................. .From......Dr. B.
.
.
Beirne,Director ?
....................
00 .. .......
Dept. of Biological Scien
.
çe
,
s ?
........,...
Pçs
.
ology Centre,.. Biological .çiençes
Proposal for Establishment of a
Subject ......
.
new Graduatepgr4n
?
9gY ?
..Date......
JUly
25,1972.....................................................................
?
and Pest Management.
Attached is the proposal for a new graduate program in the
Department of Biological Sciences, with the concomitant proposals for
new courses and a new degree title.
You will recall that these proposals were discussed and were
approved (subject to minor amendments that have been made) by more than
two-thirds of all the faculty members of the Department, at the Departmental
nd that the proposals were first made available to
meeting
all faculty members of
of
the Department
May
for
1,
a Departmental
1972,
meeting of
a
July,
last year, when comments on the proposals were' requested.
The organization and content of the attached documents are in
accordance with Senate Paper S72.83, Part III, Paragraph 3, Sections (a) to
(q) as amended.
Further in accordance with that Paper, the attached documents
Is ?
that now go from the Graduate Studies Committee of the Department to
that of the Faculty of Science and, if approved at that level, thence to
the Dean of Graduate Studies for submission to the Assessment Committee of
the Senate Graduate Studies Committee.
BPB:ct
?
Bryan P. Beirne.
Enclosure
0

 
S
?
I
.
PROPOSAL FOR A NEW MASTER'S DEGREE AND
?
PROG1ANME IN PEST MANAGEMENT
• ?
by the Pestology Centre,
Department of Biological Sciences (per B. P. Beirne)
E1

 
I ?
I
?
1.
PROPOSAL FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW
S
?
GRADUATE PROGRAM IN PEST MANAGEMENT
(a) Justification for the Program as a Whole
In 1971 the Academic Planning Committee of the Senate approved in
principle the institution of a new Master's degree in pestology. The
relevant program is proposed in this -dvcument, with the subject of the
program described in Section (e).
(1) Justification for establishing the program as such-is that:
?
-
there are expanding new employment needs and legalistic pressures for people
with broad training as general practitioners in pestology for work as pest
managers (see Section (m)); and existing graduate programs do not train for
those requirements appropriately because they are organized to train special-
ists only, e.g. as entomologists or plant pathologists, forest pestologists
or agricultural pestologists, and because they tend to train primarily for
employment in research or teaching.
To meet the new needs, several universities outside Canada are in the
process of organizing professional programs in pest management leading to new
descriptive degree titles (see Section (g)) and that are broadly similar in
nature and purpose to the program proposed here.
(ii) Justification for establishing the program at Simon Fraser University
is that: SFU already has most of the faculty expertise and numbers (Section
(d)), the courses (Section (h)), and the facilities (Sections (j) and (k))
needed to establish and operate the proposed program, and can readily obtain
the remainder at little extra cost (Section (c)).
C

 
C
?
2.
S
SFU has more assets for such a program than any other Canadian
university. This is because of a decision to specialize in
.
pestology that
was made by SFU in 1967. Over the next three years the Department of
Biological Sciences built up a faculty of twelve pestologists in its
Pestology Centre (see Section (d) ii) and the National Research Council
awarded SFU a Negotiated Development Grant of $323,000 "to assist in
developing the National (and, hopefully, a leading International) Centre
of Excellence for graduate student training in pestology and pest management".
The program proposed here is so organized that it can be established,
conducted, and evolved without major side-effects, and even terminated without
major harmful residual effects. One relevant factor is that most of the
• ?
courses are already being given as parts of the normal teaching loads of the
faculty members involved. Another is the additional courses will be taught
largely by temporary lecturers.
(b) New Positions
Existing faculty have the knowledge and experience to handle most aspects
of the program (see Section (d)). The remaining aspects would be covered by
visiting experts during at least the initial years of operation. Consequently,
no new full-time faculty positions are being requested at this time. New
positions may be requested at some future date, after the program has been
in operation and after its progress and prognosis have been reviewed fully.
The following new positions are needed to implement initially the
program proposed here:-
S

 
.
?
I
?
3.
is
(i) Visiting Professor in
Pestology. There are important aspects of
pestology in
which no existing faculty member Is a specialist. Examples are
of weeds and insect pathology. The plan Is to handle such subjects initially
by recruiting leading experts into the above position, normally on a one-
semester basis, to . teach their subjects in Special Topics [in Pestology]
courses BiSc 869-3 or 879-3.
The establishment of this position was approved in principle by the
Vice-President (Academic) as meeting in part the commitment made by SFIJ to
the National Research Council in accepting the Negotiated Development Grant
for the Pestology Centre.
?
-
(ii)
Honorary Lecturers or Professors. Certain senior scientists in
government agencies in B.C. are leading experts In pest management. It is
0
proposed that they will take leadership of certain of the 600-level courses
on practical pest management. The proposed temporary honorary titles would
be given
to such individuals, two initially (see Section (d) (I)). This is
what is done by UBC under similar circumstances.
(iii) Demonstrator, to assist in preparing and conducting the field
and laboratory work of all the 600-level courses In practical pest management.
A new position is not being requested. Instead, present plans are to request
the conversion of an existing Pestology Field Technician position into the
Demonstrator position, with promotion of the incumbent.
(c) Finances
The probable financial returns to The University would appear to exceed
the new costs.
ri

 
.4.
S
??
(I) Capital costs. Most of the facilities required to mount the
program are already available. The following needs are still outstanding:
- Two laboratory trailers, to be located in the SFU area in the UBC
?
Research Forest for 600-level classroom use. Estimated cost about $12,000
if purchased new, about $6,000 if purchased used, or about $200 removal costs
if redundant existing SFU laboratory trailers could be provided free.
-
Pesticide application equipment, for use in 600-level courses. A
minimum of $4,000 if purchased, but probably in practice largely obtainable
on loan if Federal experts are appointed to honorary teaching positions
related to those courses, and otherwise by gifts or rental.
In summary, capital costs could be In excess of $10,000 but may be of
the order of $2,000 for contingencies.
5
?
(ii) Annual operating costs.
Salary and expenses for the Visiting Professor in Pestology
Preparation fees and expenses for two (or three) Honorary
Lecturers for the 600-level courses. If, as is probable, that they
would
be seconded with pay the total could be as low as $2,000, if
without pay then as high as about $8,000
Fees and expenses for outside experts from Federal and
Provincial
agencies and industry for Individual lectures or seminars
in 600-level and other courses (see Appendix B, course outlines)
Salary for the Demonstrator In the 600-level courses and other
courses (i.e. difference between salary of Field Technician and of
Demonstrator)
$10,000
$ 3,500
'$ 3,000
$ 2,500
0

 
4 ?
6 ?
6
?
.,u1lI1_.s, ?
5 .
Student
and
faculty transportation
costs, equipment rentals, and
other operating costs related to field work
of the 600-level courses
?
$ 3,500
Materials, supplies, etc. ?
$ 2,500
In
summary, totalnew
annual operating costs -in the
first three
years would be
of the order of
?
$25,000
(iii) Revenues.
If fees
were of the order of $225 per semester then 20 M.P.M.
students for three semesters would pay about $13,500 annually; and if
in addition there were five students who would not otherwise have
come to SFU each taking two semesters of M.P.M. prerequisites the
total annual returns
in fees would be
of the order of ?
$16,000
The largest
financial returns are
likely
to be indirect
ones:
increases
under
the points
system of University financing in
which
(in B.C. 1972-73
according
to the Academic Planner) an M.Sc.
student
is worth $11,392. It may be confidently assumed that an
M.P.M. student
is equivalent to an
M.Sc. In this event 20 M.P.M. students would bring
to the University annually about
?
0 ?
$228,000
Other possible sources of revenue are: Increases under the
points system If students taking M.P.M. prerequisites could be
officially identified
and if they are classed as equivalents of under-
graduate Agriculture students (worth $5,696 each In 1972-3); overheads
that are paid to the University by overseas aid agencies for certain
types of students; and, eventually, possible bursaries or other forms of
subsidies such as government agencies now provide to medical and veterinary
. ?
science programs.

 
I. ?
I ?
.
6
(d) Personnel
(i) The following persons wish to be involved in the proposed program.
Their current areas of interest and research are indicated below, and their
curriculum vitae are attached (Appendix A):
- The following are existing full-time faculty members.
Beirne, Dr. B. P. Professor of Pest Management, Director of the Pestology
Centre. Philosophy and practice of biological control and of pest management;
ecology of agricultural insects.
Barlow, Dr. J. S. Professor; Associate Dean of Science. General and
nutritional biochemistry of insects.
Mackauer, Dr. J. P. M. Professor. Insect parasitology, especially of
aphids;
Nair,
biosystematics
Dr. K. K. Professor.
of entomophagus
Radiation
insects;
entomology;
genetic
insect
controls.
endocrinology;
ultrastructure of insect tissues.
Turnbull, Dr. A. L. Professor. Population dynamics of arthropods;
taxonomy and biology of spiders; human demography.
Webter, Dr. J. N. Professor. Physiology of host-parasite relationships,
especially of nematodes of plants and insects; economics of nematode infections.
Belton, Dr. P. Associate Professor. Physical controls, especially of
rodents, biting flies, and stored product pests; pest behaviour; electo-
physiology.
Borden, Dr. J. H. Associate Professor. Forest Insects; sex pheromones;
insect sensory physiology.
Finlayson, Mrs. Thelma. Associate Professor. Insect classification;
taxonomy of parasite larvae.

 
I ?
7.
S
Sad]eir, Dr. R. M. F. S. Associate Professor. Population dynamics,
reproduction, and ecology of small mammals; conservation of the environment.
Oloffs, Dr. P. C. Assistant Professor. Chemical pesticides, pesticide
toxicology.
Rahe, Dr. J. E. Assistant Professor. Plant pathology and physiology.
- And the following in honorary positions proposed above (paragraph (b)):
MacCarthy, Dr. H. R. Prospective Honorary Lecturer. Section Head
(Agricultural Entomology), Canada Department of Agriculture. Management of
agricultural insects; insect vectors of plant diseases.
Madsen, Dr. H. F. Prospective Honorary Lecturer. Section Head (Fruit
Tree Entomology), Canada Department of Agriculture. Management of fruit tree
.pests; chemical pesticides.
Dillistone, B. H. Prospective Demonstrator. Pestology Field Technician,
SFU. Field pest management procedures.
(ii) Evidences of the commitments by the above to the proposed program
are:
- Professors Beirne, Barlow, Mackauer, Nair, Turnbull, Webster, Belton, and
Finlayson resigned from the Belleville Research Institute of the Canada
Department of Agriculture and joined the SFIJ Department of Biological Sciences
for the primary purpose of setting up the Pestology Centre to develop such a
program.
- Professors Borden and Sadleir, who were already SFU faculty members,
voluntarily joined the Centre for the same purpose.
- Professors Oloffs and Rahe (and Mr. Dillistone) were recruited primarily
isbecause their specialities filled major weaknesses in the expertise of the

 
S
8.
Centre that had to be strengthened before an adequately comprehensive
program could be developed.
-
Eleven
of the above twelve faculty members who were surveyed individually
recently reiterated their personal commitments to the proposed program.
-
Drs.
MacCarthy and Madsen are involved because of their support of the
idea and of the support of the Canada Department of Agriculture.
- Each of the above was involved in planning the program, including
preparing parts of this document.
(iii)
The CM.P.M.J Graduate Program Committee (which would report to
the Departmental Graduate Studies Committee) would consist of three members
of the faculty of the Pestology Centre elected by ballot from among their
number. Each would normally serve for three years, which means that one
would be replaced every year and that in the first election the three
members would be elected individually for one, two, and three years,
respectively.
Ultimately, this procedure might be revised to permit M.P.M.
graduates
to stand for election and to vote.
(e) Field
of Studies
The proposed program is on pestology, which is the scientific study of
pests and of methods of dealing with them, and on its application, pest
management. Most pestologists are employed as pest managers of one sort or
another.
Pestology is the modern, comprehensive and integrated, approach to what
was hitherto (and often still is) a number of more or less segregated subjects:
the study of insects, plant diseases, weeds, or harmful vertebrates; the study

 
9.
S.
of biological,
chemical, or physical controls; the study of forestry,
agricultural, fruit
tree, stored product, or structural pests, or of pests
of man or of livestock. Pestology covers all these and their interrelations.
The integrated, management-of-the-environment, approach developed
because of the harm caused by the segregated, control-by-poisoning-pest-
species,
approaches that inherently tend to intensify existing pest problems
and create new ones and that contaminate the environment progressively with
harmful chemicals.
Because the responsibility for decisions and activities related to the
prevention and control of pest damage is being progressively restricted by
legislation
to appropriately-trained and qualified people, pestology
is
?
?
rapidly
becoming the third profession that deals with the harm caused by
?
living
organisms to people and property. The other two are the medical and
veterinary professions.
(f) Relationships Between Faculty Qualifications and Subjects
This subject is covered elsewhere in this document, e.g. in Section (d),
where the special interests of the persons to be associated with the program
are indicated, and in Section (h), where the faculty are listed in relation
to the courses of the program that they will teach.
() Degree
A new degree title, Master in Pest Management, is proposed. The
Faculty of Science would exercise the relevant statutory power.
0
?
The main reasons for proposing the new title are: to indicate that

 
10.
.
the degree results
from a structured professional program rather than from
the more
typical graduate program that is based primarily on a research
thesis; because there are likely to be similar new titles attached to
similar programs that are currently being organized at some U.S. universities,
e.g. Master in Insect Management at the University of California, Berkeley,
and either Master in Pest Management or Master in Science (Pest Management)
at Mississippi
State University; and to provide a title that indicates by
its
wording the nature of the special training. There is no similar degree title
or similar program at, or apparently currently being organized at, any other
university in Canada.
(h) Proposed Academic Requirements for the Degree
In summary, the M.P.M. graduate will have taken a total of not less
than 53 credit hours ofpestology and pest management courses with a G.P.A.
of 3.0. The academic requirements are also given under Section (n), Calendar
Entry.
(1) Proposed prerequisites for admission into the program are that the
student must:
- Meet the General and Faculty of Science Regulations for admission to
graduate studies. And
- Complete with a grade point average of 3.0 not less than 18 credit hours
from the following existing B1Sc courses or their equivalents.
BiSc 304-3 Animal ecology (204 prerequisite). Turnbull.
317-3 Insect biology. Finlayson.
.
404-3
Plant ecology (202,
204
prerequisites).
Brooke.
407-3
Population dynamics
(304 prerequisite).
Turnbull.

 
11.
BiSc 408-3
Parasitic associations. Webster/Mackauer.
409-3
Field ecology
(304
prerequisite). Sadleir/Geen.
417-3
Entomology
(317
prerequisite). Borden.
430-3
Plant pathology (201 prerequisite). Rahe.
432-3
Chemical pesticides and the environment. Oloff a.
435-3
Introduction to pestology. Beirne.
498-3
Undergraduate research. Various.
(ii)
The M.P.M. degree would not require a research thesis.
(iii)
The student would be required to pass a comprehensive examination
in pestology
(iv)
Practical
Practical
and pest
experience
management.
in
Otherwise
solving pest
the
problems
examining
I ?
is
system
a
/
key
consists
feature
)e
of
of
the program. It could be obtained through field internships - a group of
proposed new courses in which the student would apply his knowledge
,
of
principles and procedures of pestology, gained from other courses, to
evaluate
and solve representative practical pest management problems under
the guidance of specialists in the management of different kinds of pest
situations. These courses are described under Section (t), New Courses,
and proposed formally in Appendix B.
(v)
The specific requirements for the degree are that the student must
complete with a continuing and cumulative grade point average of
3.0
or better
a total of
35
credit hours of graduate (600- and 800-level) courses in or
related to pestology and pest management, or their equivalents.
The
35
credit hours would normally be made up of: 12 credit hours of
;;z
0 ?
600-level pest management courses; a five-credit individual scholarly study

 
.
12.
course;
and 18 credit hours selected from among the other 800-level courses
listed below.
The relevant
graduate courses in pestology or pest management are
listed below. Apart from 849 and the 600-level courses, which are new and
are proposed elsewhere in this document, all the courses listed already
exist and each has been given at least once:
BiSc 601-3 Urban and industrial pest management.
602-3 Forest, wildiand, and watershed pest management.
603-3 Vegetable, cereal, and forage crop pest management.
604-2 Fruit crop pest management.
605-1 Management of animal disease vectors.
- A SFU faculty member, Dr. Borden, will be coordinator of all these 600-
level courses, the one Demonstrator will be assigned to all, and one or more
other Pestology faculty members will be involved in each.
BiSc 849-5 Individual scholarly study in pestology. Various.
840-3 Economic organisms I. Finlayson.
841-3 Economic organisms II. Rahe.
846-3 Chemical pesticides and toxicology. Oloffs.
844-3 Biology of entomophagous insects. Mackauer.
845-3 Physical controls. Belton.
847-3 Pest prevention and control systems. Beirne.
843-3 Population dynamics. Turnbull.
842-3 Internal processes. Barlow/Nair.
816-3 Biology of forest insects. Borden.
848-3 Nematology. Webster.
869-3 Special topics [in pestology]. Various.
879-3 Special topics [in pestology]. Various.

 
13.
C
(vi) The M.P.M. program is so designed
that
it can be completed in
three consecutive semesters by a student who has all the prerequisites.
Students from outside SFU are unlikely to have all the prerequisites and
therefore may have to take a total of four or more semesters.
(i) New Courses
A total of 29 courses are
involved
in
the program. Six of them are
new. They fill special needs specfic1ly related to the program, and
because of this they should normally be. available for graduate degree
credit only to M.P.M. students. A proposal in the prescribed form for each
of the six is attached (Appendix B). The purposes and special features of
?
each are summarized here:
- The purpose of 849-5, individual, scholarly study in pestology, is to
enable the student to acquire knowledge of a
part
icular
aspect of pestology
in detail and depth. It would normally be the aspect in which he hopes to
be employed. His study might be based or, for example, a type of pest or
type of habitat, a type of control or an approach to study or management,
or on any or all of these in relation to a particular geographical region.
- The main purpose of 601 to 605, the courses in practical pest management,
is to enable the student to acquire, with the. best expert guidance available,
practical experience in how to identify and evaluate pest problems and in
how to develop and use appropriate
management
procedures. The courses would
be given largely in the field at 1ocatons where pest problems exist and
where control procedures are used, for
example,
in part at government field
stations; and wherever possible government and other experts on aspects of

 
0 ?
pest management will be invited-to participate in giving the courses (the
cooperation of the Canada Department of Agriculture and some other agencies
in this is already assured).
- These courses are numbered in the 600 series because: they are part
of a graduate program; they differ from 800-level courses in their approach
and from upper-level undergraduate courses in BIoSciences in their specialized
nature; proliferation of upper-level undergraduate courses in BioSciences is
to be avoided at this time; the new courses resemble most nearly in general
approach and nature the 600-level courses given in other departments (Chemistry;
M.B.A.); and they should not be available for credit to fulfil the requirements
for any graduate degree other than the M.P.M.
- The 600-level courses would be given in the Summer Semester because it
isis only then that most pests are best available for study and control. They
would be given consecutively rather than concurrently: each would consist
of two or three hours of lectures and four to six hours of field or lab work
each day for up to three (for a 3-credit course) weeks. This concentrated
form would enable the courses to be taught by experts seconded or borrowed
temporarily from other agencies and optimum use to be made of field trips
and of borrowed or rented equipment.
(J) Facilities Needed
In summary, facilities needed to mount the program mostly exist or are
potentially readily available.
Most of the M.P.M. and relevant prerequisite courses exist and have
already been given. Consequently the facilities needed to operate them
already exist. New facilities needed are primarily for the proposed new

 
600-level courses.
Some
of the Negotiated Development Grant funds
have been used to
develop field research facilities
that can double as
facilities
for the
600-level
courses, notably a fully-equipped laboratory trailer located in
a Federal research orchard in the Okànd'gan and a
fully-serviced agriculture
and forest pestology research
area in the UBC Research Forest, Maple Ridge.
There are requirements for pesticide application equipment, but as
mentioned in Section (c), there is reason to hope that these may be met by
temporary loans from governmental or other sources.
The main need that cannot be filled at the Pestology Centre level is
for two laboratory trailers to be located at the SFU Pestology Experimental
• ?
Area in the UBC Research Forest and used by students in the 600 level courses,
as well as for research purposes. The possibility will be explored of
obtaining existing SFU trailers made redundant by building programs.
(k) Sources ofSupport for Students
This is a full-time professional program. Students would be informed
In advance that they cannot expect financial support from University sources
as full-time students are unlikely to have the time to work at part-time
university duties as Teaching Assistants or research assistants. This does
not mean that a student cannot or must not take part-time employment or
otherwise get financial support from any source within or outside the
university, if he can arrange it. But it does mean that acceptance into the
program does not carry with it the commitment or the implication that the
0 ?
student will, or even might, receive direct financial support from
university
sources.
15.

 
16.
40 ?
(1)
Library Resources
and Future Needs
No new
library
resources of any major significance are needed to start
and to operate the program. No abnormal future library needs created by
the program can be envisaged.
The reasons why the resources of The University Library are satisfactory
are that the faculty members of the Pestology Centre have encouraged and
guided The Library over the past five years to develop them appropriately
and that various governmental agencies have presented the Centre with pestology
libraries, totalling over 175 shelf feet and now in The Library.
A detailed statement on this matter is being prepared by The University
Librarian and will be forwarded by him direct to the Assessment Committee.
(m) Estimated Enrollment
Present plans are to limit total enrollment to 20 to 25 students
annually in the initial three years. Indications to date are that the
numbers of qualified applicants are likely to exceed these figures. The
nature of employment prospects are the primary reason why students would
wish to enroll (and why similar programs are being developed at U.S.
universities). Employment prospects and the reasons for them are as follows.
New legislation is transfering the responsibility for pest management
decisions and actions increasingly from the individual to the community. The
community is in practice represented by suitably-trained experts. The food
production and pesticide pollution problems produce the legislation. As the
relevant legislation increases the need for such experts and the levels of
is
qualification required of them increase. The proposed program Is designed to
produce appropriately-trained experts, especially for:

 
17.
0
??
-
Private practice as consulting pestologists. This new profession does
not yet exist significantly in Canada. It is developing rapidly as pest
management programs are becoming increasingly refined and restrictions
intensify on who uses chemical pesticides, where, and when.
-
Private
practice or employment in government or Industry as the
appliers and monitors of sophisticated and complex pest management procedures.
- Work as or supervising pest control operators or pesticide prescribers
or salesmen. These are people who now are licenced by provincial governments.
There are (1971) 2,238 Provincially-qualified individuals and 742 Provincially-
licenced firms In B.C. Alberta has about the same numbers and Ontario larger
numbers. Provincial licencing qualifications are regularly upgraded. It is
to be expected that ultimately M.P.M. or similar specialized training will be
in the qualification for licencing in place of the short courses that now
have to be given by default by provincial government departments.
- Employment by federal, provincial, and local government agencies In
extension, inspection, or regulatory duties. The numbers of such people
(who total not less than 24 in B.C. at present) Increase as legislation
increases and the enforcement agencies expand. Present training is mainly
on-the-job after a biological degree.
- Academic positions or full-time research positions, for which a broad
knowledge of pestology as a whole in addition to a specialized knowledge of
an aspect of it is more advantageous to the individual and his work than the
specialized knowledge alone.
- Work in or related to pest management In developing countries. The
• ?
M.P.M. program would be more suited to practical overseas aid needs than are
M.Sc. or Ph.D. programs that train primarily teaching or research.

 
18.
- And any
jobs, not necessarily pestological, that holders of B.Sc. or
M.Sc.
degrees
in biology get and which the professional degree and training
might help SFU M.P.M.'s to get more readily and to handle more effectively.
(n) Adequacy of Office Space
Existing faculty members who wo-'ld be involved in the program have
office
apace. Temporary office space can be found in the Department of
Biological Sciences a Visiting Professors. It is not proposed to supply.
M.P.M. students with office space, at least until Pestology faculty who now
have research laboratory space only in temporary trailers are more suitably
accommodated. Meanwhile M.P.M. students can do their studying in the Library,
or other areas generally available to the student body for that purpose.
.
?
(p) Possible External Assessors
It is assumed that the university regards itself as competent 'to assess
the academic quality of the program, and that the aspects on which external
advice could be useful concern the value of the proposed program in relation
to (i) international, (ii) National, and (iii) typical provincial needs. On
this basis appropriate assessors would be:
- Professor Marshall Laird, Department of Biology, Memorial University,
St. John's, Newfoundland. (Formerly Head of Entomology for the United Nations
World Health Organization).
- Dr. B. B. Migicovsky, Director-General of the Research Branch, Canada
Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ontario.
C. H. Neilson, Provincial Entomologist, Government Buildings, Victoria,
0
?
British Columbia.

 
19.
(p) Duration of the Program
The program would be continuing. It would be reviewed regularly and
realigned
or reorganized as appropriate. It would basically take one
year
and it would be given every year.
The intention is to start it first not
later than the Fall Semester of 1973 and desirably earlier.
(g) Proposed Calendar Entry
Master in Pest Management program.
For detailed information on the M.P.M. program contact the Director,
Pestology Centre, Department of Biological Sciences.
Admission requirements:-
As in the General Regulations of the University (Graduate Studies
Calendar)
and of the Faculty of Science (do.) and successful completion of
not
less
than
six
(18 credit hours) of the following prerequisite courses,
or equivalents:
BiSc 304-3 Animal ecology
317-3 Insect biology
404-3 Plant ecology
407-3 Population dynamics
408-3 Parasitic associations
409-3 Field ecology
417-3 Entomology
430-3 Chemical pesticides and the environment
435-3 Introduction to pestology
.
0

 
I ?
• ?
20.
0 ?
Program requirements:-
The M.P.M. program
normally will require successful completion of a
comprehensive examination in pestology and pest management and of at least
35 credit
hours normally obtained as follows:
Eighteen credit hours from among the following courses:
BiSc 816-3
Biology of forest 'insects
• ?
840-3
Economic organisms I
841-3
Economic organisms II
• ?
842-3. Internal processes
843-3
Population processes
844-3
Biology of entomophagous insects
845-3
Physical controls
.
846-3
Insecticide chemistry and toxicology
847-3
Pest prevention and control systems
848-3
Netnatology
869-3
• ?
Special topics (in pestology)
879-3
Special topics (in pestology)
And five credit hours from:
849-3
Individual scholarly study in pestology.
?
A supervised
analysis in detail
and depth of an aspect of pestology and the preparation
of a scholarly paper in it.
And twelve
credit hours from the following field courses on evaluation,
?
decision making,
and management of pest situations and relevant procedures
and legislation.
These are given only in the Summer Semester and are •'
available for credit
only to M.P.M. students:
601-3. Urban and industrial pest management.

 
- ?
21.
.'. Pests of foodstuffs and stored products, structural pests, and pests
found in and near buildings, ships, and aircraft, and their management,
with emphasis on insects and rodents.
602-3.
?
Forest, wildiand, and watershed pest management.
Pests and their management, of forest trees, with emphasis on weeds,
and of recreational areas.
603-3. ?
Vegetable, cereal, and forage crop' pest management.
Agriculture pests and their management, with emphasis on insects,
nematodes, crop diseases, and birds, and including garden and greenhouse
pests.
604-2. ?
Fruit crop pest management.
?
Insects, diseases, and other pests of fruit trees, including grapevines
and small fruits, and their management.
?
605-1. ?
Management of animal disease vectors.
Insects and other organisms that attack man or livestock or that are
vectors of diseases of man or animals, and their management, including
biting flies.
0

 
S ?
ud ?
22.
. ?
-
?
APPENDIX A
Curriculum vitae of faculty members who wish to be involved in
the proposed program.
L

 
.
.
.
23.
August, 1971.
CURRICULUM VITAE
BEIRNE, Bryan Patrick ?
Age 53
Canadian ?
Married
Professor of Pest Management, and Director of the Pestology Programme,
of the Department of Biological Sciences, SFU.
Tenured
Degrees
B.Sc.
?
(Zool., sot., Geol.) 1938,
Ph.D. (Entomology), 1940,
M.Sc. (Entomology), 1941, and
M.A. ?
1942,
all
from Dublin University (Ireland).
Career
1938-39. Government of Ireland Research Scholar.
1939-41. Overseas Scholar, Royal Commission for the Exhibition of. 1851.
1941-42.
Junior Assistant (i.e. instructor), Department of Zoology,
Dublin University.
1942-49.
Lecturer in Entomology, and Assistant Director of the Museum
of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, Dublin University.
(Teaching duties in a then two-man Department were to Premedical,
2 years Agricultural, 3 years Pass Science, 4 years Honours
Natural Science, M.Sc., and Ph.D. Students).
1947-48. Lecturer, summer courses to vocational school headmasters for
?
the (Govt. of Ireland) Department of Education.
1942-49. Private practice as pest problem consultant to various government
departments and legal and industrial firms and, separately,
as owner and operator of a commercial pest control business.
1949-55. Research Scientist (Section Leader), Canada Department of
Agriculture (CDA), Entomology Research Institute, Ottawa,
Ontario.
(In charge of work in Canada of a major group of insects.
Reclassified (i.e. promoted) four times).)
1955-58. Officer-in-Charge, CDA Biological Control Laboratory, Belleville,
Ontario.
(Developed the centre from a biological control Laboratory to
a pest management Research Institute. Research publications
by the staff increased from an average of 0.3 per man per
annum to 1.2 and in size from an average 3 pages to 7. At
the same time total professional staff size was reduced, in
part by elimination from it by 8 permanent (i.e. tenured)
scientists.)
1967-. ?
Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University.
(Moved to SFU with seven colleagues from Bel levi lie to set
up the pestology programme, following the failure of attempts
to persuade CDA to move the Belleville Institute to a university
campus for that purpose. The Pestology Centre now has a
faculty of 12.)
?
.

 
24.
BEIRNE, Bryan Patrick
? - 2 -
University activities
(a) Courses:
Biol 102-4, Introduction to Biology 68-1, 68-3, 70-I, 71-2, 72-2.
BIol 435-3, Introduction to pestology 68-3, 69-2, 69-3, 70-3, 71-2, 72-I.
Biol 840-3, Economic organisms, I. 69-3.
Blot 8473, Pest Management Systems 71-I.
(b) Committees, etc.:
University Committee on Salaries and Promotions from 1967 until
It ceased to exist.
University Tenure Committee, sinde its establishment (occasional
acting Chairman)
Various BIo-Sciences Department, Faculty
?
Association, and ad hoc
University committees;
Acting Acting Chairman of the Bio-Sciences Department on various
occasions.
Supervisor of two to four graduate students at any
one time and
member of supervisory committees for others.
(c) Extramural Grants Received:
1967-68.
?
NRC interim Research Grant
$3,000
1968-69. ?
NRC Operating Research Grant
$22,050
• ?
1968-72. ?
NRC Negotiated Development Grant to
the University for the Pestology
Centre
$323,000
1969-70. ?
NRC Operating Research Grant
$15,000
1970-71. ?
NRC Operating Research Grant
$10,000
CDA Extramural Research Contract Grant
$4,800
NRC Publication Grant
$3,000
1971-72. ?
NRC Operating Research Grant
$11,500
CDA Extramural Research Contract Grant
$5,000
Scholarly Accomplishments
(a) Total publications approximately 125, including six books, in the
following main areas: taxonomy, bionomics, and morphology of butterflIs
and moths, of parasitic flies, and of leafhoppers, treehoppers, and
cicadas; distribution and zoogeography of animals, especially insects;
ecology of Individual pest and other insect species; principles of
biological and integrated controls and of pest management; ecology,
evaluation and forecasting of agricultural pests; and miscellaneous
Including entomological techniques, history, and bibliography.
S

 
.2 ?
25.
S
.
BEIRNE, Bryan Patrick
?
-3-
Scholarly Accomplishments (continued)
(b) Recent publications are:
Pest Management (Leonard Hill Books, London, 1967.
123
pp.
(By invitation; refereed)
Biological Control and its Potential. World Rev. Pest Control
6 (1967): 7-20.
?
(By invitation).
The future of integrated control's. Rep. 11th Pacific Sci. Lot 40.
Mushi 39 (1967): R127-130. (By invitation:
_refereed).
The future of biological controls. Proc. XIII internat. Cong. Ent.
Moscow (1968) (page nos. not available). (By Invitation).
The practical feasibility of pest management systems. InR.L. Rabb
and F. E. Guthrie, Concepts of Pest Management (1970): 158-169.
N.C. State Univ. Press. (By Invitation)
Effects of sprinkler irrigation on Mcdaniel and European red spider
mites in apple orchards. J. ent. Soc. Br. Columb. 67 (1970):
8-13. (With W.B. Hudson; refereed).
Effects of prec4pltation on crop Insects. Can. Ent. 102 (1970):
1360-1373. (Refereed).
Pest Insects of Annual Crop Plants in Canada. I. Lepidoptera.
TT.
Diptera. ?
Ill. Coleoptera. Mem. Ent. Soc. Can. 78 (1971).
T4 pp. (Refereed)
Pest management through people management. Proc. Tall Timbers Conf.
on Ecol. Animal Control by Habitat Management. 3 (in press).
(By
Invitation).
Professional Societies, Conferences, Committees, and the like
(a) Society Memberships:
Member of the Royal Irish Academy
Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society of London
Fellow of the Linnean Society
Fellow of the Zoological Society
Entomological Society of Canada, member
Entomological Society of America, member
Canadian Society of Zoologists, member
International Society of Blometeorology, member
British
Trust
for Entomology, member
Royal Zoological Society of Ireland
American Association forte Advancement of
Entomological. Society of Ontario, member
Entomological Society of British Columbia,
(Invited addresses to most of the above
Science, member
member
and held offices on some).
fl

 
• 1•
?
26.
BEIRNE, Bryan Patrick
S
.
0
(b)
Invited participant in:
International Congresses of Entomology (four)
International Congresses of Plant Protection (two)
International Congress of Parasitology
International Conference of Insect Pathology and Biological Control
International Union of Biological Societies Special Conference on
the International Organization of Biological Control
Pacific Science Congress
Commonwealth Agriculture Bureau Review Conferences (three)
International Conference on Integrated Controls
U.N. World Health Organization Special Conference on Disease Vectors
U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization Special Conference on
Integrated Controls
American Institute of Biological Sciences Special Conference
,
on
Biological Control of Insects of Medical Importance
International Great Plains Conference of Entomologists
Entomological Society of America - American Institute of Biological
Sciences Special Conference on Concepts of Pest Management
And various Canadian and U.S. regional conferences.
(c)
Committees (current or recent unless indicated otherwise):
Member, Science Council of Canada Advisory Committee on Basic Biology
Chairman (former and first), International Advisory Committee on
Biological Control
Member, International Biological Programme National (Canada) Use
and Management Committee
Member, International Biological Programme, International Biological
Control Committee
Co-Chairman (and Lead Speaker) Tall Timbers Research Foundation
Conference on Ecological Animal Control by Habitat Management
?
Member, National Research Council of Canada ad hoc Committees on
Negotiated Development Grants
Council Member (formerly), Professional Institute of the Public
Service of Canada
Member, Organizational Committee, International Organization for
Biological Control
Member, British Columbia Research Council
And formerly member of various Committees of societies and conferences
listed above, of CDA-CDF, CDA-USDA, etc.
(d)
Miscellaneous other activities:
Invited seminars at various universities and research centres in
Canada, United States, Britain, Ireland, and Continental Europe
Various addresses to non-professional organizations and on radio
and television, mainly In Canada but also in the U.S. and Europe
In 1946-49 promoted to the Irish andU.S. governments a plan for a
national agricultural research organization in Ireland. This
plan was the basis for the U.S. financing of what is now the
Agricultural Institute of Ireland.

 
27.
BEIRNE, Bryan Patrick
?
- 5 -
..
Cd) Miscellaneous other activities
?
(continued)
In 1962-67 promoted to the Canadian Government a plan for
professional ?
integration of government-university research
resources in and related to pesttnagement.
?
This plan was
not implemented at that time.
?
One consequence was the move of
myself and colleagues from government to university where we
have since promoted the plan directly and through various
committees with some encouraging degree of practical and
potential ?
success.
Associate Editor, Canadian Journal of Zoology, regular project
referee for U.S. and Canadian granting agencies.consultant
to government and other agencies in entomological aspects of
environmental ?
problems, etc.
Currently planning, with colleagues, structured professional
?
and
pare-professional programmes in Pest Management for SFU.
Currently, by invitation of the
?
International Development Research
Centre, organizing a meeting at SFU of experts on world pest.
problems to plan for Canada its overseas aid programmes in
non-chemical ?
pest control.
Currently discussing with the Canadian
?
International Development
Agency ways in which the SFU Pestology Centre might assist and
collaborate in developing pest management education in
developing countries.
11

 
28.
?
May 1972
CURRICULUM VITAE: ADDENDA
BEIRNE, Bryan Patrick
Curriculum vitae to August
197
1
attached. The following are addenda
to April 1972.
University Activities
Member: faculty recruitment committees re BioSciences and PSA
departments; Chairman recruiting committee re Philosophy Department;
and Philosophy Department Tenure Committee.
Prepared proposals for Master In Pest Management programme.
Received research grants for 1972-73 of $11,500 from the National
Research Council of Canada and $5,000 from the Canada Department of
Agriculture.
Invitations
Introductory address, Summer Institute on Biological Control of Plant
Diseases and Insects, Mississippi State University.
?
?
Plenary address, First International Conference on the Organic Method
for Farm and Garden, San Francisco. (Invitation not accepted.)
Participant, Conference on the Integrated Control of Insect Pests,
International Ecosystems University, Berkeley.
Member, Standing Committee on Entomology, Pacific Science Association.
Speaker, Annual Conference, Canadian Agricultural Chemicals Association.
Scholarly Publications (all in refereed journals)
Pest Insects of Annual Crop Plants In Canada. IV, Hemlptera-Homoptera.
V, Orthoptera. VI, Other groups. Mem. Ent. Soc., Can. No. 85, 73
pp.
1972.
Pest management through people management. Proc. Tall Timbers Conf. on
Ecol. Animal Control by Habitat Management 3: 1-7. 1972.
The biological control attempt against the European wheat-stem sawfly,
Cephus pygmaeus (Hymenoptera) in Ontario. Caned. Ent. (In press).
A grape leafhopper, Erythroneura zlczac (Homoptera), and its myrnarid
(Hymenoptera) egg-parasite in the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia. Caviad.
Ent. (In press) ?
(With L. M.MacKenzie).
0

 
29.
Department of Biological Sciences
&imon Fraser. University
CURRICULUM VITAE
May, 1972
Name: ?
John Slaney BARLOW
?
Age:51
Pr e sent Faculty Position: Professor and
Associate Dean of Science
Term of Present Contract:
.
Tenured - First Appointed August 1, 1967
Associate Dean - From 1 July 1969
Degrees:
?
B.S.A. ?
Ontario Apricultural College
?
1942
M.A.
?
University of Toronto
?
1948
Ph.D.
?
University of Toronto ?
1952
Career: ?
1942-45 Royal Canadian Air Force
1945-46 Research Scientist, Soap Chemistry, Lever Bros.
1947-50
Demonstrator, Medical Biochemistry, University of Toronto
?
1951-53 Research, Defence Research Northern Laboratory
1953-67 Research Scientist, Research Institute, Belleville,
Canada Department of Agriculture.
1967- ?
Professor, Simon Fraser University.
Contributi
a) Courses
301
401
842
ScienceOlO
DflS
to SFU:
taught
- Biochemistry I -
- Biochemistry II
- Internal Process
- Modern Trends in
Fall 1967, Summer 1968, Spring 1969
- Fall 1967, Summer 1968, Fall 1968, 196,
Spring 1970, 1971.
as - Spring 1970
the Natural Sciences - Spring 1970, 1971, 1972
b) Other Contributions
Chairman, Biochemistry Committee
Undergraduate Standings and Admissions Committee
Associate Dean of Science
Graduate Students
C. van Netteri
K. Penner - M.
. ? S. N. Thompson
S. N. Thompson
- M.Sc., Ma y
1969
5c.,Au-.-just 1970
- M.Sc., May 1970
- Ph.D. program
.12

 
• ?
curriculum Vitae
?
-2-
?
-
?
May, 1972
J. S. !arlow,_
Scholarly t.ttus:
a)
Invited Addresses since 1967 - Some host-parasite relationships in
fatty acid metabolism. Conference - Significance of Insect and
Mite Nutrition, Carnahan House, Lexington, Kentucky.
b)
Society Memberships (and offices formerly held)
Canadian Society of Biochemistry
Canadian Society of Physiology
Entomological Society of British Columbia
Entomological Society of Canaia.
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a)
Areas of scholarly specialization
General and nutritional biochemistry of insects
Insect physiology
b)
Publications - Total 30
?
1966 ?
Barlow, J. S. Effects of diet on the composition of body fat in
Musca domestica L.
?
Can. J. Zool. 44:775-779.
?
1966 ?
Barlow, J. S. Effects of diet on the composition of body fat in
Lucilia sericata (Meigen). Nature 212:148.
?
1966 ?
Barlow, J. S. Electrolytes in tissues, red cells, and plasma of
the polar bear and caribou. Can. J. Zool. 44:235-240 (with
J. S. Manery and J. M. Forbes).
1967 Barlow, J. S. Fatty acid compositions of Exeristes comstockii
(Cress) reared on different hosts. Can. J. Zool. 45:57-61
(with G. K. Bracken).
1970 Barlow, J. S. Distribution of long-chain fatty acids among the
lipid classes of Lucilia sericata (Meigen) and Galleria mellonella
(Linneaus). Can. J. Zool. 48:775-778 (with 0. B. Lindsay).
?
1970
?
Barlow, J. S. The fatty acid composition of the cuticle and fat
body tissue from Tenebrio molitor (L.), Periplaneta americana (L.)
and Schistocerca gregaria (Forskal.). Comp. Biochem. Physiol.
36:103-106. (with S. N. Thompson)
?
1970 ?
Barlow, J. S. The change in fatty acid pattern of Itoplectus
conguisitor (3ay) reared on different hosts. J. Parasitol.
56:1345-846. (with S. N. Thompson)
. 1971 Barlow, J. S. Aspects of fatty acid metabolism in Galleria mellonella
(L.) (Lepidoptera:Pyralidae): Isolation of the elongation systcm.
Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 38:333-346.

 
• ?
curricium
Vitae
?
w
?
May, 17
J. S. Barlow
S
Barlow, J. S. 1971. Further characterization of the principal long-
chain, unsaturated fatty acids of the blowfly Lucilia sericata (Meigen)
and a preliminary investigation into their origin. J. Comp. Biochem.
and Physiol. 39B: 823-832. (With 0. B. Lindsay).
Barlow, J. S. 1971. An improved chemically defined diet for Lucilia
sericata. Can. Ent. 103: 1341-1345.
Barlow, J. S. 1971. Incorporation of Na-1-
1
'C-acetate into the fatty
acids of two insect parasites (Hymenoptera) reared on different hosts.
Can. J. Zool. 49: 1297-1300. (With G. K. Bracken).
Submitted:
Barlow, J. S. 1971. Synthesis of fatty acids by Exeristes comstockii
(Cress) (Hymenoptera:Ichneumonidae) and two hosts, Galleria mellonella
(L.)
(Lipidoptera:Pyralidae) and Lucilia sericata (Meigen) (Diptera:
Calliphoridae)
from C-1-acetate. 3. Insect Biochem. (with S. N.
Thompson).
Barlow, J. S. 1971. Aspects of fatty acid metabolism in Galleria
41
mellonella: The consistency of the fatty acid pattern of Galleria
mellonella reared on fatty acid supplemented diets. J. Insect
Biochem. (with S. N. Thompson).
Barlow, J. S. 1972. The composition and metabolishm of fatty acids in
Ips
praconfusus Lanier (Coleoptera: Scolytidae). Can. J. Zool. (With
K. R.
Penner).
Published under my supervision:
Thompson, S. N. and R. B. Bennett. 1971. Oxidation of fat during flight
of male Douglas-fir beetles, Dendroctonus pseudotsugae. J. Insect
Physiol. 17: 1555-1563
Additional Information:
a) Formerly represented Ontario Minister for Education on Board of
McArthur College of Education, Kingston, Ontario.
Formerly Member and Chairman, Belleville High School Board
Formerly Member and Chairman, Belleville and Suburban Planning Board
Formerly Member, Belleville Com.nittee of Adjustment
Formerly Alderman of the City of Belleville
1966 - Belleville Citizen of the
Year.
is
/4

 
Curriculum Vitae
May, 19?
J. S.
Barlow
S
W
Research Grants:
1967-68
NRC
Interim Research Grant
$3,000.
1968-69
NRC
Operating
Research
Grant
5,880.
NRC
Equipment
Research
Grant
15,000.
1969-70
NRC
Operating
Research
Grant
7,000.
1970-71
NRC
Operating
Research
Grant
4,000.
1971-72
NRC
Operating
Research
Grant
4,000.
1972-73
NRC
Operating
Research Grant
6,000.
(three year grant)
.
0

 
33.
S
U
S
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
May 1972
Name: ?
Johann Peter Manfred MACKAUER
? Age: 39
Present Faculty Position: Professor
Term of Present Contract: Tenured - First Appointed August 1, 1967
Degrees:
?
Dr. Phil. nat. (magna cum laude). - 1959
Universitt Frankfurt M.
Career: ?
1959-61 Research Associate, Zoologisches Institut,
Universitt Frankfurt M.
1961-67 Research Scientist, Research Institute Belleville,
Canada Department of Agriculture
1964-67 Group Leader, Research Institute Belleville,
Canada Department of Agriculture
1967- ?
Full Professor, Department of Biological Sciences,
Simon Fraser University.
Contributions to SFU:
a)
Courses taught
202 - Genetics - Spring & Fall 1968, Spring 1969,1970,1971,1972.
408 - Parasitic Associations - Fall 1969 & 1970
844 - Biology of Entomophagous Insects - Spring 1969,1970,1972
859 - Aphid Biology and Damage (Special Topics I) - Spring 1971.
317 - Entomology - Summer 1971.
b)
Other Contributions
Chairman, Dept. Seminar - Fall 1967 to Spring 1970
Member, Departmental Committee on Graduate Studies; Recruiting;
ad hoc Committee on Ph.D. requirements
Served on various other Faculty of Science, Senate and University
Committees
Acting President, SFU Faculty Association - July to September 1970
President, SFU Faculty Association - October 1970 to June 1971.
/2

 
• ?
Curriculum Vitae
?
2 ?
- ?
34.
J. P. M. Mackauer ?
May 1972
S ?
Scholarly Status:
a)
Invited Addresses, including:
"Status of and Concepts in Biological Control", at Institut fur
Phytopathologie und Pflanzenschutz, Universitt Gttingen, 1967
"Biological Control as an Aspect of Pest Management", at Taiwan
Agricultural Research Institute, Taipei, 1968.
"Genetic Aspects of Mass Production", at OILB-FAO International Symposium
?
on the Implications of Permanent Insect Production, Rome, 1971.
"Biological Controls of Aphids", at 12th Pacific Science Congress
(Symposium J - Interacting Organisms and Population Control),
Canberra, 1971.
"The General Applicability of Evaluation Results", at
14th
International
Congress of Entomology (Symposium on The Quantitative Evaluation
of Insect Natural Enemies), Canberra, 1972.
"The effects of the host on aphid parasites", at World Aphid Conference,
- Lincoln, New Zealand, 6-8 September 1972.
b) Membership in Professional Societies:
S ?
Canadian Society of Zoologists
Entomological Society of America
Entomological Society of Canada
Deutsche entomologische Gesellschaft
Deutsche Gesellschaft fur angewaridte Entomologie
Society of Systematic.Zoology
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a) Area of Specialization
Bio-systematics of hymenopterous parasites of aphids (Hymenoptera:
Aphidiidae and Aphelinidae)
Evolution and genetics of host-parasite systems
Insect parasitology, in particular interactions between host and
parasite, immune reactions, parasitogenic effects on host,
parasite behaviour.
Biological controls of aphids.
.../3

 
• ?
Curriculum vitae,i ?
35
J. P. M. Mackauer
?
May 1972
.
?
I) Publications - Total number published or in press: 66
Since 1965 -
?
?
(papers marked by an asterisk (*) were prepared by
?
invitation).
Books
*1967 Mackauer, M. and P. Stary. World Aphidiidae (Hym. Ichneumonoidea).
Le Francois, Paris. 195
pp.
?
In: Index of Entornophagous ?
Insects.
*1968 Family Aphidiidae. Dr. W. Junk N.V., 's-Gravenhage 1968, 103 pp.
In: Hyinenopterorum Catalogus, nova editio, 3.
Publications in Journals
1965 Two simple devices for rearing aphids. J. econ. Ent., 58:365-366.
(With H. E. Bisdee).
1965 Notes on and additions to the Trioxys and Biriodoxys species
(Hymenoptera:Aphidiidae) of North America. Can. Ent., 97:
225-231.
1965 Histological and karyometric examinations of the oenocytes of
• ?
Aphis pçrni DeGeer (Horn., Aphididae). Naturwissenschaf ten,
?
52:351-352. (In German)
1965 Aphidius smithi Sharma and Subba Rao (Hymenoptera:Aphidiidae)
a parasite of the pea aphid new in southern Ontario. Proc.
ent. Soc. Ontario, 95:121-124. (With H. E. Bisdee).
1965 Parasitological data as an aid in aphid classification.
Can. Ent, 97:1016-1024.
1965 Notes on some Danish aphid parasites (Hym., Aphidiidae).
Ent. Meddr, 34:103-106. (With 0. Heie).
1965 A new Aphidius species (Hym., Aphidiidae) parasitic on the
blackberry aphid, Sitobion fragariae (F.) (Horn., Aphididae).
Dtsch. ent. Z., N.F., 12:347-349.
1966 A new aphid parasite from West Africa (Hym.,, Aphidiidae).
Entomologist's mon. Mag., 101:116-118.
1967 A new genus and several new species of aphid parasites (HyTn.
Aphidiidae). Entomophaga, 12:139-147.
*1967 ?
Host association and parallel
evolution in
the parasitic-Hymenop-
tera.
?
I.
?
General aspects
and parasites
of the Homoptera,
0
Part I.
?
Angew.
?
Parasit.,
8:21-39.
?
(In German).
./4

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
"
?
36.
J. P. M. Mackauer ?
May 1972
. ?
1967 The hymenopterous parasites (Hytnenoptera:Aphidiidae et
Aphelinidae) of the pea aphid in eastern North America.
Canad. Ent., 99:1051-1082. (with T. Finlayson).
*1968 The Aphidiidae of Finland (Hymeñoptera). Fauna fennica, 22:
1-40. (In German).
1968 Aphidius rubifolii n. sp. Hymenoptera:Aphidiidae), a parasitoid
of Masonaphis maxima from British Columbia. J. ent. Soc. Br.
Columbia, 65:34-35. ?
S
?
-
*1968 Insect parasites of the green peach aphid, Myzus persicae Sulz.,
and their control potential. Entomophaga, 13:91-106.
1968 Phenotypic polymorphism in Aphidius smithi Sharma & Subba Rao
(Hymenoptera :Aphidiidae). Entomophaga, 13:281-287.
*1968 Zoogeographical aspects of biological control. Natur und Museum,
Frankfurt M., 98:491-495. (In German).
*1969 Sexual behaviour of and hybridization between three species of
Aphidius Nees (Hymenoptera:Aphidiidae), parasitic on the pea
aphid. Proc. ent. Soc. Wash., 71:339-351.
1970 Effect of gene Orange on the duration of larval developirtent in
. ?
Aphidius smithi (Hymenoptera:Aphidiidae). Ann. ent. Soc.
Amer., 63:342-343.
*1971 Acyrthosiphon pisum (Harris}, Pea Aphid (Romoptera: AphJdidae),
pp.
3-10. In.: Biological Control Programmes against Insects
and Weeds in Canada 1959-1968. Techn. Comxnun. Commonw. Inst.
biol. Control, 4.
1971 Trioxys acericola, n. sp. (Hym., Aphidiidae), a parasite of the
aphid Drepanosiphoniella from France. Ann. ent. Soc. France,
N. S.,
7:885-887. (With P. Stary).
*1972 Genetic aspects of insect production. Entomophaga, 17:27-48.
The establishment of three exotic aphid parasites (Hymenoptera:
Aphidiidae) in British Columbia.
J.
ent. Soc. B. C., 69 (in
press). (With A. Campbell).
The aphid-attacking genera of Aphelinidae (Hymenoptera), including
the description of a new genus. Canad. Ent. (submitted for
publication).
Antennal amputation as a method for bio-marking aphids. J. econ.
Entom. (submitted for publication).
.
./5

 
Curriculum Vitae
114W
?
37.
J.
P. M. Mackauer
?
May 1972
0 ?
Additional Information
a)
Other positions
1960- Member, Centre d'Identification, International Organization of
Biological Control (O.I.L.B.), Geneva.
1968- Member, Editorial Board of Journal "Entomophaga".
1968- Chairman, International Biological Programme (I.B.P.-Section UM)
Core Project on "Biological Controls of Aphids".
1970- Member, Advisory Committee for symposium
3,
12th
p
acific Science
Congress.
1971 Member, Canadian Delegation to the XII Pacific Science Congress,
Canberra, August - September.
1972 chairman, Section on Aphid Population Dynamics, World Aphid
?
Conference, Lincoln, New Zealand, 6-8 September 1972.
b)
Scholarships Received
1959-61 Research Fellowship, German Federal Ministry of Agriculture..
1961 ?
Special Research Grant, International Organization of Biological
Control.
1961 ?
National Research Council of Canada Post-Doctoral Fellowship
(awarded but not accepted).
c) ?
Research Grants Received at SFU
1967
NRC Interim Grant in Aid of Research
$3,700
1968
NRC Grant in Aid of Research
9,800
NRC Major Equipment Grant
8,700
NRC Travel Grant
1,290
1969
NRC Grant in Aid of Research
8,000
1970
NRC Grant in Aid of Research
?
.
8,000
President's Research Grant
1,300
I.B.P. Special Conference Grant
3,000
1971
NRC Grant in Aid of Research
8,000
NRC Travel Grant
1,084
1972
NRC Grant in Aid of Research
8,000

 
38.
Department of Biological Sciences
.
?
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
May, 1972
Name:
?
Karunakaran Krishna NAIR
?
Age:51
?
Present Faculty Position: Professor
Term of Present Contract: Tenured - First Appointed August 1, 1967
Degrees: B.Sc. 1942 University of Madras
M.Sc. 1947 University of Bombay
Ph.D. 1952 University of Bombay
Career: ?
1956-59 Professor and Head, Zoology Dept. Wilson College, Bombay.
1959-65 Head, Dept. of Insect Sterilization and Pest Control,
Atomic Energy Establishment, Trombay, Bombay.
1965-67 Research Scientist, Canada Dept. of Agriculture
Research Institute, Belleville (Sub-group leader).
1967- ?
Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, SF0.
Contributions to SFU:
a)
Courses taught
305 - Animal Physiology - Fall 1967, Summer 1968, Fall 1969, Spring 1971,Fall
448 - Experimental Techniques III - 1/3 Summer 1968, Spring 1969, 1970
?
197
Summer 1971,Spring 1972
810 - Ionizing Radiations and Radioisotopes in Biology - ½ Summer 1971.
842 - Internal Processes - Summer 1969, Spring 1971, 1972
490, 491, 492 - Individual Study Semester - Fall, 1971.
b)
Other contributions
Member, Executive Committee, Faculty of Science 1969-1971
Member, University Radiological Safety Committee -1971
Chairman, University Radiological Safety Committee 1970-71
Member, Senate 1971 -
Member, Department Electron Microscope Committee
Member, University Selection Committee (NRC Scholarship)
Member, Senate
Nomination
Committee
.../2
ri

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
-2-
?
39.
K. K. Nair
?
May, 1972
S ?
Serve
on the Supervisory Committee of the following:
A.
Barr (Major Supervisor)
D. Mahon (Major Supervisor)
R. Paulson
B.
Jenks
S. Clement
V. Lai
C. Slater
C. Malloy
S.Craig
L. Beebe (Major Supervisor)
Scholarly
Status:
Papers presented at conferences:
1970 Nair, K. K. and N. M. G.
Bhakthan. Ultrastructural damage in
the somatic tissues of gamma-irradiated house fly. IVth mt.
Contress on Radiation Research, Evian, France.
Society Membership:
Life Member,
Society of Animal Morphologists and Physiologists of
India
Entomological Society of Canada
Canadian Society for Cell Biology
Entomological Society of America
American Mosquito Control Association
Scholarly Accomplishments
a)
Areas of Research
Radiation Entomology, Developmental Physiology (Insects)
b)
Publications - Total 46
1968 Rahalkar,
G. W.
and K. K. Nair. Influence of diapause on the radio-
sensitivity of Khapra beetle larvae. Isotopes and Radiation in
Entomology. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna 149-154.
C
./3

 
Curricu1ui vitae ?
40.
K. K.
Nair
?
May, 1972
.
??
1968 Harwalakar, M.
R.
and K. K. Nair. Effect
of X-irradiation
on post-
?
embryonic development of the red cotton bug, Dysdercus koenigii.
Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 61:1107-1111.
1968 Sivasubramanian,
R., G.
Bhaskaran and K. K. Nair. Imaginal differentia-
tion in X-irradiated pupae of the housefly, Musca domestica nebulo
(Fabr.). Proc. of the 13th International Congress in Entomology,
Moscow.
1969 Nair, K. K. and N.
M. G.
Bhakthan. Preliminary studies on the ultra-
structural damage in the flight muscles of gamma-irradiated housefly.
mt. J. Radiat. Biol. 16(4) :397-399.
1969 Bhakthan,
N. M.
0.,
K. K.
Nair and J. H. Borden. Occurrence of a fat
body layer around the testes of Ips confusus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae).
Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 62(6):1495-1496.
1969 Borden, J. H., K. K. Nair and C. E. Slater. Synthetic juvenile hormone:
Induction of
sex
pheromone production inIps confusus. Science 16:
1626-1627.
1970 Sivasubramanian, P., G. Bhaskaran and
K.
K. Nair. Effects of x-rays on
morphogenesis In the housefly. J. Insect Physiol. 16:89-97.
1970 Sivasubramanian, P., G. Bhaskaran and K. K. Nair. Differentiation of
. ?
the imaginal muscles in x-irradiated housefly pupae. Ann. Ent.
?
Soc.
of America. 63(4)-1019-1022.
1970 Bhakthan,
N. M. G.,
J.
H. Borden and K. K. Nair. Fine structure of
degenerating and regenerating flight muscles in a bark beetle,
confusus. I. Degeneration. J. Cell Sc., 6:807-820.
1971 Bhakthan,
N. M.
C., K. K. Nair and J. H. Borden. Fine structure of
degenerating and regenerating flight muscles in a bark beetle,
confusus. U. Regeneration. Can. J. Zool. 49:85-89.
1972 Kearns, D. R. and K. K. Nair. Physiological studies on the effects of
tepa on Schistocerca gregaria. Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 65:216-221.
1972 Bhakthan,
N. M.
G. and K. K. Nair. Fine structural changes in the
somatic tissues of gamma-irradiated housefly. I. Flight muscles.
Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 65:504-508.
1972 Nair,
K. K.
and H. Menon. Detection of juvenile-hormone-induced gene
activity in the colleterial gland nuclei of Periplaneta by
3
H-actinomycin-D "staining" technique. Experientia,
?
.
(in press).
1972 Menon, M. and K. K. Nair. Sex pheromone production and reproductive
behaviour in gamma-irradiated Tenebrio molitor. J. Insect Physio]..
(In press).
S
/4

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
4 ?
41.
K. K.Nair ?
May, 1972
S
?
1972 Nair, K. K. and Menon, M. Detection bf juvenile-hormone-induced
template activity by Feulgen microspectrophotometry. Accepted
for
presentation at the 4th International Congress of Histo-
chemistry and Cytochemistry, Kyoto, Japan.
Additional Accomplishments
Served as a consultant and panel member, International Atomic Energy
Agency (Vienna) of the United Nations Organization.
Chairman, I.A.E.A./F.A.O/F.A.O.
Symposium, Radioisotopes and Radiation
in Relation to Agricultural Pests, Athens, 1963.
Served on the Sub-Committee of chemosterilants. Defence Research
Board of Canada.
S
Member, Editorial Board. Journal of Animal Morphology and Physiology.
Attended the I.A.E.A./F.A.0. Symposium on Radiation Entomology at
Athens, Greece as a nominee of the Canada Department of Agriculture, August,
1970.
Research Grants
1967-68
NRC
Interim Operating Grant
$3,000.
Travel Grant
840.
1968-69
NRC Operating Grant
7,840.
NRC Equipment
Grant
12,000.
1969-70
NRC
Operating Grant
8,000.
SFU
President's
Research Grant
1,000.
1970-71
NRC
Operating
Grant (3 yr.)
8,000.
1971-72
NRC
Operating
Grant
8,000.
1972-73
NRC
Operating Grant
8,000.
SFU President's Research Grant
1,000.
NRC Equipment
Grant
8,000.

 
Department of Biological Sciences
• ?
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
May, 1972
Name:
?
Albert L. TURNBULL ?
Age:_
Present Faculty
Position: Professor
Term of Present Contract: Tenured - First Appointed July 20, 1967
Degrees: B.S.F.
?
1951 University of British Columbia
M.F.
?
1953 University of British Columbia
D. Phil. 1957 Oxford University
Career: ?
1950-1954 Biol. Control Research Lab, Canada Dept. of
Agriculture, Vancouver
1954-1967 Research Institute, Canada Dept. of Agriculture,
Belleville, Ontario
1967- ?
Simon Fraser University
Contributions to SFU:
a)
Courses taught
?
003-3
?
Ecology of Pop. Explosion - Winter 1969, 1970, 1971
?
304-3
?
Animal Ecology - Spring 1968, 1969, 1970, Winter 1970, 1971
?
407-3
?
Population Dynamics - Winter 1967, 1968, 1969, Spring 1971, 1972
?
804-3
?
Advanced Ecology - Spring 1968
?
843-3
?
Population Processes - Winter 1968
?
879-3
?
Special Topics III - Spring 1969
?
PDC461-471 Envirormtenta]. Education- Summer 1971
Supervision of 3 graduate students.
b) Service to University
1.
Senator - 3 year term commencing 1969
2. Senate Appeals Board, 1969-1970
3. Academic Planning Committee, 1969-
4.
Joint Board of Teacher Education, 1971-
5.
Ad-Hoc Committee on Environmental Studies Program
S ?
6. Ad-Hoc Committee on Environmental Health Program
7.
Dept. of Communications (pro-teni) Curriculum Committee
8.
Dean of Science Rep. on University Statistics Committee
9.
Academic Committee for TV, Ecology Project (isc 204)
10.
Fac. of Education Committee for PDP 461 & 471 (Kamloops Outdoor
Education Project).

 
?
• S ?
• Curriculum Vitae
?
-2- ?
May, 1972
A. L. Turnbull
?
• ?
c) Service
to Community
1. T. V.
Programs (Channel 9 Cablevision)
Simon Fraser University Today
2 series of 6 hours each - Auspices
of SFU Alumni Association
2.
High School Ecology Lectures
Multi-media
plus 1 hour lecture
21 High Schools in Lower Mainland
3.
Elementary School Ecology Lectures
Multi-media plus ½ hour lecture ? - -
19 Elementary schools in Lower Mainland.
4. Nine
guest appearances on hot line radio shows and innumerable
addresses
to local service clubs, professional bodies, etc.
Scholarly Status:
a)
1967 Seminar, Biological Control of Insects. Queen's University
1967 Seminar, Natural Regulation of Animal Populations. Guelph Univ.
?
?
1967 Seminar, The Role of Araneae in the Regulation of Axthropods
in Grassland Communities. Biology Club, Harvard Univ.
1967 Seminar, Homeostasis in Animal Communities. Queen's University
1969 Seminar,
The Ecological Role of Pest
Animals. Green Timbers Res.
Station, Tallahasee, Florida.
1970 Seminar, Environmental Ecology. University of Victoria.
b)
Society Membership
British Ecological Society
Entomological Society of Canada
Entomological Society of. Ontario
Entomological Society of B. C.
Canadian Society of Zoology
American Entomological Society
1964 - Secretary of Biol. Control Section
1965 - Vice-Chairman of Biol. Control Section
1966 - Chairman of Bid. Control Section
Centre
International de Documentation Arachnologique
.
./3

 
?
Curriculum Vitae
?
v ?
May, 1972
A. L. Turnbull
• ?
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a) Areas
of Scholarly Specialization
1 • Animal ecology - particularly of Arthropods
2.
Population dynamics
3.
Biological control of insect pests
4.
Taxonomy and biology of Araneae
b) Publications - Total 23
1965 Effects of prey abundance on the development of a spider Agelenopsis
potteri (Blackwall) (Araneae: Agelinidae). Can. Entomologist 97:
141-147. Refereed.
1965 The spider genus Xysticus C. L. Koch (Araneae: Thomisidae) in Canada.
Can. Entomologist 97:1233-1280. (With C. D. Dondale and J. Redner).
Refereed.
1966 Effects of predator and prey densities on interactions between goldfish
and Daphnia pulex (DeGeer). Can. J. Zool. 44:285-289. (With D. A.
Chant). Refereed.
1966 A population of spiders and their potential prey in an overgrazed
pasture in Eastern Ontario. Can. J. Zool. 44:557-583. Refereed.
1966 A "quick trap" for area sampling of Arthropods in grassland communities.
J. Econ. Entomology 59:1100-1104. (With C. F. Nicholls). Refereed
1967 Population dynamics of exotic insects. Bull. Ent. Soc. America 13:
333-337. Refereed - Invitation
1969 Biological control of insect pests. Chapter Prepared for Text.
"Principles of Plant and Animal Pest Control", Vol. 3, Insect-Pest
Management and Control, U. S. Acad..Sci., Washington, D. C. Invitation.
1969 The ecological role of pest populations. Proc. Tall Timbers Conference
on Ecological Animal Control by habitat management. 1:219-232.
Invitation.
An improved Berlese-Tullgren funnel and a floatation separator for
extracting grassland arthropods. Can. Entomologist (in press).
(With Dondal, C. D. and C. F. Nicholls).
A five year record of spider species from a meadow community in
south-east Ontario. Can. Entomologist (in press).(With Dondale, C. D.,
J. H. Redner and R. B. Sample).
?
1969 Wandering of hunting spiders in a meadow. C. R.
4e
Cong intern.
Arachn., Paris (IV. 1968); Bull. Mus. Hist. nat., 41 (suppl. 1).
(With C. D. Dondale, J. H. Redner, E. Farrell, and R. B. Semple).
1972 Ecology of Spiders. (A Review). Annual Reviews of Entom, 18.
Ann. Reviews Inc., Palo Alto, Calif. (in press), Invitation.

 
?
45.
-
Curriculum
Vitae ?
May, 1972
A. L. Turnbull
10 ?
Additional Comments
Research Grants
National Research Council
1967 - Interim Grant
?
$3,000.00
1968-69 - Operating Grant
? 9,800.00
- Major Equipment Grant ? 5,500.00
1969-70 - Operating Grant ? 10,000.00
1970-71 - ?
8,000.00
1971-72 ?
6,000.00
Leon & Thea Koerner Foundation
1969-70 Grant for
BiSci 003 ?
1,000.00
1970-71 Grant for
BiSci
003 ?
500.00
.
is

 
• ?
46.
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
May, 1972
Name: ?
John Malcolm WEBSTER ?
Age: 35
Present Faculty Position:—Professor
Term of Present Contract:Tenured
-
First appointed 16 August 1967.
Degrees:
B.Sc. (Special) Imperial College, London Univ. England 1958
Ph.D. ?
Imperial College, London Univ. England 1962
DIC ?
Imperial College, London Univ. England 1962
Career: 1958-61 Agricultural Research Council Scholar, Imperial College.
1961-66 Scientific Officer, Rothamsted Experimental Station,-Eng.
1966-67 Research Scientist, Canada Dept. of Agriculture,
Research Institute, Belleville, Ontario.
. ?
1967-71 Associate Professor, Simon Fraser University.
1971- ?
Professor
Contributions toSPU
a)
Courses taught
Biology 203
-
Developmental Biology
-
68-1,
69-1, 70-1, , 70-3, ?
72-2
Biology
408
- Parasitic Associations
- 69-3,
72-1
Biology
498
- Undergraduate Research
- 69-1
(2 students)
Biology
841
- Economic Organisms II
- 68-3,
69-3
Biology 848
- Nematology - 71-1
Biology 859
- Special Topics - 68-1,
70-1.
b)
Other contributions to SFU
Graduate Student Sunervision
Senior Supervisor - Paulson, R. E. (Ph.D.)
Craig, S. (M.Sc.)
Hunter, D. (M.Sc.)
Lam, A. (M.Sc.) 1967-70
Pitcher, J. (M.Sc.)
Thong, C. (Ph.D.)
On Supervisory
Committee
?
?
- Bollerup, G. (M.Sc.)
?
Gilgan, C. (M.Sc.) 1967-71
.
?
?
Saunders, R. (M.Sc.) ?
Smith,
T. (M.Sc.)
Thomas, A. (M.Sc.)
Mueller, C. (Ph.D.)
./2

 
uuuI. ,
?
' ? 47.
Curriculum-Vitae ?
-2-
J.M. Webster
?
May, 1972
?
Administrative Resonsibilities
University
Interim Dean of Graduate Studies 1970-1971
Senate - elected member 1969-70
Senate- ex officio 1970-1971
Senate Graduate Studies Committee, Chairman 1970-71
Executive Ctte., Senate Graduate Studies Committee, Chairman 1970-71
Academic Planning Committee 1970-71
Search Committees for Deans of Arts, Education and Science 1971
University Tenure Committee, 1972
PSA Chairman Search Committee, 1972
Faculty Association Affairs Committee 1969
Faculty Club Committee 1969-
Department (include the following)
Electron Microscope Committee
Graduate Studies Committee 1971-
Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, Chairman 1968-70
Greenhouse Committee 1969-
Seminar Convener 1971-1972
Space Committee 1969-
• ?
Outside University
B.C. Dept. Agriculture, Crop Protection Lead Committee 1970-
West Regional Research Committee (W56 Project USA) 1969-
Pacific Science Congress, Organizational Committee, 1972-
Honors and Awards Committee of S.O.N. 1971-
Scholarly Status
a) Invited addresses
Entomophilic nematodes in a pest management programme. Indian Agricultural
Research Institute, New Delhi, also at the Aligarh Muslim University.
Manipulation of the environment to enhance the control of insects by-
nematodes. Commonwealth Institute of Biological Control, Bangalore.
Nematodes as harmful and beneficial organisms. University of Kyushu, Japan.
Nematode Ecology - Physiology and environment. Colloquium Chairman and
opening speaker. International Congress of Parasitology, Washington,
p.C.
...../3

 
- Curriculum Vitae
?
-3-
?
48.
J. M. Webster ?
May, 1972
An interpretation of the ultrastructural response of tomato
S ?
roots susceptible and resistant to Meloidogyne incognita.
E.P.P.O. Antibes, France.
Environmental manipulation to facilitate biological control of
insects. Workshop on Nematodes for biological control, Lehigh
University, Pennsylvania.
b) Membership in Professional Societies
American Society for Parasitology
British Society for Parasitology
Canadian Entomological Society
Canadian Phytopathological Society
Canadian Society of Zoology
European Society of Nematology
Institute of Biology
Neinatological Society of India
Organization of Tropical American Neinatologists
Society for Experimental Biology
Society of Nematologists
Society for Invertebrate Pathology
Scholarly Accomplishments
a) Proposed Research - Host parasite relationships of organisms in insects
and plants.
Manipulation of the biological and physical environment of parasites
during their development in order to increase the incidence of beneficial
ones and decrease the incidence of harmful ones.
a)
A study of the ultrastructure and physiology of the host tissue
response to developing parasites using tissue culture and in vivo
techniques to help ascertain (i) the mechanisms of resistance and
susceptibility of plant and insect hosts to disease causing organisms
and (ii) the requirements of developing parasites.
b)
Modification of the host response
by
hormonal minipulation in order
to benefit man's requirements of the host parasite relationship.
c)
Increasing the infective potential of insect parasites by modifying
the micro-environment.
d)
Method of reception and type of response of nematodes to light and
the effect of light manipulation on nematode behaviour.
e)
Assessment of the importance of nematode associations (i). to the plant
or insect host (ii) to the forest economy
by
a detailed study of the
interactions of the physico-chemical environment with (a) bark beetles,
fungi and nematodes and (b) forest trees, nematodes and microorganisms
and (iii) in food chains in healthy and polluted environments.
/4

 
• , Curriculum Vitae
?
-4-
.i
J. M. Webster ?
May, 1972
• b)
Tota]. Publications - 50
SResearch Papers (refereed) - 36
• ?
General Papers (refereed)
?
- 10
Non-refereed papers
?
- 3
Invited Review (refereed)
?
- 1
Research Papers (refereed)
1968 Webster, J. N. and J. F. Bronskill. Use of Gelgard M and an
evaporation retardant to facilitate control of larch sawfly by
a nematode-bacterium complex. J. Econ. Ent. 61: 1370-1373.'
1968 Doncaster, C. C. and J. M. Webster. Clumping of the plant
parasitic nematode Ditylenchus dipsaci in water. Nematologica,
14: 131-136.
1968 Webster, J. M. and D. J. Hooper. Seriological and morphological
studies on the inter- and intra-specific differences of the
plant-parasitic nematodes Heterodera and Ditylenchus.
Parasitology, 58: 879-892.
1970 Paulson, Ronald E. and John M. Webster. Giant cell formation in
tomato roots caused by Meloidogyne incognita and Meloidogyne
hapla (Nematoda) infection. A light and electron microscope
?
study. Can. J. Bot., 48: 271-276.
1971 Burr, A. H. and J. M. Webster. Morphology of the eyespot and
description of two pigment granules in the esophageal muscle
of a marine nematode: Oncholaimus vesicarius. J. Ultrastruct.
Res. 36: 621-632.
1971 Gordon, R., J. M. Webster and D. E. Mead. Some effects of the
nematode Mermis nigrescens upon carbohydrate metabolism in the
fat body of its host, the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria.
Can. J. Zool. 49: 431-434.
1971 Gordon, R. and J. M. Webster. Mermis nigrescens: Physiological
relationship with its host, the adult desert locust Schistocerca
gregaria.
?
Exptl. Parasitology. 29: 66-79.
1971 Lam, A. B. Q
.
and J. M. Webster. Morphology and biology of
Panagrolairnus tipulae n. sp. (Panagrolaimidae) and Rhabditis
(Rhabditella) tipulae n. sp. (Rhabditidae), from leatherjacket
larvae Tipula paludosa Meig. (Diptera: Tipulidae). Nematologica
17: 201-212.
1971 Thong, C. H. S. and J. M. Webster. The effect of gonadotrophins
on the in vitro development and body length of the free-living
nematode Cephalobus sp. Bastian. Can. J. Zool. 49: 1059-1061.
.
/5

 
1971 Nelson, H., J. M. Webster and A. H. Burr. A redescription of
the marine nematode Oncholaimus vesicariulu (Wieser, 1959) and
observations of the pigment spots of this species and of
Oncholaimus skawensis Ditlevsen, 1921. Can. J. Zool. 49: 1198-1197.
Curriculum Vitae
?
-5-
3. M. Webster
?
May, 1972
.
C
1971 Oloffs, P.. C., S. Y. Szeto and J. M. Webster. TranslocatiOn of
organochiorine pesticide residues from soils into carrots. can.
J. Plant Sc. 51: 547-550.
1972 Gordon, R. and J. M. Webster. Nutritional requirmentS for protein
synthesis during parasitic development of the entomophilic
nematode Mermis nigrescens. Parasitology. 64: 161-172.
1972 Hunter, D. M., R.M.F.S. Sadleir and
J.
M. Webster. Studies on
the ecology of caterebrid parasitism in deermice. Can. J. Zool.
50: 25-29.
General Papers
1968 Webster, J. M. The effect of 2, 4-D on plant parasitic nematodes in
culture and in vivo.
?
Comptes Rendus Du VIII Symp. Internat. Neinat.
Antibes, 1965, 88.
1969 Paulson, R. E. and J. M. Webster. Ultrastructural response of
plant calls to gall-forming nematodes. J. Nema. 1: 22-23.
1969 Webster, J. M. and S. Craig. The direct effect of plant and
insect hormones on Cephalobus sp. J. Nematology 1: 308.
1970 Gordon, R. and Webster,
J.
M. Some effects of the nematode Mermis
nigrescens on the physiological environment of the parasite in
its host, the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria. J. Parasitology,
56, Sec. II: 121.
1970 Webster, J. M. Nematodes as biological control agents. Proceedings
of 21 Ann. Western For. Ins. Work Conf., Seattle 1970; 61-62.
1970 Paulson, R. E. and J. M. Webster. The cellular response of a
resistant tomato plant to Meloidogyne incognita.
J.
Parasitology,
56 (Sec. II): 260.
1971 Gordon, R. and J. M. Webster. The nutritional requirements of the
parasitic nematode Mermis nigrescens for protein synthesis. J.
Nematology 3: 310.
1971 Paulson, R. E. and Webster,
J.
M. Light and electron microscopy of
the hypersensitive reaction of tomato (Lyçopersicon esculentum
to Meloidogyne incognita). J. Nematology 3: 323-324.
/6

 
.4-
P4•p?
?
-
?
51.
Curriculum Vitae
?
-6-
.1. M. Webster ?
May, 1972
1972 Webster,
J. M.
and R. E. Paulson. An interpretation of the
ultrastructural response of tomato roots susceptible and resistant
to Meloidogyne incognita. Proc. E.P.P.0. Symposium, Antibes,
France.
Book
1972 Webster,
J. M.
(Editor). Economic Nematology. Academic Press,
London, 1972. 563 pp.
Invited Review
Webster,
J. M.
The host-parasite relationships of plant-parasitic
nematodes. In Advances in Parasitology, Academic Press, 7: 1-40.
Non-Refereed Papers
1968 Webster,.
3. M.
(Editor). Proceedings of the North Western Nematology
Workshop. Integrated Control Programs for Nematode Pests.
Simon Fraser University Audio Visual Centre, 45 pp.
Book Review
1970 Webster,
J. M.
Plant Pathology, by G. N. Agrios. Academic Press.
New York, 1969, 629 pp. Nematologica 16: 158.
.
Publications in press
1972 Lain, A. B. Q
.
and
J. M.
Webster. Morphological characteristics for
differentiating larval instars of leatherjackets, Tipula paludosa
Meig. Can.
J.
Ent. (In press).
1972 Lam, A. B. Q
.
and
J.
M. Webster. Effect of the DD-136 nematode
and of a 8-exotoxin preparation of Bacillus thuringensis var
thuringensis on leatherjackets, Tpula paludosa larvae.
J.
Invert. Path. (In press).
1972 Paulson, R. E. and J. M. Webster. Ultrastructure of the hypersensitive
reaction of tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum L. roots to infection
by the root-knot nematode, Meloidogyne incognita. Phys. Plant
Path. (In press).
1972 Thong, C. H. S. and J. M. Webster. A redescription of the bark
beetle. nematode Contortylenchus brevicomi synonym Contortylenchus
barberus (Nematoda: Sphaerularidae). J. Nematol. (In press).
1972 Nelson, H., B. Hopper and J. M. Webster. Eno
plus anisospiculus,
a new species of marine nematode from the Canadian Pacific Cost.
Can. J. Zool. (In press).
/7

 
1968
- 1968-69
- 1969-70
eting Ed. - 1969-70
1969-70
- 1970-71
- 1971-72
- 1972-73
- 1972-73
$
?
400.00
$13,990.00
$18,000.00
$ 2,200.00
$ 1,500.00
$18,000.00
$18,000.00
$18,000.00
$ 3,500.00
52.
Curriculum Vitae
?
-7-
J. M. Webster ?
May, 1972
Additional Comments
1)
Member of the Editorial Board of the international journal "Nematologica".
2)
Edit papers from time to time for the following journals:
Canadian Journal of Zoology
Experimental Parasitology
Journal of Nematology
3)
Initiated and was prime organizer-of the North Western Neinatology
Workshop in Spring 1968, where over 50 neinatologists from B.C.
and many parts of the world discussed the theme of "Integrated
Control for Nematode Pests".
4)
Chairman of sessions at Society of Nemátology Congress at San Francisco and
Ottawa and of the Western Forest Insect Work Conference at Seattle.
5)
External Examiner for Ph.D. candidate of the University of Adelaide,
Australia.
6) Outside Research Funds
Chemical Company Grants -
• National Research
National Research
Council
Council
B. C. Coast Vegetable Mar
B. C. Dept. Agriculture -
National Research Council
National Research Council
National Research Council
Canada Dept. Agriculture
0

 
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
March, 1972
Name: ?
Peter BELTON
?
Age: ?
41
Present Faculty Position: Associate Professor
Term of Present
Contract: Tenured - First Appointed
1 November 1967
Degrees: 1955 B.Sc. (Hons) London University
1955 A.R.C.S.
?
Imperial
College, London
1970 Ph.D.
?
Glasgow University
53.
Career:
?
1949-50
1950-51
1955-57
1957-60
. ?
1960-61
1961-67
1964-67
1967-70
1970-
present
1971-
present
Asst. Exper. Officer, Mm. of Food, London*
National Service R.A.F., Radio and Telecommunications
(Certificate of Merit)
D.S.I.R., Research Studentship
Assistant
p
rofessor, Zoology, Glasgow University
Cerebral Palsy Foundation Fellowship, Columbia Univ.
Research Officer, Canada Department of Agriculture, Belleville*
Group Leader, Belleville, for research on influence of
physical, inetarchonistic, and autocidal controls on
insect behaviour and mortality.
Associate Professor, SFU
Associate Professor, SFU*
Director, Academic Advice Centre, SFU
*Permanent (Tenured) Position
Contributions to SFU
a) Courses taught
101 - Introductory Biology - Spring 1970 and 1971
201 - Cell Biology and Biochemistry - Spring 1968, Fall 1968, 1970
300 - Physics and Chemistry of the Environment - Spring 1969, 1971,
1972 (part)
305 - Animal Physiology - Summer 1970
845 - Regulation and Control II - Spring 1969, 1972
826 - Electrophysiological techniques - Fall 1969, 1971
003 - Ecology and the Population Explosion (lecture) - Fall 1970, 1971
Sci 010. - Contemporary Topics in the Natural Sciences (lecture) - Fall 1970
/2

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
- 2 - ?
March 1972
P. Belton
?
b) Other
.
Contributions
Graduate Advisory Committees for
R. A. Costello (Chairman
M. P. Daem (Chairman)
K. D. Maclean (Chairman)
C. van Netten
L. J. Bennett
R. M. Willing
C.
W.
Cilgan
D. Mahon
S. Craig
Chairman, Senate Undergraduate Appeals Board, Feb. 1972
Faculty of Science Executive Committee, since May 1971-
Coordinator (With Drs. Sadleir and Sherwood) Burnaby Lake Survey,
Opportunities for Youth, Summer 1971
Member of Simon Fraser Speakers Bureau1968-71. Talked to service
clubs, high schools, participated in several radio and television
programmes.
• ?
Scholarly Status:
a)
Invited to give seminars at Columbia Univ., New York; Tufts University,
Medford Mass.; University of Alberta, Edmonton, Queen's University,
.
?
Kingston; University of Toronto: University of Victoria; University
of British Columbia.
Invitational addresses to Canadian and Ontario Entomological Societies
West, Coast Conference on excitable systems
Invited as a symposium speaker "The use of sound in Insect Control"
14th International Congress of Entomology, Canberra, Australia
?
Invited paper and book chapter on "Analysis of Mosquito Behaviour"
14th International Congress of Entomology, Canberra, Australia
b)
Society Membership
Fellow, Royal Entomology Society, London, since 1954
Member (Director 1966-67) Entomological Society, Ontario, since 1962
Member, Entomological Society, Canada, since 1962
Member, American Mosquito Control Association, since 1966
Member, Entomological Society, B. C., since 1968
C)
External Examiner
University of Alberta, Edmonton.
.
/3

 
?
55.
Curricul4m Vitae
?
- 3 -
?
March 1972
P. Belton
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a)
Areas of Scholarly Specialization
Non-chemical techniques for controlling agricultural and stored-
product pests. Also effects of sounds, ultrasonics, light,
electromagnetic radiation, electrostatics, etc. on pests.
b) Publications - Total 26
1956 Electrical responses of certain lepidopterous tympanal organs.
Nature, Lond. 177: 139-140. (with P. T. Haskell).
1958 Membrane potentials recorded from moth muscle fibres. J.
Physiol. 142: 20-21.
1958 A one-valve D.C. amplifier with high impedance input. Electr.
Engng. 30: 454-456.
1960 Effects of ions on potential in lepidoteran muscle fibres.
Biol. Bull. 119: 289.
i
s1961 Comparative effects of drugs on graded responses of insect
muscle fibers. Fed. Proc. 20: 339. (with H. Grundfest).
1961 The
ionic factors in the electrogenesis of the electrically
inexcitable and electrically excitable membrane components
of frog
slow muscle fibers. Biol. Bull. 121: 382. (with
H. Grundfest).
1962 A
field test on the use of sounds to repel the European
corn borer. Ent. exp. et
appl. 5: 281-288. (with R.H.
Kempster).
1962 The Physiology of sound reception in insects. Proc. Ent.
Soc. Ontario 92 (1961): 20-26.
1962 Responses to sound in pyralid moths. Nature 196: 1188-1189.
1962 Simple switching device with phase synchronization. J. Acoust.
Soc. Amer. 34: 894.
1962 Potassium activation and "K-spikes" in muscle fibers of the
mealworm larva (Tenebrio molitor). Amer. J. Physiol. 203:
588-594. (with H. Grundfest).
1962 The K-permeability of the muscle fiber membrane of the mealworm
(Tenebrio molitor) larva. J. gen. Physiol. 45: 590A. with
H. Grundfest).
/4

 
56.
Curriculum Vitae
?
- 4 -
?
March 1972
P. Belton
0
1963 Effects of sound on insect behaviour. Proc. ent. Soc.
Manitoba 18: 22-30.
1963 Some factors affecting the catches of Lepidoptera in light
traps. Canadian Ent. 95: 832-837. (with R.H. Kempster).
1963 Modification of an electric cine camera to take remote bulb
exposures. Rev. Sci. Instruin. 34: 704-706.
1964 The value of Physical factors in insect control. Canadian Ent.
96: 114.
?
(with M.G. Maw).
1966 Light-trap collections of mosquitoes near Belleville, Ontario
in 1965. Proc. Ent. Soc. Ontario 96: 90-96. (with M. Galloway).
1967 Trapping mosquitoes with sound. Prof. Calif. Mosq. Contr.
Assoc.
35,
p
98.
1967 A device for programming the insensity of fluorescent lamps.
J. Econ. Ent. 60: 883-884. (with R. H. Kempster and
K.K.
Nair).
(Refereed).
1967 The effect of illumination and pool. brightness on oviposition
by Culex restuaris (Theo) in the field. Mosq. News 27: 55-68.
.
? (Refereed).
1967 A comparison of different light traps for Culicoides (Diptera:
Ceratopogonidae). Canadian Ent. 99: 267-272. (with A. Pucat).
(Refereed).
1967 A specimen of Aedes thibaulti collected near Belleville, Ontario.
Canadian Ent. 99: 1336. (with D. E. French). (Refereed).
1969 The electrical activity of cockroach rectal muscle fibres.
Comp. Physiol. biochem., 28: 853-863. (With B.E. Brown).
(Refereed).
1969 Innervation and neural excitation of ventral muscle fibres of
the larva of the waxmoth, Galleria mellonella. J. Insect.
Physiol. 15: 731-741. (Referred).
1970 An annotated list of the mosquitoes of Southeastern Ontario.
Proc. Ent. Soc. Ont., 100: 200-230. (co-author).
1971 The effects of pharmacological agents on the electrical responses
of cells of Nitella flexilis. (with C. van Netten). Can. J.
Physiol. Pharmacol. 49: 824-832. (Refereed).
.
..... /5

 
. 'Curriculum vitae
?
- 5 -
?
March, 1972
P. Belton
?
'
Additional Comments:
. ?
1956-57 Glasgow University, Dept. of Zoology. Demonstrated (Laboratory)
1st year zoology to medical, dental and veterinary students.
1958-60 Glasgow University, Dept. of Zoology. Appointed as Assistant.
Demonstrated (laboratory), comparative physiology and electro-
physiology to 4th year zoology students. Prepared lectures
and practical courses for comparative ethology and electronic
technique for 4th year students.
1964-65 Queen's University, Dept. of Physiology. Prepared and
demonstrated laboratory course and group conference on
intracellular electrophysiology.
1962-66 Supervised the research of five high school and university
?
students during 11 to 22 weeks in the summer.
1965-66 Carried out cooperative research resulting in publications or
research reports with two graduate students (Mr. A.
Carmichael, U.W.0., and Miss A. Pucat, McDonald College).
Chairman 1966- Working party on Chemosterilants, Ent. Advisory
Committee, Canada Defence REsearch Board.
Leader, Glasgow University Field Investigation on Lamb Predation by
birds in the Hebrides, 1957.
.
?
Member of group investingating and assessing mosquito problem on the
Cayman Islands, Canada External Aid Dept. 1964
Consultrant to Ultrasori International Inc., New York, 1970
Member, IDRC. Work Conference and Seminar. On-farm storage of grain
in Africa. June, 1971.
External Grants
1968-69 National Research Council Grant
1969- ?
Feller Chemical Corp. (Effects of
Ultrasound on pests)
1969-70 National Research Council Grant
1970-73 National REsearch Council Grant
$18,925.
874.
11,000.
39,000.
0

 
?
58.
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser
University
CURRICULUM VITAE
February, 1972
Name: ?
John Harvey BORDEN
?
Age: 34
Present Faculty Position:
Associate Professor
Term of PreSent
Contract: Tenured - First Appointed September 1,
1966
Degrees: B.S.
?
1963 Washington State University
M.S.
?
1965 University of California
A.D. ?
1966 University of California
Certification:
?
Certified Entomologist in General Entomology and Forest Entomology,
AMERICAN REGISTRY OF CERTIFIED ENTOMOLOGISTS.
Career: No previous
professional positions.
Contributions to SF0:
a) Courses taught
. ?
101 - Introduction to Biology - Fall 1966, 1967, 1969, Summer 1970
102 - Introduction to Biology - Spring 1967, 1969, Spring 1972
416 - Introductory Entomology - Spring 1967, 1968, Fall 1968
417 -
Entomology - Spring 1970, Fall 1970, 1972
498 - Undergraduate Research - Summer 1967, 1968, Fall 1968,
Spring 1970, 1971,Spring 1972
816 -
Biology of Forest Insects - Spring 1968, Fall 1969, 1970, 1971
859 - Special Topics - Summer 1968
Educ. 810 - Fall 1968
b) Other Contributions
Former Committee and Executive Membershi
1.
Treasurer, Faculty Association Executive, 1968-69
2.
Senate Committee on Admissions Policy (Ellis Report), 1969
3.
Faculty of Science Nominations Committee 1969-1971
4.
Departmental Tenure Committee, 1969-1970
5.
High School Visitation Committee, Fall, 1971
6.
Presidential Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics, 1971
7.
Faculty of Science Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, 1970-71
Act
•2.
4.
ive Committee Membership
Senate Scholarship Committee, 1970-72
Archaeology Tenure Committee, 1969-72
Departmental Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, 1969-72
(Chairman, 1970-71)
Departmental Space Committee, 1967-72.
./2

 
59.
Curriculum Vitae
?
-
February, 1972
J. H. Borden
S ?
Graduate Adviso
Graduated: ?
R.
R.
C.
R.
S.
K.
R.
F.
J.
P.
ry or Examining Committees
A.
Ellis, M.Sc. (Major Advisor)
B.
Bennett, M.Sc. (Major Advisor)
Hofstra, Ph.D.
Thompson, Ph.D.
N. Thompson, M.Sc.
Penner, M.Sc.
L. Fenton (Economics), M.Sc.
Hall (Chemistry), Ph.D.
V. Richerson, Ph.D. (Major Advisor)
Muthigani, M.Sc.
In Course: ?
L. Bennett, Ph.D. (Major Advisor)
H. Viug, M.Sc. (Major Advisor)
C.
E.Fockler, M.Sc. (Major Advisor)
D.
Ostaff, M.Sc. (Major Advisor)
H. L. Friesen (Education) M.Sc.
A. Campbell, Ph.D.
S. Craig, M.Sc.
C.
Thong, Ph.D.
D.
Hunter, M.Sc.
Scholarly Status:
Seminars:
?
SFU, 1966, 1971
University of Washington, 1968
New York State College of Forestry, 1969
Invitational Papers:
Pacific Branch of the Entomological Society of America, June 1971
Entomological Society of Canada, August, 1971
National Science Teachers Association, December, 1971
Symposia: Western Forest Insect Work Conference, April 1971, Moderator
and Participant
Workshops: Western Forest Insect Work Conference, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971,
Invited Participant
Guest Lectures:
B. C. I. T., 1968
SFIJ, several from 1966-71
.
/3

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
0 ?
February, 1972
J. H. Porden
. ?
Submitted Papers:
Entomological Society of B. C., Annual Meeting, 1968 (2)
Entomological Society of America, Annual Meeting, 1965, 1968, 1969,197
Pacific Branch of the Entomological Society of America,
Annual Meeting, 1965, 1970
Entomological Society of Canada, Annual Meeting, 1964, 1966, 1971
Federation of Canadian Biologists, 1969
Papers Reviewed for Journals (Several prior to 1971):
1971: Annals of the Entomological Society of America (3)
Canadian Journal of Zoology (1 plus one request referred to
another reviewer)
1972: Annals of the Entomological Society of America (1)
Canadian Journal of Zoology (1)
Society Membership:
Entomological Society of B. C. (Director, 1969-71)
Entomological Society of Canada
Entomological Society of America
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Honorary Societies:
Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Sigma Xi.
0 ?
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a) Teaching
Introductory Biology (101 and 102), Introductory Entomology (417), Biology
of Forest Insects (816), Undergraduate and Graduate Research Advising.
b) Research
Sex pheromones and biology of forest insects, insects in public
school science.
Current Projects:
1.
Isolation, identification and synthesis of the sex pheromones of
Dendroctonus pseudotsugae and Trypodendron lineatum (with Dr.
R. M. Silverstein, N. Y. State College of Forestry, Syracuse).
2.
Behavior in relation to pheromones in Gnathotrichus retusus.
3.
Biology of the conifer infesting fungus, Cryptoporus volvatus, and its
arthropod fauna. (With Dr. M. McClaren, SFU).
4.
Biology of insects associated with red alder.
5.
Preparation of a book on insects for elementary school teachers.
(With B. Herrin, S.F.U.).
6.
Development of teaching materials for introductory biology.
(Presently working on nucleic acid and chromosome models).
?
..

 
• ?
'Curriculum \iitae ?
-4-
?
February, 1972
J. H. Borden
Active Graduate Student Projects:
.
??
Behavioral and electrophysiological response of Dendroctonus pseudotsugae
?
to various wavelength bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. (L. Bennett).
The effect of logging and slash
burning
on soil arthropod populations
in a coastal B.C. forest. (H. Vlug).
Reproductive behavior and physiology of Trypodendron lineatum. (C. E.
Fockler).
Sex pheromone of the western hemlock looper Lainbdina fiscellaria lugübrosa
(D. P. Ostaff).
c) Graduate Student Theses Directed
Ellis, R.A. M.Sc. 1969. Studies of Notonecta undulata Say (Herniptera:
Notonectidae) as a predator of mosquito larvae.
Bennett, R.B. M.Sc. 1971. Scolytid flight response to olfactory stimuli
with special reference to Dendroctonus pseudotsugae Hopkins (Coleoptera:
Scolytidae).
Richerson, J.V. Ph.D. 1972. Host finding mechanisms in Coeloides
brunneri Viereck (Hymenoptera: Braconidae).
• ?
d) Publications, Films and Reports (Total 30, plus one book in press)
Educational Contributions
1968 Preparation of Blowfly Salivary Gland Chromosomes. (Consultant
as part of 4-person team producing film which is now used in
Biol. 102 and is under review for commercial distribution.)
1972 Insects in the Classroom. (With B. Herrin). (Book in Press, B.C.
Teachers' Federation).
1972 An inexpensive and effective chromosome model for introductory
biology instruction. ?
(Paper in preparation).
Research Papers - Total 27 (all in refereed journals).
1965 ?
Life history of Choristoneura lambertinaria subretiniana Obraztov
(Lepidoptera: TorticIdae) attacking lodgepole pine. (With R. W.
Stark). Can. Ent. 97:684-690.
1965 ?
A field
test of lindane for prevention and control of attack by
Ips
confusus (LeConte) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) in slash.
(With R. W. Stark). J. Econ. Ent. 58:994-996.
1965 ?
Observations on mortality factors of the fir engraver beetle,
• ?
Sco]j
?
ventralis (Coleoptera: Scolytidae). (With R. W. Stark).
?
J. Econ. Ent. 58:1162-1163.
1966 ?
The antenrial receptors and olfactory response of Ips confusus
(Coleoptea:
Scolytidae)
to male sex attractant in the laboratory.
(With D. L. Wood). Ann. Ent. Soc. Am. 59:253-261.
• ?
. .. ./5
I,

 
.'
?
., ?
---------
?
-.
1967 ?
Emergence patterns of
I
R
s
confusus
(Coleoptera: SCOlytidae) from
ponderosa pine. (With E. A. Cameron). Can. Ent. 99:236-244.
1967 ?
Factors influencing the
response
confusus
(LeConte)
(Coleoptera: Scolytjdae) to male attractant. Can. Ent. 99:1164-1193.
1968 ?
Antenna], morphology
of
Iks
confusus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae).
Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 61:10-13.
1968 ?
Sex pheromone of Dendroctonus pudotsugae (Coleoptera: Scolytidae):
Production, bioassay, and partial isolation. (With R. M. Silver-
stein and R. G. Brownlee). Can. Ent. 100:597-603.
1968 ?
Sex pheromone of
Trypodendron
lineatuxn (Coleoptera: Scolyticlae):
and
Production,
R. M. Silverstein)
bioassay,
?
and
Can.
partial
Ent. 1.00z629-36.
isolation.
(With R.
G.
Brownlee
1968
?
Induction
hormone
of
in
flight
Ips
confusus
muscle volume
(Coleoptera:
degeneration
Scolytjdae).
by
-
synthetic
(With C.
juvenile
E.
Slater). Z. vergi. Physiol. 61:366-368.
1969 ?
Flight muscle volume changes in Ips confusus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae).
(With C. E. Slater). Can. J. Zool. 4:29-32.
1969
?
Fecal filaments produced by
fungus-infesting
larvae of Platydeme
oregonense (Coleoptera: Tenebrionjdae). (With
M6
McClaren and
M. A. Horta). Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 62:444-446.
1969 Sex pheromone of Trypodendron lineatum: production in the hindgut-.
Maiphighian tube region. (With C. E. Slater). Ann. Ent. Soc.
Amer. 62:454-455.
1969
Observations
on the life history and habits of AlniphaUs aspericollis
Can.
(Coleoptera:
Ent.
?
ScolytIdae)
:870-878.
in southwestern British Columbia.
1969
The effect of temperature and other environmental factors on Notonecta
Pan-undulata
pac.
Ent.
Say
?
45:20-25.
(Hemiptera: Notoñectidae).
?
(With R. A. Ellis).
1969
A
continuously-recording
flight mill for invetigating the effect of
volatile
R. B. Bennett).substances
?
J. Econ.
on the
Ent.
flight
62:782-785.
of tethered insects.
?
(With
1969
Laboratory
(With R.
rearing
A. Ellis).
of Notonecta
?
J. Ent.
undulata
Soc. B.
(Say)C.
?
66:51-53.
?
(Hemiptera: Notonectidae).
1969
Occurrence
Ann.
(Coleoptera:
Ent.
of
Soc.
a fat
Scolytidae).Amer.
body
62:1495-1496.
layer
?
around
(With N.
the
H.
testes
G. Bhakthan,
of I
p s confusus
K. K.
Nair).
1969
Synthetic juvenile hormone: induction of sex pheromone production in
jjP_s
1626-1627.
confusus. ?
(With K. K. Nair and C. E. Slater).
?
Science 166:
1970
Fine
J.
r.
structure
Cell
Degeneration.Sci.
of
6:807-820.de-
?
and
(With
regenerating
?
N. M. G.
Bhakthan
flight muscles
and K. K.
of
Nair).
Ips
confusus.
?
..
-
./6

 
.
• Curriculum vitae
?
-6-- ?
February, 1972
J. 1!.
Borden
?
1970 ?
Predation by Notoriecta undulata
(Heteroptera: Notonectidae) on larvae
of the yellow fever mosquito. (With R.
A.
Ellis).
Ann.
Ent. Soc.
Amer. 63:963-973.
?
1970 ?
Biology of Polyporus volvatus Peck (Agaricales:
. Polyporaceae) in
southwestern British Columbia: distribution, host species and
relationship with subcortical insects. (With
M.
Mcclaren).
yesxs
3:145-154.
?
1971
?
Fine structure of de- and regenerating flight muscles of
Ips
confusus
fl
Re g
eneration. (With N. M. G. Bhakthan and K. K. Nair).
J. 2ol. 49:85-9
?
1971 ?
Observation. on Eriocaiuoe ovata
L.
(Ryienopteras Tenthredinidse)
Dean).
infesting
J.
red
Ent.
alder
Soc.
in
B.
southwestern
C. 68:26-28.
British Columbia (With
W. F.
?
1971
?
Sound and vibration are not obligatory host-finding stimuli for
Coeloides brunneri. (
W
ith
J. V.
Richerson). Entomophaga 16: 95-99.
?
1971 ?
Flight arrestment of tethered Dendroctonus pseudotsugae and Trypodendron
lineattun (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) in response to olfactory stimuli.
(With
R. B.
Bennett). Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer. 64-; 1213-1286.
?
1972
?
Biology
in
southwestern
o
fypto
p
orus
British
volvatus
Columbia:
(Peck)
life
Shear
history,
(Agarica].es,
development,
'o1ypOraceae)
and
arthropod infestation in the field. (With M. McClaren).
Syesis (In press)
Papers submitted
to
Journals
?
1972 ?
Host finding behavior in Coeloides brunneri (Hymenoptera: Braconidae).
(With J.V. Richerson) (Submitted to the Canadian Entomologist).
?
1972 ?
Morphology of a unique sensillum placodeum in Coeloides brunneri
Viereck (Hymenoptera: Braconidae). (With LV. Richerson and J.
Hollingdale). (Submitted to Canadian Journal of Zoology).
1972 ?
Host finding by heat perception in the bark beetle parasite, Coeloides
brunneri. (With J.V. Richerson). (Submitted to Science).
?
Note: ?
Several papers in preparation.
fl

 
C
Other Publications - Total
2
Crefereed)
1971
?
Secondary attraction in the Scolytidae: an annotated bibliography.
(With L. Stoik.r.k). Canada Dcpt. Fisheries and Forestry
1nformato. Pc..r' RC-X-57. 77 p.
Changing philosophy in forest
insect management.
Bull. Ent. Soc. Amer . 17: 268-273.
Additional Accomplishments:
a) Research Grants
0-?.
C
is
1966-67
President's Research Grant, SFU
$1,042.
1967-68
National Research Council
5,000.
1968-69
National Research Council
9,800.
NRC (Major Equipment)
6,800.
Canada Dept. of Forestry (E.M.R.)
6,000.
B. C. Forest Industries
6,000.
President's Research, SFU.
1,500.
1969-70
National Research Council
7,000.
Canada Dept. of Fisheries and Forestry (EMR)
6,000.
President's Research, SFU
1,050.
1970-71
National Research Council (3 years)
8,500.
Canada Dept. of Fisheries and Forestry (EMR)
6,000.
National Science Foundation (USA, 2 years)
14,625. ?
(US)
1972
National Research Council
8,500
b) Additional Activities
1.
Member, Pest Control Committee, Council of Forest Industries of
B.
C., 1966-71.
2.
Program Chairman, Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society
Of B. C., 1969.
3.
Member, Program Committee, Annual Meeting of the Pacific Branch,
Entomological Society of America, 1970, 1971.
4.
Member, Common Names Committee, Western Forest Insect Work
Conference, 1971-1972.
5. In
charge of registration, Annual Meeting of the Entomological
Society of Canada, 1971.
External References:
Dr. K. Graham, Dept. of Forestry, University of British Columbia.
Dr. John A. Chapman, Canadian Forestry Service, Pacific Forest Research Centre,
506 West Burnside Road, Victoria, B.C.
Dr. David
L. Wood, Division of Entomology, Dept. of Entomology and
Parasitology, University of California, Berkeley, California.

 
25 May, 1972
Addendum to
Curriculum Vitae,
John H.
Borden
(Supercedes
Memo from
JHB
to Geen,
28
Feb. 1972)
I. Scholarly
Accomplishments
a)
Research, Graduate Student Projects
Sex pheromones of lepidopteran orchard pests. O.M. Vakenti).
b)
Invited to contribute chapter to proposed book on Pheromones.
Elsevier/North Holland Press. Relevant correspondence attached.
c)
Graduate Student Theses Directed
Fockler, C.E. M.Sc. 1972. Some aspects of the-behavior and
physiology of sexual activity in Trypodendron lineatum
Olivier (Coleoptera: Scolytidae).
Viug, H. M.Sc. 1972. The effects of logging and slash burning
on soil Acari and Collexnbola in a coniferous forest near
Maple Ridge, British Columbia.
d)
Research Papers
Two papers now in press.
• ?
1972. Host finding behavior in Coeloides brunneri (Hymenoptera:
Braconidae). (With
J.V.
Richerson). Can. Ent. (In press).
1972. Morphology of a unique sensilluin placodeum in Coeloides
brunneri Viereck (Hymenoptera: Braconidae). (With J.V.
Richerson and J. Hollingdale). Can. J. Zool. (In press).
One additional paper submitted to journal.
1972. Sexual behavior and seasonal mating activity of Trypodendron
lineatum (Coleoptera: Scolytidae). (With•C.E. Fockler).
(Submitted to the Canadian Entomologist).
II. Research Grants
1972. National Science Foundation (USA, 2 years) $12,345.00.
III. Additional Activities
6.
Committee on Professional Training Standards, and Status.
Entomological Society of America. 1972.
7.
Nominating Committee. Western Forest Insect Work Conference. 1972.
.8. In charge of operations. Annual Meeting of the Pacific Branch
of the Entomological Society of America, Victoria, B.C.,
June, 1972.
0

 
•,
'Jo.
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
May, 1972
Name:
?
Thelma FINLAYSON (Mrs.)
?
Age:57
Present Faculty
Position: Associate Professor
Senator S. McKeen Curator in Entomology
Term of Present
Contract: Tenured - July, 1971
First Appointed - September 15, 1967
Degrees:
?
1936 Honours B.A. in Biology, Toronto
1937 Teaching Certificate, Ontario College of Education
Note: B.A. accepted as terminal degree on appointment
at SFU.
Career: ?
Research Institute, Canada Department of Agriculture, Belleville,
Ontario, as:
1937-1940 Technical Officer
1942-1959 Technical Officer (various grades)
1959-1964 Research Officer (grades 2 and 3)
1964-1967 Research Scientist (grade 2)
1967-1971 Assistant Professor, Simon Fraser University
1971- ?
Associate Professor, Simon Fraser University
Contributions to SFU:
a) Courses taught
102 - Introduction to Biology - Spring 1968 (tutorials only),
Summer 1968 (full), Summer 1969 (full) Fall 1971
317 - Insect Biology (new course given for the first time) - Fall 1969,
Summer 1970, Spring 1971, 1972
840 - Economic Organisms I (new course given for the first time) -
Fall 1968. 1971
Graduate Student - one Ph.D. student (part)
/2

 
• ?
• ?
67.
Curriculum Vitae
?
-2-
Thelma Finlayson ?
May, 1972
b) Other contributions
1967-3
?
Interviewed all
Biology Honours and Majors students,
analyzed results, and prepared a report for the Department.
1968
?
Organized and chaired graduate student seminars.
1968 ?
Member of Student Affairs Committee.
1969
?
Faculty Association representative on University Food
Services Committee.
1970-71 Member of Department of Biological Sciences Undergraduate
Curriculum Committee.
1971-
?
Academic Counselling
1971-72 Faculty of Science member on Univ. Appointments Committee for
Scholarly Status:
?
Faculty of Arts
a) Recent Invitations (Since March, 1970).
1.
From the Entomological Society of America, to co-author with
Prof. K. Hagen, University of California, Berkeley, the section on
parasitic Hymenoptera for a proposed several-volume work on the
immature stages of insects.
2.
From the Department of Biology, University of New Brunswick,
Fredericton, to give a seminar on Biological Control.
3.
From Forest Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture, to act as
discussion leader at "Workshop on Research. and Development. Studies
of Larch Casebearer in Western Larch Stands", at Moscow, Idaho.
4.
From the Western Forest Insect Work Conference, to organize and
act as Moderator of the session on "Problems inherent to exotic
insect outbreaks: at the 22nd Annual Meeting held at Glenwood
Springs, Colorado, March 1971.
5.
From the Entomological Society of British Columbia, to become a
director for two years.
6.
Various radio and newspaper interviews.
b) Membership in Learned Societies
Entomological Society of Canada
Entomological Society of America
Canadian Society of Zoologists
. ?
American Institute of Biological Sciences
Entomological Society of British Columbia
Entomological Society of Ontario
International Organization for Biological Control (I.0.B.C.)
Sigma Delta Epsilon (Graduate Women's Scientific Fraternity)

 
Curriculum Vitae ?
3 ?
68.
Thelma Finlavson ?
May, 1972
• ?
Scholarly Accomplishments
a)
Current
areas
of scholarly specialization
Biological control procedures and techniques
Biology and taxonomy of immature stages of parasitic insects.
b)
Publications - Total-24 in Refereed Journals, 21 of them since 1957,
mainly in three areas.
1)
Parasites of forest insects: 6 papers, 22 pages
2)
Effects of food and environmental factors on reproductions
?
?
of parasitic Hymenoptera:
?
5 papers, 13 pages
3)
Biology and taxonomy of immature stages of parsitic insects:
13 papers, 223 pages.
For the past five years, in journals with a referee system:
1966 The false cocoon of Hyposoter parorgyiae (Vier.) (Hymenoptera:
Ichneumonidae).
Canadian
Ent. 98:139.
1967 A classification of the subfamily Pimplinae (Hymenoptera:
Ichneumonidae) based on final-instar larval characteristics.
Canadian Ent. 99:1-8.
1967 The hymenopterous parasites (Hymenoptera:Aphidiidae et Aphelinidae)
of the pea aphid in eastern North America.
Canadian
Ent. 99:
1051-1082. (With M. Mackauer).
1967 Taxonomy of final-instar larvae of the hymenopterous and dipterous
parasites of Acrobasis spp. (Lepidoptera:Phycitidae) in the
Ottawa region. Canadian Ent. 99:1233-1271.
1969 Final-instar larvae of two hymenopterous parasites of a wood-boring
beetle, Tetropiuzn velutinum L.eConte (Coleoptera:Cerambycidae).
J. entomol. Soc. British Columbia 66:62-65.
1970 Final-instar larval characteristics of Coleocentrus ruf us
(Hymenoptera:Ichneumonjdae). Canadian Ent. 102:905-907.
In preparation: 2 papers; 1 monograph; and 1 book co-authored with
Prof. K. Hagen, University of California, Berkeley.
Additional Comments:
External Research Awards
1967-68
National
Research
Council
$3,000.
. ?
1968-69
National
Research
Council
5,800.
1969-70
National
Research
Council
3,000.
1972-73
National
Research
Council
2,000.

 
69.
Department of Biological Sciences
?
Simon Fraser University
.
.
CURRICULUM VITAE
May, 1972
Name: ?
Richard Michael Francis Stuart SADLEIR -
?
Age:
?
36
Present Faculty
Position: Associate Professor
Term of Present Contract: Tenured - July 23, 1970
First Appointed - 1 April, 1967.
Degrees: B.Sc. Honours (First Class), Univ. of Western Australia, 1958
Ph.D., University of Western Australia, 1961.
Career: ?
Postdoctoral Fellow - Univ. of British Columbia, 1961-1963.
Postdoctoral Fellow - Nature Conservancy and University of
Aberdeen, Scotland, 1964.
Research Fellow - Zoological Society of London, 1964-1967.
Contributions to SFU:
a)
Courses taught
102 - Introductory
Biology, Fall 1970
304 - Animal Ecology - Summer 1967
316 - Vertebrate Biology - Fall 1967, Summer 1968, Spring 1969,
Fall 1969, Spring 1971.
409 - Field Ecology - Summer 1969, Summer 1971.
836 - Vertebrate Reproductive Ecology - Fall 1968, Fall 1970.
879 - Modern Forest Practice - Fall 1969.
b)
Member of following committees
University Search Committee for Dean of Science
University
(and Departmental) Search Committee for Chairman of
Department of Biological Sciences
University Committee on Animal Care
Departmental Promotion and Tenure Committee
Faculty of Science Executive Committee
Kinesiology Selection Committee
Scholarly Status:
a) ?
Invited Addresses
To Society of Psychosomatic Research, London, U. K. November, 1967.
(Unable to attend - paper read in absentia).

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
-2-
?
May, 197270.
• :
R.
M. F.
S. Sadleir
S ?
Invited
Addresses (continued...)
To 2nd International Conference on "Biology of Reproduction in
Mammals". (Society for the Study of Fertility). Nairobi,
Kenya, April 1968.
To 3rd International Symposium on "Environment and Reproduction
in Mammals and Birds". (Society for the Study of Fertility).
Edinburgh, Scotland - March 1972.
b) Society Membership
American Society of Mainmalogists
British Ecological Society
Canadian Society of Zoologists
Canadian Society of Wildlife and Fisheries Biologists
Japanese Society of Population Ecology
Society for the Study of Fertility
Zoological Society of London
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a)
Research
My general research interest is the role of the environment in
the reproduction of mammals. My present specific project is
.
?
concerned with the effect of the alteration of forest environ-
ments by logging on reproduction in deermouse and other small
mammal populations. I am also interested in vertebrates as pests
and am currently collating information on this subject fromal].
Canadian provinces.
b)
Publications
• Scientific Papers - 19 total (15 in refereed journals)
Books - 1 published;
?
1 written (to be published)
Chapters - 2
1965 ?
Reproduction in two species of kangaroo Macropus robustus and
Megaleia rufa in the arid Pilbara region of Western Australia.
Proc. Zoo].. Soc. Lorid. 145:239-61.
1965 ?
The relationship between agonistic behaviour and population changes
in the deermouse Peromyscus maniculatus (Wagner). J. Ariim.
Ecol. 34:331-52.
1966 ?
The preservation of mammalian spermatozoa by freezing. Lab. pract.
15:413-7.
1966 ?
The construction of rectal electrodes for electro-ejaculation.
(With P. Healey). J. Reprod. Fertil. 11:299-301.
.
?
1966
?
Notes on reproduction in the larger Felidae. Inter. Zoo Yrbk.
6:184-7.
/3

 
Curriculum Vitae
?
May, 1972
R.
M. F.
S. Sadleir
• ?
1966 ?
The diagnosis of infertility in a black leopard (Pantherapardus).
Vet. Rec. 79:397-8.
1966 ?
Investigations into the reproduction of larger felidae in captivity.
(Abstract). J. Reprod. Fertil. 12:411-2.
1967 ?
The toxicity of various non-electrolites to human spermatozoa and
their protective effects during freezing. (With D. W. Richardson).
J.
Reprod. Fertil. 1.:439-44.
1968 ?
Induction of ovulation in the lion (Felis leo). (With.
I. W.
Rowlands).
J.
Reprod. Fertil. 16:106-11.
1968 ?
Reproductive responses to the environment in mammals. J. Psychosomatic
Res. 12:3-9.
1969
?
The role of nutrition in the reproduction of wild mammals. J.
Reprod. Fertil. Suppi. No. 6:39-48.
1970 ?
The use of index trap lines to estimate population nwnbersof deermice
(Peromyscus maniculatus) in a forest environment in British
Columbia. (With B. G. Petticrew). Can. J. Zool. 48:385-389.
1970 ?
The establishment of a dominance rank order in male Peromyscus
maniculatus and its stability with time. Anim. Behav. 18:55-59.
1970 ?
Population dynamics and breeding of the deerniouse Peromyscus
maniculatus on Burnaby Mountain, B. C. Syesis 3:67-74.
1970
?
Studies on the band-tailed pigeon (Columba fasciata) in British
Columbia. I. Seasonal changes in gonadal development and
crop gland activity. (WithG. L. March). Can. J. Zool. 48:
1353-1357.
Books:
1969 ?
The Ecology of Reproduction in Wild and Domestic Mammals. 321 pp.
(Methuens, London)
To be published 1973: The Reproduction of Vertebrates. (Academic Press
New York and London).
Chapters "Cycles and Seasons" and "Environmental Effects" in Reproduction in
Mammals. (Austin & Short, Eds.). To be published by Cambridge
University Press in 1972.
C
.../4

 
Curriculum vitae
?
May, 1972
R. M. F. S. Sadleir
Additional.
Comments:
a)
Awards
C.S.I.R.O. Overseas Postgraduate Studentship - 1962
N.R.C. Travel Grant to attend Nairobi Conference ($1540) - 1968.
b)
Other Teaching Posts
Resident Tutor, St. Georges College, University of Western
Australia, 1959-61.
?
--
External Lecturer, University of London, 1965-66.
Lecturer, Capilano College, West Vancouver, 1968.
c) ?
External
Research Awards
1967-68
NRC Interim Grant
$4,500.
1968-69
NRC Grant
$6,860.
1969-70
NRC Grant
$7,000.
1970-71
NRC Grant (1st of
3 year)
$8,000.
1971-72
NRC Grant (2nd of
3 year)
$8,000.
1972-73
NRC Grant (3rd of
3 year)
$8,000.
d) ?
Graduate
Student Supervision
1 Ph.D.
student graduated 1971.
2 M.Sc.
and 2 Ph.D. students
currently being
supervised.
Member of supervisory committee of 7 other students.
e) Continuing Education
Currently acting as Director of Television Production:
in production - fund raising film for ecology series;
in planning - scripts and organisation for producing a TV
Ecology course.
External References:
Dr. D. H. Chitty, Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia
Dr. J. E. Eisenberg, Smithsonian Institute Biological Program in Ceylon,
6 Galkanda Rd., Aniwatte, Kandy, Ceylon.
Dr.
I. W.
Rowlands, Wellcome Institute of Comparative Physiology,
Zoological Society of London, Regents Park, London, N. W. 1, England.

 
..,...
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
CURRICULUM VITAE
February, 1972
Name: ?
Peter Christian OLOFFS
?
Age:
42
Present Faculty
Position:AssistantProfessor
Term of Present Contract: 2 years - expires 31August1974
First Appointed - 1 September 1968
Degrees: Dipi. Agr. 1956 University, G8ttingen, Germany.
M.A. ?
1964 Dept. of Zoology, University of B. C.
Ph.D. ?
1968 University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Career: 1958-1963
1962-1963
1963-1964
1965-1968
1968
1968-date
Chemist, Later Chemicals Ltd., Vancouver, B. C.
Teaching Assistant, Univ. of British Columbia.
Sessional Lecturer, Univ. of British Columbia.
Research Assistant (Insect
Toxicology
& Residue
Research), University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Project Associate (Insect
Toxicology &
Residue
Research), University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Assistant Professor, Simon Fraser University.
Contributions toSF:
a)
Courses taught
Biology 301 - Biochemistry I - Fall 1969, Spring 1970, Fall 1970
Spring 1971
Biology 846 - Insecticide Chemistry and
Toxicology -
Spring 1969, 1970,
Biology 315 - Plant Physiology - Summer 1971
?
1971.
Repeated guest lectures in other SFU courses.
b)
Other contributions
Biochemistry Committee
Faculty Association Vice-President - Fall 1970 to July 2, 1971.
President and Sponsor, SFU Tennis Club, Oct. 1968 to Summer 1970.
See tennis courts built.
.•
?
Member, Salary
Committee, SFU Faculty Association, 1970-71.

 
LeJLUL
Y
AI
P. C. Oloffs
Scholarly Status
a)
Invited Addresses
. ? "Side effects of pesticides". Seminar, Faculty of Agriculture,
University of British Columbia, 1969.
"Extracellular. plant enzymes metabolizing pesticides, and factors
affecting the reactions". Seminar, Faculty of Agriculture,
University of British Columbia, 1970.
"Pesticides in Perspective", 2 lectures, UBC Extension Department.
Note: This lecture series was cancelled at the time and place for
which scheduled because of insufficient registrants - then held
unofficially in form of discussion with the people sho were present.
"Pesticides for the home gardener". Invitational address at Annual
Meeting of-B. C. Council of Garden Clubs, 1969.
"Urban and suburban use of pesticides and effects".
Invitational
address, meeting of Western Canada Turfgrass Association, Feb. 1970.
"Benefits and needs of pesticides". - YMCA, April, 1969.
"Pesticides - hazards from uses and misuses". Invitational address,
9th Annual Meeting, Western Canada Turfgrass Association. (See
publications list).
"Pesticides". UBC courses Pharmacy 435 and Plant Science 435. Two
lectures and 1 laboratory (3 hours) per week during Fall Semester 1970.
"Pestology at the university level". Invitational address, 51st Annual
Meeting, Agricultural Institute of Canada, Lethbridge, Alberta,
July 1971. Published in Proceedings.
"World-wide Implications of Pesticide Use". One-hour TV programme,
Channel
10, Nov. 3, 1971 (With Drs. H.R.MacCarthy and A. C. Renney).
"Metabolism of Cyclodiene Insecticides". Seminar, Fac. of Agric.,
UBC, Nov. 16, 1971.
"Pesticides - Yes or No?" Invitational address, Ann. Convention,
Nursery Trade Assoc., Harrison Hot Springs, Dec. 3, 1971.
"Pesticides and Public Health". Guest lecture, Depts. of Plant Science
and Pharmacy, UBC, Dec. 9, 1971.
b)
Professional Societies
Entomological Society of British Columbia
Entomological Society of America
Member: ?
ii)
i)
Programme
Membership
Committee
Committee )
of Pacific Branch
A
A .A. S
American Chemical Society, Pesticide Section
Agricultural Institute of Canada (AIC).
is
Western Canada Turfgrass Association (Honorary Member).
/3

 
P. C. O].offs
Scholarly Accomplishments
a)
Area of Specialization
S
.
Pesticide Chemistry, Biochemistry and Toxicology.
Note: not ecology and our once so beautiful environment.
b)
Refereed Publications
1956 The transition phenomenon in relation to the penetration of
water through the cuticle of an insect, Cenocorixa expleta
(Hungerford). Can. J. Zool. 44: 621-630.
1969 The epoxidation of aidrin by excised pieces of plant tissue.
?
J. Agricultural and Food Chemistry, .17(1): 143-147.
1970 Epoxidation of aidrin by cell-free pea root preparations.
Pesticide Sc., 1: 228-232.
1971 The translocation of pesticide residues into carrots from
various soils. Can. J. Plant Science. 51: 547-550.
(With Szeto and Webster).
GLC separation of heptachlor epoxide, oxychlordane, a- and
y-chlordane. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 7: 33-35.
(With Conder and Szeto).
Organochiorine residues in human tissues. Rept. of the 6th
Pesticide Residue Analysis Seminar.
p.
42-46.
A new apparatus to induce hepatic cirrhosis in rats with
gaseous Cd
4
. In prepration. (Still in prep. as contribution
of one collaborator from UBC so slow in coming). With H.
Clarke, N. Noble,
S.Y.
Szeto).
Fate and Behaviour of Five Chlorinated Hydrocarbons in Three
Natural Waters. Submitted to Can J. Microbiol. (With
L. J. Albright and S.Y. Szeto).
c)
Non-Refereed Publications
1970 Interactions. Western Can. Turfgrass Assoc. "Feature Article".
April, 1970. Vol. 2, #4.
1971 Pesticides - Hazards from Uses and Misuses. Proc. 9th Ann.
Mtg. Western Can. Turfgrass Assoc.
pp
44-62.
Pestology at the University level. Proc. 18th Annual Mtg.,
Agric. Pesticide Society.
p.
84-92.
1972 Formulating Pesticides. Western Can. Turfgrass Assoc.
?
"Feature Article". Feb. 1972. (In press).
.
Additional Comments
Member - B. C. Carrot Research Committee
Member - B. C. Pesticide Advisory Committee (Advisory Committee to
Minister of Agriculture). ?
-
.. .../4

 
• ?
Curriculum Vitae
?
February 1972
P. C. Oloffs
Grants
National Research Council Grant - $4000.00 per annum, 1970, 71, 72
B. C. Medical Research Council Grant - $5000.00
B. C. Plant Science Lead Committee Grant. (Grant awarded to Dr. J.
Webster - used to finance technician, Mr. S. Y. Szeto, for
several
months and to finance field work.)
Dept. of Energy, Mines and Resources Grant - $3,000.00
President's Research Grant - $1,500.00
Velsicol Chem. Corp, Chicago. - $2,000.00
Public Health. $17,920.00 for April 1972 - March 1973.
References
Dr. H. R. MacCarthy, C.D.A. Research Station, 6660 N. W. Marine,
Vancouver, B. C.
Mr. G. M. Maclntyre, Professor, Faculty of Law, University of
British Columbia, Vancouver 8, B. C.
Mr. Jack Later, President, Later Chemicals Ltd., 330 Lysander Lane,
Richmond, B. C.
0

 
i • .
77.
Department of Biological Sciences
Simon Fraser University
S
CURRICULUM VITAE
February, 1972
Name: ?
James E. RAHE
Age:
?
32
Present Faculty Position:
Assistant Professor
Term of Present Contract:
2 yrs. 7 mos. - expires August 31, 1973
First Appointed - October 1, 1969
Degrees:
?
B.S.A. ?
1961
Purdue University
Ph.D. ?
1969
Purdue University
Career:
Sept. 57 - Jan. 61
Undergraduate Student, Purdue University
April 61 - Jan. 63
Platoon Leader, U.S. Army, Ft. McClellan, Alabama
Jan. 63 - June 69
Graduate Research Assistant, Dept. of Biochemistry,
Purdue University
June 69 - Oct. 69
Postdoctoral Appointment, Dept. of Biochemistry,
Purdue University
Oct. 69 - present
Assistant Professor, Dept. of
Biological'Scierjces,
Simon Fraser University.
Contributions to SFU:
a)
Courses
taught
201 - Cell Biology and Biochemistry - Spring 1972.
301 - Biochemistry I - Summer 1970, Fall 1971.
841 - Economic Organisms II - Fall 1969 (one of three instructors),
Fall 1970
b)
Committees
Oct 1971 - present - Chairman, Dept. Undergraduate Curriculum Committee
Nov 1971 - present - Department Tenure Committee
Jan 1972 - present - CUSO Interview Team.
S
12

 
10.
Curriculum Vita'
?
-2-
J. E. Rahe
?
February 1972
S
Scholarly Status:
a) April, 1971. ?
Department of Plant Science, UBC.
"Biochemical Aspects of Induced Disease Resistance
in Phaseolus vulgaris."
b)
Society Membership:
Phytochemical Society of North America
American Phytopathological Society
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Sigma Xi
Scholarly Accomplishments:
a)
Research specializtion in area of biochemical nature and control
of natural and artificially induced disease resistance in plants.
b)
Total publications in print: 6, submitted: 1.
1969 Correlation
of phenolic metabolism with histological changes in
Phaseolus vulgarIs inoculated with fungi. Netherlands J. Plant
S
Pathology, 75:50-71. (Invited Paper)
1969 Induced resistance in Phaseolus vulgaris to bean anthracnose.
Phytopathology
59:1641-1645.
1970 Cinnamic acid production as a method of assay for phenylalanine
anunonia-lyase in acetone powders of Phaseolus vulgaris.
Phytochernistry 9:1009-1015.
1970 Factors affecting gene expression as a key to disease resistance
in plants. Arquivos do Instituto Biologico. 37:1-7. (Invited Paper).
1970 Metabolic nature of the infection-limiting effect of heat on bean
anthracnose. Phytopathology 60:1005-1009.
1972 Biochemical nature and control of induced resistance in Phaseolus
vulgaris. ?
I. Phytoalexin nature of heat-induced protection
against bean anthracnose. Phytopathology (submitted Feb. 1972).
Other publications:
1969 A biochemical study of mechanisms of defense in Phaseolus vulgaris
against ColletotrIchum lIndemuthianum and other fungi. Ph.D.
Thesis, Purdue University, 156 pp.
.
/3

 
Curriculum vita ?
-.
J. E. Rahe ?
February 1972
Summary of Department-Related Activities 1.971-1972
Teaching
Teaching duties during the past year included BISC 301 (fall trimester);
the previous two trimesters were devoted to research. An effort was made to
define the content interrelationship between BISC 301 and 201. Although no
definite recommendations have been formulated, Dr. Oloff s and myself are
presently offering the respective courses as a succession while attempting
to remain within the scope of the calendar descriptions. From this it is
felt that factual data will be obtained to substantiate any proposed
changes or recommendations regarding the role of these courses in the
biology curriculum.
Research
During the past year research concerning the nature of artificially
induced resistance to the anthracnose fungus in bean plants has yielded data
which contribute significantly to current understanding of natural defense
mechanisms in plants. With respect to a number of aromatic and phenolic
plant constituents characteristic of metabolic response in beans it was
shown that the induced defense response in susceptible cultivars is identical
to the naturally occurring defense response of resistant cultivars. This
was interpreted to mean that the genetic potential for resistance is present
in susceptible cultivars, but under normal conditions is not adequately
expressed. This data has been recently submitted for publication in Phyto-
pathology.
It was previously shown that susceptible plants in which resistance
has been induced are also protected against subsequent infection. During
the past year data indicating that such protected plants actively respond to
subsequent infection have been obtained. They respond without being induced,
and in the same manner as naturally resistant cultivars. These data are
presently being incorporated into two manuscripts, one of which describes
the response and the other a new method for rapid quantitative analysis by
thin-layer chromatography of a phenolic substance (phaseollin) characteristic
of these responses and for which a direct role in resistance has been widely
suggested.
The use of gaseous CO to induce the resistant response in beans was
discovered in our research during the past year, primarily due to the
research efforts of Robert Arnold. Clarification of some details is
necessary before this work can be published.
An initial NRC grant was applied for during December of 1971 to
support and further the above research.
Administrative duties as Chairman of the Department Undergraduate Curriculum
Committee
have
required a large time commitment during the past three months.
This includes time spent in committee meetings, preparation of documents,
discussions with faculty and students, and time spent as representative to
the Faculty of Science Undergraduate Curriculum Committee.

 
Curriculum Vit
?
80.
J. E. Rahe ?
February 1972
Additional University and Community Involvement
1.
CUSO interview team
2.
All Saints Pari (Bingo Organization)
3.
All Saints Parish (Canadian Catechism: Youth Group Leader-9th grade).
External References
Dr. Joseph Kic,
Department of Biochemistry,
Purdue University,
Lafayette, Indiana 47906.
Dr. E. B. Williams,
Department of Botany and Plant Pathology,
Purdue University,
Lafayette, Indiana 47906.
Dr. John Tuite,
Department of Botany and Plant Pathology,
Purdue University,
Lafayette, Indiana 47906.
0

 
81.
0
S
?
APPENDIX B
Descriptions of proposed new courses required by the proposed program:
BiSc 849-5, 601-3, 602-3, 603-3, 604-2, 605-1.
Note: The preparation of detailed course outlines will require extensive
cooperation from guest instructors and outside agencies. Such cooperation
cannot be solicited until we have an approved program in which they can be
formally involved. Meanwhile tentative detailed course outlines exist
and can be provided if needed with the understanding that they are liable
to be modified when the outside agencies and Individuals become involved.
is
0

 
82.
Cf.!
Pf.'t W?ORMAT!ON
Department:
?
Biological Sciences
?
Course NumbedBiSc 849
Title: Individual
Scholarly Study in Pestology
Description:
An analysis of an aspect of . pestology or pest managmenet resulting in
scholarlypaper.AmandatorycourseforthedegreeofMasterofPestlIanagenent.
Credit hours: five ()
?
Vector:
?
N/A ?
prerequisite(s) if any:_____
?
Acceptance into M.P.N. z':;-
gramme.
2.
t.OLL!T AND SCHEDUtlG:
probably not
Estimated Enrollment:
over 25
When will the course first be offered:
1972-3
Row often viii the course be offered:
Any semester as needed and as feasible.
3.
J13T1F1CATIO:
To enable students in the otherwise largely generalist M.P.M. programme to study
depth or in full detail an aspect
_ofpestology or o.f pest management that is
normally related to where, why, and/or on what they hope to be employed.
• ?
Any one of the faculty me-ber
z
in
• ?
t1itct Vculty ,ter will normally teach the course:
the M.P.M. prograr.'me. -
Elt are the budctary iuItcatiops of counting the course:
Minimal: possible
costs of limited work travel and of Xeroxing.
a- ?
- -- - .-
-,
Are there sufficient Library resources
(append details):
?
Yes
a)
Outline of the Course
Appended
b)
Azt
indicnt1'n of
the corrpetence of the Faculty meter to give
the cc-_
c)
Library
resources Appended
.1w%\
?
t:
. r%'d:
Dcpertrnttl
Crcduate
Studiev
Comcit1ee:_
_Date:_
Pctcuity Crsduate
Studies Committee:
?
Date :_.
Date:
-
Sete
Graduate Studies
Cornittcc:_
Date:______
cnate:
?
Date: --
CS.
11
1
.1

 
L
w
-
?
83.
Outline of course B1Sc 849
The scholarly study would be a research project tailored to the
needs of the individual student. It would be normally based on a literature
study but sometimes on data obtained directly from other sources. It may
relate
to aspects of pest problems and/or their management in the particular
geographical region and/or type of habitat where the student hopes to work
or to particular aspects of management on which he hopes to be employed or in
which he plans to specialize further.
The subject would be selected by the student in consultation with
a faculty member who would then become his supervisor and would have to be
approved by the Pest Management Supervisory Committee. The end-result of the
scholarly study would be a scholarly paper that would be graded by an examining
committee of three faculty members.
Faculty members of the Pestology Centre who would supervise students taking
the course are: -
B.P. Beirne, Professor of Pest Management, Director of the Pestology Centre.?
B.Sc. (Hons.), M.A., M.Sc., Ph.D. (Dublin), M.R.I.A.
J.S. Barlow, Professor, Associate Dean of Science. B.S.A. (Ontario Agric.
Coil.), M.A., Ph.D. (Toronto).
J.P.M. Mackauer, Professor. Dr. Phil. Nat. (Frankfurt H.).
isK.K. Nair, Professor. B.Sc. (Madras), M.Sc., Ph.D. (Bombay).
A.L Turnbull, Professor. B.S.F., M.F. (British Columbia, D. Phil. (Oxford).
J.M. Webster, Professor, B.Sc., Ph.D. (London). A.R.C.S., D.I.C.
P. Belton, Associate Professor. B.Sc. (London), Ph.D. (Glasgow), A.R.C.S.
J.H. Borden, Associate Professor. B.S. (Wash. Sta.), M.S., Ph.D. (California,
Berkeley).
T. Finlayson (Mrs.), Associate Professor. B.A. (1-ions.), (Toronto).
R.M.F.S. Sadleir, Associate Professor. B.Sc. (lions.), Ph. D. (Western Australia).
P.C. Oloffs, Assistant Professor. Dip. Agr. (Gttingen), M.S.A. (British
Columbia), Ph.D. (Wisconsin).
J.E. Rahe, Assistant Professor. B.S., Ph.D. (Purdue).
Library resources:
In addition to the normal resources of the SFU library there are
several libraries of pestology and related literature (totalling 173 shelf feet)
.
?
that were recently presented to the Pestology Centre by Federal and Provincial
government agencies.

 
84.
Re: Covering memorandum on proposed new BioScience postgraduate courses
601 to 605.
.
?
These proposed courses have the following in common:
General: These courses form an integrated group; they are in
effect segments of one large course. They are required for the proposed
Master of Pest Management degree. They are classed as postgraduate courses
because it is considered that they should not be available for credit
toward a primary degree. They are not classed as graduate (800-level)
courses proper because they are distinctive in their technological orientation.
Vector: These courses would be given consecutively rather than
concurrently. This would enable each to be given by an expert seconded
temporarily to the University for that purpose; it would enable each to be
taken by individuals on temporary leave from jobs; it would enable optimum
use to be made of field trips and borrowed or rented equipment; and it would
avoid permanent commitments that might make course evolution or abolition
difficult. The courses would be full-time, intensive operations in which
work equivalent to one credit would be done in one week.
Prerequisites: To be defined for the individual prospective
student by the proposed Pest Management Supervisory Committee.
Justification: The course
Master of Pest Management degree. They
practical experience in the methods and
supplement the theory and the theory of
other pestology courses.
s are requisites for the proposed
are designed to give the student
procedures of pest management to
the practice that are covered in
Teachers: A Pestology Centre faculty member, Dr. J.H. Borden,
would be in charge of all the courses in a supervisory directorial capacity
and would teach one of them. Each of the others would be given by an expert
from outside the University (usually from a Federal government research
centre in B.C.). Each of the five courses would have at least one Pestology
Centre faculty member as an advisor and back-up teacher. All five would have
the one individual as Demonstrator.
Budgetary Implications: The chief costs would be: fees to the
(non-SFU) course leaders who want them, calculated at approximately a $500
preparation fee and $500 per credit hour; travel costs (bus rental or
car mileage, and lodging) to and from SFU for field trips; and possible rental
costs of some equipment. Trailers will be required for classroom use at
the SFU agricultural experiment area in the UBC Research Forest.
Library Resources: Adequate, especially with the recent gifts from
Federal and B.C. Provincial Government agencies of 173 shelf feet of pestologv
and related literature and gifts of full sets of pestology extension literature
from other Canadian and U.S. government agencies.
Course Outlines: In all five courses the student will learn by
• ?
doing to diagnose, prescribe, apply, and evaluate in relation to the character-
istics of the pests, the properties of the control agents and procedures,
safety precautions, and legal and economic restrictions. The proposed

 
-
?
85.
general
outline that will apply to each course is this: -
1)
Survey and Detection a) Is there a pest organism present? Methods
of survey and identification, sampling methods, use of keys.
b) Could there be a pest problem in the future?
?
Assessment
of the situations in which pests may occur and conditions
favouring their development.
2)
Damage Assessment and Prediction
?
a) What damage is the pest
organism causing?
?
Recognition of damage caused by important
pests. ?
Methods of estimating impact of damage on crop,
structure or environment.
?
b) What damage could the pest cause
in the future? ?
Means of predicting population increase of
pests and correlation with eventual damage.
3)
Decision Making
?
a) What should be done, if anything, to control
the pest? ?
Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-
benefit analysis, selection of most effective and ecologically
compatible control method.
?
b) What should be done, if anything,
to prevent the occurrence of a pest which would cause damage
in the future? ?
Economics of pest damage and control, i.e.
cost-benefit analysis, selection of most appropriate environmental
modification or preventive controls.
4)
Application of Catrols and Preventive Methods
?
a) How should a
control be applied to achieve maximum effectiveness?
?
Timing,
dosage, dispersal, application methods for controls. b) What
.
methods will minimize the chance of pest occurrence and damage?
Methods of environmental modification, e.g. cultural methods,
building modifications, elimination of pest habitat, introduction
of lethal agent into habitat (baits, attractants, sterile
individuals, poisons, etc.), sanitation.
5)
Assessment of Controls or Preventive Methods
?
a) How effective was
the control used?
?
Repeat sections 1) and 2). ?
b) How effective
were any preventive measures taken? ?
Repeat sections 1) and 2).
6)
Legislation and Safety Controls a) What legal considerations must
be made? Legislation regarding pest import and export,
quarantines, pesticide usage, use of disease organisms, property
rights, inspection, residues, etc. b) What safety precautions
must be taken? Medical or public health impact of the pest,
toxicity of pesticides and safety procedures when applying them.
0

 
• ?
I.
cILri,Y'. ?
Irr't':no:
86.
Departm
e
nt
1
1')
Course
?
unUc.r ?
lc((i
Title: ?
Urban
and ?
I whi't
ii
a I Pct ?
1I1,1'rp('nt
Dccc r I p
t
Ion:
re)cedtlrcs
?
and
me
t hod
!
-, ?
ud ?
in ?
preventing damage by
?
pests ?
(,n
?
i ?
1
at
-__
in
;ind ?
around
buil
dings
and
vehi
cl
es.
Credit ?
Hours,
:
Three
-Vector: 8020
Prerequisite(s) ?
If
(see
covering memo)
(Sec ?
covering marorand':1
?
2. ?
I0LI. ::T /[) SCiW.DLIG
Etiatcd Erro1h:nt: 25
?
IThen
will the course first be offered: Su:er i9:
(limited by facilities)
How often will the course be offered:
Ever y
Summer Semester
?
. ?
1i?3T1;•)C.f;:1.C::::
-
?
Sc.: ccvt .
ring icmorandenn
OT ?
_
?
6.
?
1
tich L'cculty c.-.her viii
•norralI
teach
the
course:
v isit1n lecturer Cr
Dr. P. Eel
t".
lr^iat
r-
-.c
the
budtcry
irplIction of cuntirg
the
course:
Up
to $2.000 hoi:::
for lecturer. about $1,000 for travel; about S500 for miscellaneous and
coil tinenc1es
Lro ?
ef(
cat
Librr.ry re
s
ources (append dctaiic):
A)
Outline of the Course
Appended and
see covering
meorandu:n
b) t ?
indicat ion of
the co,ctence of the Faculty
member
to give
thc
C:
c)
Library t000urces ?
S e
v
CO\'L'I
i ug
niorancIti:: ?
App&::
t."7rovd:
?
Gducte Studies Coc:lttce:
?
DI; te:
1'3clty Credu1 Studje Coc:ittve:
?
D'tc
5 ?
!7uIty:
?
Date:____
Cate Graduate Studies Coranittee:
?
Date:
Date:

 
87.
Biological Sciences 601-3. Urban and Industrial Pest Management.
0
?
Detailed Course Description
Course Description
A 3-credit, lecture and laboratory course to be held in a 3-week
period. Lectures will be primarily in a 2-hour period in the early
morning, followed by extensive field, laboratory and project work
for the duration of each day. In some cases lectures may be concentrated
into more than 2-hour periods to allow whole-day field trips or project
work.
The course will cover Insects, mites, fungal diseases, rodents and
birds that cause harm to or are pests in or around houses, warehouses,
ships, other industrial or residential structures, greenhouses and gardens
in an urban environment. ?
The course will be taught in part on location
in and around Vancouver, with the cooperation of various municipal,
Federal, and provincial government and semi-government agencies as appropriate.
Outline
For the pests and environment listed above, the course will cover
the following subject areas.
1) Survey and Detection a) Is there a pest organism present? Methods of
survey and Identification, sampling methods, use of keys. b) Could
there he a pest problem in the future? Assessment of the situations
in
which pests may occur and conditions favouring their development.
2) Damage Assessment and Prediction
causing? Recognition of damag
of estimating impact of damage
b) What damage could the pest
predicting population increase
damage.
a) What damage is the pest organism
caused by important pests. Methods
on crop, structure or environment.
cause in the future? Means of
of pests and correlation with eventual
3)
Decision Making a) What should be done, if anything, to control the
pest? Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit
analysis, selection of most effective and ecologically compatible
control method. b) What should be done, if anything, to prevent
the occurrence of a pest which would cause damage in the future?
Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit analysis,
selection of most appropriate environmental modification or preventive
controls.
4)
Application Qf Controls and Preventive Methods a) How should a control
be applied to achieve maximum effectiveness? Timing, dosage,
dispersal, application methods for controls. b) What methods will
minimize the chance of pest occurrence and damage? Methods of
environmental modification, e.g. cultural methods, building modifica-
tions, elimination of pest habitat, introduction of lethal agent
is
?
sanitation.
habitat (baits, attractants, sterile individuals, poisons, etc.),
sanitation.

 
88.
Biological Sciences
601-3 (continued)
5) Assessment of Controls or Preventive Methods a) How effective was the
control used? Repeat sections 1) and 2). b) How effective were any
preventive measures taken? Repeat sections 1) and 2).
6)
Legislation and Safety Controls a) What legal considerations must be
made? Legislation regarding pest import and export, quarantines,
pesticide usage, use of disease organisms, property rights,
inspection, residues, etc. b) What safety precautions must be taken?
Medical or public health impact of the pest, toxicity of pesticides
and safety procedures when applying them.
Faculty
General supervision: Dr. J. H. Borden, Associate Professor, Pestology
Centre.
Primary course teacher: outside expert not selected at this time.
Advisors: Dr. P. Belton, Associate Professor, Pestology Centre (and
primary course teacher if a suitable outside expert not available)
and Dr. K. K. Nair, Professor, Pestology Centre; Dr. R.M.F.S. Sadleir,
Associate Professor, Pestology Centre.
S
0

 
•1.
*
89.
Depnrtrncnt ?
BJoScionce
0Pl12j. ?
Course Numbcr:_
2
Title:
?
rore
.
;t, Wildland, and Wa'rshed pest management.
Description:
Procedures
and methods used In preventing damage by pests ( sensu lato
to
forest
trees
and in and around rural recreational situations.
Credit Hours:
?
Three ?
Vector: 8-0-20
?
Prerequisite(s) if any:
(see covering memo)
?
?
(see covering?
memo)
2.
L0L1.!1T tJTD
SCHFDIrLTNG:
Estimated
Enrolltt.nt:
25
?
- When will the course first be offered: Surer 1973
(limited by facilities)
fla
y
often will the course be offered:
?
Every Summer Iqemester
3.
JU3TIVICATICfl:
See covering memorandum
4.
r.':r'1cs:
Uhich Faculty
?
tbr will normally teach the course:
?
Dr. J. H. Borden
ttat ara
the budgetary lcpllcations of taunting
the course: About 9100O_for
travel and related expenses; about $500 for miscellaneous and contingencies.
Are
th2re
aufficiont Library
resources (append
details):
?
Yes
t.ppc
ded:
a) ?
Outline
of the Course Appended;
and see covering memo.
b) ?
An
indication of the competence
c)
?
Library resources ?
See covering
of
?
the FacuIt ?
member
memo.
to give ?
the cc
Appcik..
1
t.proved:
Dc-pertr.ntol
Graduate Studies Committee:
Date:_______
L !
cculty
Ccduote Studies Cotznittc-e:
Date:_______
ete Graduate
Studies Cotittee: ?
Date:______
Cenate: ?
Date: ?
-
GS. 1P/
Vcul ty:
?
Dcte:_______

 
S ?
9U.
Biological Sciences 602-3. Forest, Wildiand and Watershed Pest Management.
0 ?
Detailed Course Description
Course Description
A 3-credit, lecture and laboratory course to be held in a 3-week
period. Lectures will be primarily in a 2-hour period in the early
morning, followed by extensive field, laboratory and project work
for the duration of each day. In some cases lectures may be concentrated:
into more than 2-hour periods to allow whole-day field trips or project
work.
The course will cover insects, mites, nematodes, plant diseases,
weeds, rodents and other mammals which are pests in lands principally
managed for timber production, recreation or as watersheds. Includes
pests of forest trees, control of weeds on right-of-ways and the control
of insect pests such as mosquitoes and blackflies which originate in
freshwater on forest and wildiand areas. The course will be taught mainly
in
the field and will extensively utilize the resources of the U.B.C.
Research Forest, Maple Ridge, B.C.
Outline
For the pests and environment listed above, the course will cover
the following subject areas.
. ?
1) Survey and Detection a) Is there a pest organism present? Methods
of survey and identification, sampling methods, use of keys. b)
Could there be a pest problem in the future? Assessment of the
situations in which pests may occur and conditions favouring
their development.
2)
Damage Assessment and Prediction a) What damage is the pest organism
causing? Recognition of damage caused by important pests. Methods
of estimating impact of damage on crop, structure or environment.
b) What damage could the pest cause in the future? Means of predict-
ing population increase of pests and correlation with eventual
damage.
3)
Decision Making a) What should be done, if anything, to control the
pest? Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit
analysis, selection of most effective and ecologically compatible
control method. b) What should be done, if anything, to prevent the
occurrence of a pest which would cause damage in the future? Economics
of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit analysis, selection
of most appropriate environmental modification or preventive controls.
4)
Application of Controls and Preventive Methods a) How should a control
be applied to achieve maximum effectiveness? Timing, dosage, dispersal,
application methods for controls. b) What methods will minimize the
chance of pest occurrence and damage? Methods of environmental
. ?
modification, e.g. cultural methods, building modifications, elimination
of pest habitat, introduction of lethal agent into habitat (baits,
attractants, sterile individuals, poisons, etc.), sanitation.

 
91.
Biological Sciences 602-3 (continued)
S ?
5)
Assessment of Controls or Preventive Methods a) How effective was the
control used? Repeat sections 1) and 2). b) How effective were
any preventive
measures taken? Repeat sections 1) and 2).
6) Legislation and Safety Controls a) What legal considerations must be
made? Legislation regarding pest import and export, quarantines,
pesticide usage, use of disease organisms, property rights,
inspection, residues, etc. b) What safety precautions must be
taken? Medical or public health impact of the pest, toxicity of
pesticides and safety procedures when applying them.
Faculty
General Supervision: Dr. J. H. Borden, Associate Professor, Pestology
Centre.
Primary course teacher: Dr. Borden.
Advisor: Dr. A. L. Turnbull, Professor, Pestology Centre.
.
S

 
4
1
I
i
I
I
ii.
'TT)A!t flgLOflAT
Dcpertmnt: ?
BioSciences (l'e.stology) ?
Course
Nurber:Bic03
Tjt1c:Vcgctabc, cereal, and forage crop pest management
Description:
Procedures and methods
used in preventing damage by pests
(sensu latc'
^
to annual crop plants.
Credit
Ilourc:_
Three
- Vector:
8-0-20
Prerequisite(s) if any:
(see covering memo)
?
(see covering
2.
ttOLUNTANDSCHEDULING:
E3tinated EnrollLz3nt: . 25
?
Uhen
will the course first be offered: Summer 197..
(limited by facilities)
Flow often will the course be offered:
?
_
Every
?
irnme Semester ?
-
3.
JtT77ICtLTICi:
See covering memorandum
tich L'cculty rbcr will .nor31ly teach the
?
V1S1t1Tg lecturer
?
-
%.1t are the btetcry ilications of m
o
unting the course:
?
Up to
$2,000
honora: ?
for lecturer; about $1,000 for travel; about $500 for miscellaneous or continge-:
Ara tt-re suficiont Library resources (6ppend.details):
?
Yes
Lc.d: a) Outline of the Course Appended, and,
see
covering memorandum.
b)
t indication of the competence of the Faculty mcier to give the c
c) Library
resources
See
covering memorandum. ?
Appended.
t.":'ovcd: Dcparttntal Graduate Studies Committee:
?
Date:______
Vcculty Crcduate Studies Committee:
?
Date:_____
Date: ?
-,
Senate Graduate Studies Cornittce:
?
Date:
-
Ccnate:
Date:—__
CS. 1:7

 
Biological
Sciences 603-3. Vegetable, Cereal and Forage Crop Pest Management.
Detailed Course Description
Course Description
A 3-credit, lecture and laboratory course to be held in a 3-week
period. Lectures will be primarily in a 2-hour period in the early
morning, followed by extensive field, laboratory and project work for
the duration of each day. In some cases lectures may be concentrated into
more than 2-hour periods to allow whole-day field trips or project work.
The course will cover insects, mites, plant diseases, weeds and
birds that cause harm to annual vegetable, cereal and forage crop plants
and their products
in
the field (damage to products in storage
is dealt
with in
601). Course to be taught in part at the SFU agricultural
experiment area in the U.B.C. Research Forest, Maple Ridge, and in part
at government experimental and private farms in the Lower Fraser Valley.
Outline
For the pests and environment listed above, the course will cover
the following subject areas.
1)
Survey and Detection a) Is there a pest organism present? Methods of
survey and identification, sampling methods, use of keys. b)
. ?
Could there be a pest problem in the future? Assessment of the
situations In which pests may occur and conditions favouring their
development.
2)
Damage Assessment and Prediction a) What damage is the pest organism
causing? Recognition of damage caused by important pests. Methods
of estimating impact of damage on crop., structure or environment.
b) What damage could the pest cause in the future? Means of
predicting population increase of pests and correlation with eventual
damage.
3)
Decision Making a) What should be done, if anything, to control the
pest? Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit.
analysis, selection of most effective and ecologically compatible
control method. b) What should he done, if anything to prevent
the occurrence of a pest which would cause damage in the future?
Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit analysis,
selection of most appropriate environmental modification or preventive
controls.
4)
Application of Controls and Preventive Methods a) How should a control
be applied to achieve maximum effectiveness? Timing, dosage,
dispersal, application methods for controls. b) What methods will
minimize the chance of pest occurrence and damage? Methods of
environmental modification, e.g. cultural methods, building modifica-
tions, elimination of pest habitat, introduction of lethal agent into
habitat (baits, attractants, sterile individuals, poisons, etc.),
sanitation.
I.
.

 
* ?
a ?
94.
0
?
Biological
Sciences 603-3 (continued)
5)
Assessment of Controls or Preventive Methods a) How effective was the
control used? Repeat sections 1) and 2). b) How effective were any
preventive measures taken? Repeat sections 1) and 2).
6)
Legislation and Safety Controls a) What legal considerations must be
made? Legislation regarding pest import and export, quarantines,
pesticide usage,
use
of disease organisms, property rights, inspection,
residues, etc. b) What safety precautions must be taken? Medical
or public health impact of the pest, toxicity of pesticides and
safety procedures when applying them.
Faculty
General Supervision: Dr. J. H. Borden, Associate Professor, Pestology Centre.
Suggested primary course teacher: Dr. H. R. MacCarthy, B.A. (UBC),
Ph.D. (U. California, Berkeley), Head, Entomology Section, Research
Station, Canada Department of Agriculture, Vancouver, Honorary
Lecturer in Plant Science (Entomology), UBC.
Advisors:
Dr. J. E. Rahe and Dr. P. C. Oloffs, Assistant Professors,
and Dr. B. P. Beirne, Professor, Pestology Centre.
.
0

 
• 1.. ?
.'nAR
Department: ?
1o$c1enceq (1
1
et')1v)
?
Course tiumber:IiSc 604
Title:
?
Fruit crop post management
methods used in preventing damage by pests (sensu ].ato)
to orchard trees and small fruits.
Credit Hours:
?
Two -
? Vector: 8-0-20
?
prerequisite(s) if
(for two weeks)
?
(see coverin
-
2.
Tfl0LLNT /It
1,CHEDUL1G:
Ectirtated Enro11mnt:
?
25 ?
When will the course first be offered: 1973
(limited by facilities)
flo'.s often will
the course be offered:
?
F
Pr y
S'-r 'Semester
3.
JvrirlCt.Tl0N:
?
S it
e -
?
rLijiorandnm
trich
I f ccultj c-Scr
t,tll
nortui
I
teach the course, Visiting lecturer
?
-
Mat aro
the bud,etary inplications of
cunt1n6 the course:
-
1, 1 2
te_$L500
for
lecturer: ?
about $3,000 in travel and lodging costs for field trips;
about
$500 for
contingencies.
?
S
Aro
th•3r0
ca
fIctout
Library ?
resources (eppend .
details): ?
Yes
.1
t;rod:
a)
?
Outline of ?
the Course
?
Appended, and see covering memo.
b) ?
Art tndicit ion
of
?
the competence of ?
the Faculty meber
to &ive
?
the ?
c:
c) ?
Ltbrry
t.ourccs ?
See covering memo.
Append
I'
.1
t.-- ,proved:
D:rtuueI
?
Graduate
Studies CoSttec:
Vccutty Crcduatc' Studies Coctttte:
_Date:__
I
Faculty:
Dtc
_
ettot€ ?
Crduate Studies Committee:
Date:___
cnAte:
____
S
S
cS.3'
ii

 
*
Biological Sciences
604-2. Fruit Crop Pest Management.
.
?
Detailed Course Descrition
Course Description
A 2-credit lecture and laboratory course to be held in a 2-week
period. Lectures will be primarily in a 2-hour period in the early
morning, followed by extensive field, laboratory and project work for
the duration of each day. In some cases lectures may be concentrated
into more
than 2-hour periods to allow whole-day field trips or project
work.
The course will cover insects, mites, plant diseases, rodents, and
birds that cause harm in orchards, vineyards, and hop gardens, and to small
fruits. Course to be taught as far as possible on location in the Okanagan
Valley from the SFU Pestology Laboratory located at the Federal Department
of Agriculture Research Station there and in government and private orchards.
Outline
For the pests and environment listed above, the course will cover
the following subject areas.
a) Survey and Detection a) Is there a pest organism present? Methods of
survey and identification, sampling methods, use of keys. b) Could
there be a pest problem in the future? Assessment of the situations
in which pests may occur and conditions favouring their development.
2)
Damage Assessment and Prediction a) What damage is the pest organism
causing? Recognition of damage caused by important pests. Methods
of estimating impact of damage on crop, structure or environment.
b) What damage could the pest cause in the future? Means of
predicting population increase of pests and correlation with eventual
damage.
3)
Decision Making a) What should be done, if anything, to control the
pest? Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit
analysis, selection of most effective and ecologically compatible
control method. b) What should be done, if anything, to prevent
the occurrence of a pest which would cause damage in the future?
Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit analysis,
selection of most appropriate environmental modification or
preventive controls.
4)
Application of Controls and Preventive Methods a) How should a control
be applied to achieve maximum effectiveness? Timing, dosage, dispersal,
application methods for controls. b) What methods will minimize
the chance of pest occurrence and damage? Methods of environmental
modification, e.g. cultural methods, building modifications, elimina-
tion of pest habitat, introduction of lethal agent into habitat
(baits, attractants, sterile individuals, poisons, etc.), sanitation.
5)
Assessment of Controls or Preventive Methods a) How effective was the
• control used? Repeat sections 1) and 2). b) How effective were any
preventive measures taken? Repeat sections 1) and 2).

 
• ?
,l.
NOW
Biological
Sciences 604-2. (continued)
6)
Legislation and Safety Controls a) What legal considerations must be
made? Legislation regarding pest import and export, quarantines,
pesticide usage, use of disease organisms, property reights,
inspection, residues, etc. b) What safety precautions must be
taken? Medical or public health impact of the pest, toxicity of
pesticides and safety procedures when applying them.
Faculty
General Supervision: Dr. J. H. Borden, Associate Professor, Pestology
Centre.
Suggested primary course teacher: H. F. Madsen, A.B. (San Jose), Ph.D.
(U. California, Berkeley), Head, Entomology Section, Research
Station, Canada Department of Agriculture, Summerland, and formerly
Associate Professor, Division of Entomology, University of California,
Berkeley, and State Entomologist for California.
Advisor: Dr. A.
L. Turnbull, Professor, Pestology Centre.
is

 
t
I
Cr3.E::rAfl.
(Pestology) ?
- Course flumber: BjS 60
Title: ?
Management
_of Animal DiseaseAgents
oacription:_0res and methods used in controlling pests that cause or
transmit disease to man and his domestic animals.
-i
Credit Hours:
?
One ?
-
? Vector:8-0-20
?
Prerequisite( r.) if any:'.
2.
11OLL1NT AND SCHEDULING:
Ctiwttd EnrollT'nt: ?
25 ?
When will the course first be offered:Su7er:7
?
(limited by facilities)
How often will
the
course be offered:
?
Every summer semester. ?
-
3.
Jt
?
FCtTIC:
?
LI
See covering mem'randurn.
6.
?
!
UjiC1.1
Fcculty
?
will nol1y teach the
course: Dr. J.P.M. Mackauer and
Dr. J. N. Webster.
tat are te bud*tary implications of mounting the course: About$500.00fcr
?
_-
localtravelandmiscellaneousexpenses.
turo
thcro
cufftc1cnt
Library
resources
(append details): ?
Yes
i) Outline of the Course Appended, and see covering memorandum.
b)
1n
tndicat n of the cotetcnce of
the F: cul ty
mcmher
to give
the
c)
Library rebourcesSee covering memorandum.
t.:provo4: Dartrint.t Graduate
Studies Corttee:
Date:_____
L'cculy Cr,.duatc Studies
Cor'ittec:
?
Date:
_______
4
Fecal ty:
-
_Date:
Secoto Graduate Studies Cocnittec:
?
_Date:-
Senr.t:
?
_
-
CS. l.!

 
-
Biological
Sciences 605-1. Management of Animal Disease Agents.
Detailed Course Description
Course Description
A 1-credit, lecture and laboratory course to be held in a 1-week
period. Lectures will be primarily in a 2-hour period in the early
morning, followed by extensive field, laboratory and project work for
the duration of each day. In some cases lectures may be concentrated
into more than 2-hour periods to allow whole-day field trips or project.
work.
The course will cover insects, arachnids, helminths, and some
other organisms that cause or transmit disease to man and livestock or
that poison or cause allergies. Emphasis will be on public health
implications of environmental changes that result from management programmes
and from contacts with disease agents caused by movements of people and
animals.
Outline
For the pests and environment listed above, the course will cover
the following subject areas.
1) Survey and Detection a) Is there a pest organism present? Methods of
survey and identification, sampling methods, use. of keys. b) Could
. ?
there be a pest probleta in the future? Assessment of the situations
in which pests may occur and conditions favouring their development.
2)
Damage Assessment and Prediction a) What damage is the pest organism
causing? Recognition of damage caused by important pests.
Methods of estimating impact of damage on crop, structure or
environment. b) What damage could the pest cause. in the future?
Means of predicting population Increase of pests and correlation
with eventual damage.
3) Decision Making a) What should be done, If anything, to control the
pest? Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit
analysis, selection of most effective and ecologically compatible
control method. b) What should be done, if anything, to prevent
the occurrence of a pest which would cause damage in the future?
Economics of pest damage and control, i.e. cost-benefit analysis,
selection of most appropriate environmental modification or preventive
controls.
4)
Application of Controls and Preventive Methods a) How should a control
be applied to achieve maximum effectiveness? Timing, dosage,
dispersal, application methods for controls. b) What methods will
minimize the chance of pest occurrence and damage? Methods of
environmental modification, e.g. cultural methods, building
modifications, elimination of pest habitat, introduction of lethal
.
?
agent into habitat (baits, attractants, sterile individuals, poisons,
etc.), sanitation.

 
..,
?
100.
Biological
Sciences 605-1. (continued)
5)
Assessment of Controls or Preventive Methods a) How effective was the
control used? Repeat sections 1) and 2). b) How effective were any
preventive measures taken? Repeat sections 1) and 2).
6)
Legislation and Safety Controls a) What legal considerations must be
made? Legislation regarding pest Import and export, quarantines,
pesticide usage, use of disease organisms, property rights,
inspection, residues, etc.. b) What safety precautions must be.
taken? Medical or public health impact of the pest, toxicity of
pesticides and safety procedures when applying them.
Faculty
General supervision: Dr. J. H. Borden, Pestology Centre.
Primary course teachers: Dr. J.P.M. Mackauer and Dr. J. M. Webster,
Professors, Pestology Centre.
.
0

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