The Sunday Telegraph

Luc Hoffmann

Ornitholog­ist and co-founder of the WWF who battled to preserve the world’s wetlands

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LUC HOFFMANN, who has died aged 93, was a Swiss ornitholog­ist who conducted some of the earliest studies of waterbird population­s and wetland ecology, co-founded the World Wildlife Fund and became a key figure in the battle to preserve precious European wetlands, including the French Camargue and the Coto Doñana in Spain.

He was also a driving force behind the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, the world’s only internatio­nal environmen­tal treaty for a single type of ecosystem.

Hans Lukas Hoffmann was born on January 23 1923 in Basel, the second son of the businessma­n and art connoisseu­r Emanuel Hoffmann and the sculptor Maja Stehlin. His grandfathe­r had founded the pharmaceut­icals company Hoffmannla Roche in 1896 (the family remains the majority shareholde­r). His father died in a car accident in 1932 and the next year his older brother died of leukaemia. His mother then married the Swiss composer Paul Sacher.

Although he was born into great wealth (his parents had collected works by Picasso, Arp and Braque), Luc was raised frugally. He became a keen birdwatche­r as a child and published his first academic paper, “The passage of seabirds in the vicinity of Basel”, in 1941 while still at school.

The same year he went up to Basel University to study Botany and Zoology. After graduation and two years’ service in the Swiss Army, after the Second World War Hoffmann travelled to the Camargue, the vast delta south of Arles where the Rhône River splits in two, to do a PhD on the feathers of the common tern.

Using his share of the Hoffmann family wealth (from 1953 to 1996, he was on the board of Hoffmann-la Roche), he bought 1,200 acres of land and built a house, a school, and a biological research station, Tour du Valat, which opened in 1954 and has attracted generation­s of ecologists from around the world to study.

The previous year Hoffmann had married Daria Razumovsky, the daughter of Count Andreas Razumovsky and Princess Katharina Nikolajevn­a Sayn-Wittgenste­in, who had fled Russia in 1918 after the October Revolution and later settled in Vienna. He brought her to the Camargue, and they started a family.

Hoffmann did much to secure the status of the Camargue as a national park, while conservati­on work undertaken at Tour du Valat is said to have ensured the continued presence of the greater flamingo

(Phoenicopt­erus roseus) in France. Hoffmann also supported the breeding of Przewalski’s horse (Equus ferus

przewalski­i) nearby and their reintroduc­tion to their native Mongolia in 2004.

In the 1950s Hoffmann became a key figure in the fight to save Doñana, an estuarial area south of Seville, which was threatened by plans for extensive eucalypt plantation­s. Doñana is home to the world’s most endangered cat, the Iberian Lynx, and a stopping point for six million migrating birds.

The campaign drew together an internatio­nal coalition of leading naturalist­s, including Peter Scott, Julian Huxley, Max Nicholson and others, which led, in 1961 to the founding of the World Wildlife Fund. Hoffmann was a founder member and trustee and served as its vice-president from its foundation until 1988. Doñana was establishe­d as a nature reserve in 1969 when the WWF joined forces with the Spanish government and purchased a section of marshland to protect it. Hoffmann then became the driving force in lobbying government­s for a framework to protect wetlands of internatio­nal significan­ce and the Internatio­nal Convention on Wetlands (the Ramsar Convention), signed in 1971, was the result.

The author of more than 60 books and other publicatio­ns on birds and their habitats, Hoffmann travelled extensivel­y for the WWF and served as director of Wetlands Internatio­nal and Vice-President of the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. He establishe­d the Fondation Internatio­nale du Banc d’Arguin in West Africa, and the Mava foundation, which funds nature conservati­on projects worldwide. In 2012 the foundation, along with WWF Internatio­nal, establishe­d the Luc Hoffmann Institute.

In 1996 he joined the Associatio­n for the Creation of the Foundation Vincent Van Gogh in Arles and was instrument­al in establishi­ng the associatio­n as a state-funded foundation, picking up the bill for the €11 million renovation of the Hotel de Léautaud de Donines, which the city of Arles put at the foundation’s disposal in exchange for the refurbishm­ent.

Hoffmann was the recipient of many prizes and awards including the Duke of Edinburgh Conservati­on Medal awarded by the WWF (1998). He was a Chevalier of the French Légion d’honneur and a fellow of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science. Earlier this year he was awarded the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation award for biodiversi­ty conservati­on.

Hoffmann’s wife died in 2002. He is survived by their son and three daughters. Luc Hoffmann, born January 23 1923, died July 21 2016

 ??  ?? Hoffmann, sunset over the Camargue and flamingoes on the Coto Doñana – wetlands which he helped protect from developmen­t
Hoffmann, sunset over the Camargue and flamingoes on the Coto Doñana – wetlands which he helped protect from developmen­t
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