The Scotsman

Gerald Lincoln

Award-winning endocrinol­ogist and naturalist

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Lincoln was a considerab­le polymath, who devoted his remarkable life to unravellin­g the mysteries of nature. His father, a Norfolk tenant farmer, died when he was six and the family had to leave the farm. His mother and her brother then bought a farm near Reepham, where he spent his childhood years running through the countrysid­e and marvelling at the birds and especially the moths. He became an adept poacher too, carrying toilet paper as an alibi when he ventured off the road and into the woods.

With his older brother Dennis, Gerald started trapping and recording moths, a project that won him the Prince Philip Award for Zoology and led to a place at Imperial College, London studying zoology. It was at this time that he met his future wife, Caroline.

Rogr Short working at the veterinary school at Cambridge had read about Gerald’s moth project in the newspapers and invited him to study the deer on the Isle of Rum for a PHD. His work led to a clear understand­ing of the way in which the red deer breeding cycle, including antler growth, is controlled by day length to ensure that the hinds calve at the optimum time to benefit from spring grass. The breeding season in red deer is short and sharp; in effect they undergo an annual puberty.

It was while working from Rum that he noticed that his beard growth increased whenever he anticipate­d leaving the island and going to see his girlfriend. Beard growth reflects testostero­ne levels so in the true spirit of investigat­ion he weighed his beard shavings daily to demonstrat­e the phenomenon. This was an important observatio­n showing that testostero­ne levels are controlled by the higher centres. The results were published in a famously anonymous paper in Nature – a very rare distinctio­n.

In 1974 Roger Short became Director of the new MRC Unit of Reproducti­ve Biology in Edinburgh and Lincoln joined the unit. This left him a year during which he travelled overland to Komodo to see the famous dragons.

His work at the MRC unit used Soay rams which he kept in artificial daylight conditions. From this, he was able to elucidate the mechanism by which mammals decode photoperio­d via changes in melatonin acting at the level of the pituitary gland – just below the brain. The pituitary reads the length of the nights, short in summer and long in winter, creating two states of body and mind – one for summer and one for winter.

By measuring the frequency with which his rams hit their heads against the sides of the pens he created an index of “irritabili­ty” and demonstrat­ed that, counter-intuitivel­y, this increased as testostero­ne levels fell. From this he postulated a “male irritabili­ty syndrome” pointing out that grumpiness in men coincides with the decline in testostero­ne with age; a theory that attracted widespread publicity.

Over a 40-year career, Gerald unravelled the timing mechanisms that drive fertility and growth, concepts he later revealed as evolutiona­rily conserved mechanisms driving rhythms of life for all animal species on our planet. Recently he explained how unicellula­r marine microorgan­isms, which live for only a few days, have neverthele­ss annual rhythms enabling them to make yearly migrations. He pointed out that each human cell has similar annual clocks.

For his work, he received numerous scientific awards and medals, election to fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and appointmen­t as Emeritus Professor of Biological Timing at Edinburgh University.

Throughout their time at Edinburgh, Gerald and Caroline

based themselves at Kirkton Cottages, Puddledub in Fife, transformi­ng two farm cottages and the surroundin­g grass paddocks into what was to become a paradise of biodiversi­ty and a nature reserve.

In retirement Gerald was able to devote himself to this work. He encouraged many visitors to this private reserve, infecting them with his passionate and cheerful enthusiasm. He constructe­d a sand martin colony which each year bred over 400 fledglings, he attracted a breeding pair of mute swans to his ponds, and crucially he recorded moths all over Scotland.

Moths provide a means of measuring environmen­tal change and Lincoln came to see very clearly the gravity of the damage to our environmen­t. As he wrote: “The alarm bells have gone off – industrial farming and the encroachme­nt of towns is trashing the countrysid­e. Gone are the butterflie­s and the wild flowers – a crisis.”

He leaves his wife Caroline, twosons,richardand­robbie, and a daughter, Rachel. JOHN FLETCHER

 ??  ?? Gerald Lincoln, BSC, PHD, SCD and FRSE, endocrinol­ogist and naturalist. Born: April 1945 in Norfolk. Died: 15 July, 2020 at Puddledub, Fife aged 75.
Gerald Lincoln, BSC, PHD, SCD and FRSE, endocrinol­ogist and naturalist. Born: April 1945 in Norfolk. Died: 15 July, 2020 at Puddledub, Fife aged 75.

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