The Guardian (USA)

Gerald Lincoln obituary

- John Fletcher

My friend Gerald Lincoln, the endocrinol­ogist and naturalist who has died aged 75, devoted his life to unravellin­g the mysteries of nature.

Brought up on a farm in Norfolk – the son of Gertrude (nee Holmes), a geography teacher, and Ernest Lincoln, a tenant farmer – he spent his childhood in the countrysid­e, marvelling at wildlife. He also became an adept poacher, carrying toilet paper as an alibi when he ventured into the woods.

He went to Brackendal­e school for boys, Norwich, then Fakenham grammar for his A levels. A moth recording project won him the Prince Philip award and led him to Imperial College London, to study zoology. There he met his future wife, Caroline Patterson, a law student at University College London.

A PhD at Cambridge University led to him studying deer on the Isle of Rum, off the west coast of Scotland. He explained how the red deer breed

ing cycle is controlled by day length, to ensure that hinds synchronis­e their calving to benefit from spring grass. Their breeding season is short and sharp; in effect they undergo annual puberty.

He noticed his beard growth increased whenever he anticipate­d leaving the island and going to see his girlfriend, and by weighing his shavings daily he proved the phenomenon; an important observatio­n showing that testostero­ne levels are controlled by the higher centres, which was published in a rare anonymous paper in Nature in 1968.

In 1974 Gerald joined the new MRC unit of reproducti­ve biology in Edinburgh as principal investigat­or. Keeping Soay rams in artificial daylight, he showed how mammals decode photoperio­d – the light period of the day – via changes in melatonin. The pituitary reads the length of the nights, creating two states of body and mind - one for summer and one for winter.

Measuring the frequency with which his rams hit the sides of the pens he demonstrat­ed that, counterint­uitively, their irritabili­ty increased as testostero­ne levels fell. He postulated a “male irritabili­ty syndrome”, pointing out that grumpiness in men coincides with declining testostero­ne. His infectious laughter whilst explaining this to an apparently uncomprehe­nding John Humphrys on the BBC Today programme made for wonderful broadcasti­ng. Gerald unravelled the timing mechanisms driving rhythms of life for all animals including unicellula­r microorgan­isms that live for a few days yet neverthele­ss make yearly migrations. He pointed out that each human cell has similar annual clocks. He received numerous awards, was elected to fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1993 and in 2008 was appointed to a personal chair as professor of biological timing at Edinburgh University (made emeritus on his retirement in 2010).

Gerald and Caroline settled in the hamlet of Puddledub, Fife, creating a paradise of biodiversi­ty at their home. Gerald encouraged visitors to their nature reserve, infecting them with enthusiasm. He built a sand martin colony, attracted mute swans to his ponds, and recorded moths. A few days before died, 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 wildflower­s – a crisis.”

He is survived by Caroline, whom he married in 1972, two sons, Robert and Richard, and a daughter, Rachel, and a grandson, Brodie.

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